Pseudo-Plutarch is the conventional name given to the actual, but unknown, authors of a number of pseudepigrapha attributed to Plutarch but now known not to have been written by him. Some of these works were included in editions of Plutarch's Moralia.
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5 total works indexed
· 1994 · cited 14x
· 1919 · cited 14x
· 1914 · cited 13x
· 1936 · cited 13x
· 1916 · cited 11x
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Pseudo-Plutarch is the conventional name given to the actual, but unknown, authors of a number of pseudepigrapha attributed to Plutarch but now known not to have been written by him. Some of these works were included in editions of Plutarch's Moralia.
==Works== Among the works included in some editions of Plutarch's Moralia are: the Lives of the Ten Orators (; Latin: Vitae decem oratorum), biographies of the Ten Orators of ancient Athens, based on Caecilius of Calacte, possibly deriving from a common source with the Lives of Photius The Doctrines of the Philosophers (; Latin: Placita Philosophorum) De Musica (On Music) Whether Fire or Water is More Useful Greek and Roman Parallel Stories (), also known as the Parallela Minora (Minor Parallels) Pro Nobilitate (Noble Lineage) De fluviis (On Rivers / About the Names of Rivers and Mountains; Greek: Περὶ ποταμῶν καὶ ὀρῶν ἐπωνυμίας) De Homero (On Homer) De Unius in Re Publica Dominatione (On the Rule of One in the Republic) Consolatio ad Apollonium (Consolation to Apollonius)
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).