Jason of Nysa

Jason of Nysa (Greek: Ἰάσων ὁ Νυσαεύς, Iason o Nysaevs; 1st-century BC) was a Stoic philosopher, the son of Menecrates, and, on his mother's side, grandson of Posidonius, of whom he was also the disciple and successor at the Stoic school at Rhodes.

[1] He therefore flourished after the middle of the 1st century BC.

The Suda lists four works of his:[1] However, the Suda expresses doubt about whether the third book is his, and also credits Jason of Argos as having written a Life of Greece in 4 books.

[2] This biography of a philosopher from ancient Greece is a stub.

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