Aristotle Re-Interpreted: New Findings on Seven Hundred Years of the Ancient Commentators
Editat de Sir Richard Sorabjien Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 noi 2019
With a wide range of contributors from across the globe, the articles look at the commentators themselves, discussing problems of analysis and interpretation that have arisen through close study of the texts. Richard Sorabji introduces the volume and himself contributes two new papers. A key recent area of research has been into the Arabic, Latin and Hebrew versions of texts, and several important essays look in depth at these. With all text translated and transliterated, the volume is accessible to readers without specialist knowledge of Greek or other languages, and should reach a wide audience across the disciplines of Philosophy, Classics and the study of ancient texts.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350123663
ISBN-10: 1350123668
Pagini: 688
Dimensiuni: 156 x 232 x 36 mm
Greutate: 1.01 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350123668
Pagini: 688
Dimensiuni: 156 x 232 x 36 mm
Greutate: 1.01 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
Introduction: Seven Hundred Years of Commentary and the Sixth Century Diffusion to other Cultures
Richard Sorabji
1. The Texts of Plato and Aristotle in the First Century BCE: Andronicus' Canon
Myrto Hatzimichali
2. Boethus' Aristotelian Ontology
Marwan Rashed
3. The Inadvertent Conception and Late Birth of the Free Will Problem and the Role of Alexander
Susanne Bobzien
4. Alexander of Aphrodisias on Particulars and the Stoic Criterion of Identity
Marwan Rashed
5. Themistius and the Problem of Spontaneous Generation
Devin Henry
6. Spontaneous Generation and its Metaphysics in Themistius' Paraphrase of Aristotle's Metaphysics 12
Yoav Meyrav
7. The Neoplatonic Commentators on 'Spontaneous' Generation
James Wildberding
8. A Rediscovered Categories Commentary: Porphyry? with Fragments of Boethus
Riccardo Chiaradonna, Marwan Rashed, and David Sedley
9. The Purpose of Porphyry's Rational Animals: A Dialectical Attack on the Stoics in On Abstinence from Animal Food
G. Fay Edwards
10. Universals Transformed in the Commentators on Aristotle
Richard Sorabji
11. Iamblichus' Noera Theôria of Aristotle's Categories
John Dillon
12. Proclus' Defence of the Timaeus against Aristotle: A Reconstruction of a Lost Polemical Treatise
Carlos Steel
13. Smoothing over the Differences: Proclus and Ammonius on Plato's Cratylus and Aristotle's De Interpretatione
R. M. van den Berg
14. Dating of Philoponus' Commentaries on Aristotle and of his Divergence from his Teacher Ammonius
Richard Sorabji
15. John Philoponus' Commentary on the Third Book of Aristotle's De Anima, Wrongly Attributed to Stephanus
Pantelis Golitsis
16. Mixture in Philoponus: An Encounter with a Third Kind of Potentiality
Frans A. J. de Haas
17. Gnôstikôs and/or hulikôs: Philoponus' Accountof the Material Aspects of Sense-Perception
Peter Lautner
18. The Last Philosophers of Late Antiquity in the Arabic Tradition
Peter Adamson
19. Alexander of Aphrodisias versus John Philoponus in Arabic: A Case of Mistaken Identity
Ahmad Hasnawi
20. New Arabic Fragments of Philoponus and their Reinterpretation: Does the World Lack a Beginning in Time or Take no Time to Begin?
Marwan Rashed
21. Simplicius' Corollary on Place: Method of Philosophising and Doctrines
Philippe Hoffmann and Pantelis Golitsis
22. A Philosophical Portrait of Stephanus the Philosopher
Mossman Roueché
23. Who Were the Real Authors of the Metaphysics Commentary Ascribed to Alexander and Ps.-Alexander?
Pantelis Golitsis
The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle Translations
Bibliography
Index Locorum
General Index
List of Contributors
Introduction: Seven Hundred Years of Commentary and the Sixth Century Diffusion to other Cultures
Richard Sorabji
1. The Texts of Plato and Aristotle in the First Century BCE: Andronicus' Canon
Myrto Hatzimichali
2. Boethus' Aristotelian Ontology
Marwan Rashed
3. The Inadvertent Conception and Late Birth of the Free Will Problem and the Role of Alexander
Susanne Bobzien
4. Alexander of Aphrodisias on Particulars and the Stoic Criterion of Identity
Marwan Rashed
5. Themistius and the Problem of Spontaneous Generation
Devin Henry
6. Spontaneous Generation and its Metaphysics in Themistius' Paraphrase of Aristotle's Metaphysics 12
Yoav Meyrav
7. The Neoplatonic Commentators on 'Spontaneous' Generation
James Wildberding
8. A Rediscovered Categories Commentary: Porphyry? with Fragments of Boethus
Riccardo Chiaradonna, Marwan Rashed, and David Sedley
9. The Purpose of Porphyry's Rational Animals: A Dialectical Attack on the Stoics in On Abstinence from Animal Food
G. Fay Edwards
10. Universals Transformed in the Commentators on Aristotle
Richard Sorabji
11. Iamblichus' Noera Theôria of Aristotle's Categories
John Dillon
12. Proclus' Defence of the Timaeus against Aristotle: A Reconstruction of a Lost Polemical Treatise
Carlos Steel
13. Smoothing over the Differences: Proclus and Ammonius on Plato's Cratylus and Aristotle's De Interpretatione
R. M. van den Berg
14. Dating of Philoponus' Commentaries on Aristotle and of his Divergence from his Teacher Ammonius
Richard Sorabji
15. John Philoponus' Commentary on the Third Book of Aristotle's De Anima, Wrongly Attributed to Stephanus
Pantelis Golitsis
16. Mixture in Philoponus: An Encounter with a Third Kind of Potentiality
Frans A. J. de Haas
17. Gnôstikôs and/or hulikôs: Philoponus' Accountof the Material Aspects of Sense-Perception
Peter Lautner
18. The Last Philosophers of Late Antiquity in the Arabic Tradition
Peter Adamson
19. Alexander of Aphrodisias versus John Philoponus in Arabic: A Case of Mistaken Identity
Ahmad Hasnawi
20. New Arabic Fragments of Philoponus and their Reinterpretation: Does the World Lack a Beginning in Time or Take no Time to Begin?
Marwan Rashed
21. Simplicius' Corollary on Place: Method of Philosophising and Doctrines
Philippe Hoffmann and Pantelis Golitsis
22. A Philosophical Portrait of Stephanus the Philosopher
Mossman Roueché
23. Who Were the Real Authors of the Metaphysics Commentary Ascribed to Alexander and Ps.-Alexander?
Pantelis Golitsis
The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle Translations
Bibliography
Index Locorum
General Index
Recenzii
Building on the extraordinary achievements of the Ancient Commentators on Aristotle project, [Aristotle Re-Interpreted] is a valuable collection of groundbreaking studies, which, together with [Aristotle Transformed], constitutes a must-read for any scholar and student of philosophy and Classics as well as an indispensable acquisition of any library in these fields.
In terms of the amount covered [this book is] certainly good value, and in my view anyone working in this subject area would be strongly advised to buy and read both [this and Aristotle Transformed.]
Classicists and philosophers are devoting increased attention to ancient commentaries on Aristotle. Much of this work began in earnest in the 1980s with the Duckworth/Bloomsbury "Ancient Commentators on Aristotle" series and the present volume's companion collection of scholarly essays, Aristotle Transformed (1990; 2nd ed., 2016), also edited by Sorabji. Aristotle Re-Interpreted updates earlier work in the wake of roughly three decades of research, discoveries, and advancements. Known for his leadership in founding this fascinating field of research, Sorabji (emer., King's College London, UK) brings together 23 essays-some original, some republished, some newly translated-by a host of esteemed scholars and philosophers from across the globe. The resulting volume is physically massive and massively significant for those whose research and teaching interests focus on ancient Aristotelian and Neoplatonist philosophical schools. In addition to the essays, Sorabji provides a lengthy, detailed introduction, which offers a nice survey of the philosophical figures and topics of interest within the field. Classicists, medievalists, and philosophers-really anyone interested in Aristotle, Neoplatonism, or the development of ideas from the classical age to the Middle Ages and Renaissance-will appreciate this scrupulously researched, intellectually breathtaking book. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
This volume is very interesting for many reasons: it provides new findings and fragments on ancient philosophy, it contains essays that deal with poorly studied philosophers and commentaries, and it is a great tool for scholars who want to deepen their understanding of the main themes of ancient philosophy and to know how the works of the greatest ancient philosophers circulated around the world. At the end of the volume readers can also find an extensive bibliography, an Index Locorum, and an index of names and arguments.
The volume is an excellent product that makes a considerable contribution to the study of the acceptance of Aristotelian thought through its commentators. (Bloomsbury Translation)
In terms of the amount covered [this book is] certainly good value, and in my view anyone working in this subject area would be strongly advised to buy and read both [this and Aristotle Transformed.]
Classicists and philosophers are devoting increased attention to ancient commentaries on Aristotle. Much of this work began in earnest in the 1980s with the Duckworth/Bloomsbury "Ancient Commentators on Aristotle" series and the present volume's companion collection of scholarly essays, Aristotle Transformed (1990; 2nd ed., 2016), also edited by Sorabji. Aristotle Re-Interpreted updates earlier work in the wake of roughly three decades of research, discoveries, and advancements. Known for his leadership in founding this fascinating field of research, Sorabji (emer., King's College London, UK) brings together 23 essays-some original, some republished, some newly translated-by a host of esteemed scholars and philosophers from across the globe. The resulting volume is physically massive and massively significant for those whose research and teaching interests focus on ancient Aristotelian and Neoplatonist philosophical schools. In addition to the essays, Sorabji provides a lengthy, detailed introduction, which offers a nice survey of the philosophical figures and topics of interest within the field. Classicists, medievalists, and philosophers-really anyone interested in Aristotle, Neoplatonism, or the development of ideas from the classical age to the Middle Ages and Renaissance-will appreciate this scrupulously researched, intellectually breathtaking book. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
This volume is very interesting for many reasons: it provides new findings and fragments on ancient philosophy, it contains essays that deal with poorly studied philosophers and commentaries, and it is a great tool for scholars who want to deepen their understanding of the main themes of ancient philosophy and to know how the works of the greatest ancient philosophers circulated around the world. At the end of the volume readers can also find an extensive bibliography, an Index Locorum, and an index of names and arguments.
The volume is an excellent product that makes a considerable contribution to the study of the acceptance of Aristotelian thought through its commentators. (Bloomsbury Translation)