Atlantis (Vietnamese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Atlantis" in Vietnamese language version.

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  • Hale, John R. (2009). Lords of the Sea: The Epic Story of the Athenian Navy and the Birth of Democracy. New York: Penguin. tr. 368. ISBN 978-0-670-02080-5. Plato also wrote the myth of Atlantis as an allegory of the archetypal thalassocracy or naval power.
  • Plato's contemporaries pictured the world as consisting of only Europe, Northern Africa, and Western Asia (see the map of Hecataeus of Miletus). Atlantis, according to Plato, had conquered all Western parts of the known world, making it the literary counter-image of Persia. See Welliver, Warman (1977). Character, Plot and Thought in Plato's Timaeus-Critias. Leiden: E.J. Brill. tr. 42. ISBN 978-90-04-04870-6.
  • Feder, Kenneth (2011). “Lost: One Continent - Reward”. Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and Pseudoscience in Archaeology . New York: McGraw-Hill. tr. 141–164. ISBN 978-0-07-811697-1.
  • Clay, Diskin (2000). “The Invention of Atlantis: The Anatomy of a Fiction”. Trong Cleary, John J.; Gurtler, Gary M. (biên tập). Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy. 15. Leiden: E. J. Brill. tr. 1–21. ISBN 978-90-04-11704-4.

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  • "As Smith discusses in the opening article in this theme issue, the lost island-continent was – in all likelihood – entirely Plato's invention for the purposes of illustrating arguments around Grecian polity. Archaeologists broadly agree with the view that Atlantis is quite simply 'utopia' (Doumas, 2007), a stance also taken by classical philologists, who interpret Atlantis as a metaphorical rather than an actual place (Broadie, 2013; Gill, 1979; Nesselrath, 2002). One might consider the question as being already reasonably solved but despite the general expert consensus on the matter, countless attempts have been made at finding Atlantis." (Dawson & Hayward, 2016)