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  1. Heracleides (Ancient Greek: Ἡρακλείδης) was a physician of ancient Greece who was said to have been the sixteenth in descent from Aesculapius, the son of Hippocrates I, who lived probably in the fifth century BC.

  2. Heráclides Póntico, nacido en Heraclea en el Ponto, filósofo y matemático griego platónico de la primera generación de la Academia. Sustituyó a Platón durante el tercer viaje que éste realizó a Siracusa.

  3. Heráclides y Aristarco. Propuestas no ortodoxas en el pensamiento griego. Resumen: En este trabajo se consideran dos propuestas astronómicas previas al exitoso modelo geocéntrico de Ptolomeo, a saber, la de Heráclides de Ponto, un modelo geo-heliocéntrico, y la de Aristarco de Samos, el fallido heliocentrismo estricto griego.

  4. Gottschalk H. B., Heraclides of Pontus (Oxford, 1980), 58–87, discusses very competently the astronomical fragments but I differ with his interpretations of the two crucial texts for any so-called Heraclidean heliocentrism.

  5. Heracleides Ponticus, Greek philosopher and astronomer who first suggested the rotation of Earth, an idea that did not dominate astronomy until 1,800 years later. He was a pupil of Plato, who left the Academy temporarily in his charge. His writings are all lost except for a few fragments.

  6. 30 de dic. de 2013 · Apollonius also wrote a substantial critique of fellow empiricist physician and surgeon Heraclides of Tarentum (fl. 85–65 BCE) who in addition to his Commentaries on Hippocrates, wrote four books on external and internal therapy, as well as a dietetic treatise, and some works in pharmacology.

  7. Greek philosopher Heraclides was the son of Euthyphron, who was a wealthy man of high status at Heraclea Pontica. (One of his ancestors was an original founder of this Greek colony on the south coast of the Black Sea.) Heraclides attended the academy in Athens and was left in charge of it during Plato's third visit