Andrew D. Barker (barker-a)
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Bibliography
Barker, Andrew D. 1976. “The Digression in the ‘Theaetetus’ .” Journal of the History of Philosophy 14(4): 457–462.
Barker, Andrew D. 1991. “Aristoxenus’ Harmonics and Aristotle’s Theory of Science.” in Science and Philosophy in Classical Greece, edited by Alan C. Bowen, pp. 188–226. Sources and Studies in the History and Philosophy of Classical Science n. 2. New York: Garland Publishing Co. Essays derived rom a conference held by the Institute for Research in Classical Philosophy and Science.
Barker, Andrew D. 1996. “Plato’s ‘Philebus’: The Numbering of a Unity.” Apeiron 29(4): 143–164.
Barker, Andrew D. 2006a. “Archytas Unbound: A Discussion of Carl A. Human, Archytas of Tarentum.” in Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, volume 31, edited by David Sedley, pp. 297–322. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Barker, Andrew D. 2006b. “Ptolemy’s Musical Models for Mind-Maps and Star-Maps.” in Rationality and Reality. Conversations with Alan Musgrave, edited by Colin Cheyne and John Worrall, pp. 273–292. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science n. 20. Dordrecht: Springer.
Barker, Andrew D. 2009. “Ptolemy and the meta-Helikôn.” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 40(4): 344–351.
Barker, Andrew D. 2013. “Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Conservative Legacy of Johann Nepomuk Nestroy.” in Wittgenstein Reading, edited by Sascha Bru, Wolfgang Huemer, and Daniel Steuer, pp. 137–152. Berlin: de Gruyter.
Barker, Andrew D. 2014. “Pythagorean Harmonics.” in A History of Pythagoreanism, edited by Carl A. Huffman, pp. 185–203. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Barker, Andrew D. 2015. “Musical Pitch and the Enigmatic Octave in Problemata 19.” in The Aristotelian Problemata Physica. Philosophical and Scientific Investigations, edited by Robert Mayhew, pp. 266–254. Philosophia Antiqua n. 139. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
Barker, Andrew D. 2019. “Greek Acoustic Theory: Simple and Complex Sounds.” in Sound and the Ancient Senses, edited by Shane Butler and Sarah Nooter, pp. 92–108. The Senses in Antiquity. London: Routledge.