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Aristotle Re-Interpreted: New Findings on Seven Hundred Years of the Ancient Commentators edited by Richard Sorabji Bloomsbury Academic An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing P1c BLOOMS BURY LO:-JDO]\; • OXFORD' ]\;EW YORK· ]\;EW DELHI' SYDNEY Contents Acknowledgements vii List of Contributors viii Introduction: Seven Hundred Years of Commentary and the Sixth Century Diffusion to other Cultures Richard Sorabji The Texts of Plato and Aristotle in the First Century B C E: Andronicus' Canon Myrto Hatzimichali 81 2 Boethus' Aristotelian Ontology Marwan Rashed 103 3 The Inadvertent Conception and Late Birth of the Free Will Problem and the Role of Alexander Susanne Bobzien 125 4 Alexander of Aphrodisias on Particulars and the Stoic Criterion of Identity Marwan Rashed 161 5 Themistius and the Problem of Spontaneous Generation Devin Henry 179 6 Spontaneous Generation and its Metaphysics in Themistius' Paraphrase of Aristotle's Metaphysics 12 Yoav Meyrav 195 7 The Neoplatonic Commentators on 'Spontaneous' Generation James Wi/berding 211 8 A Rediscovered Categories Commentary: Porphyry(?) with Fragments of Boethus Riccardo Chiaradonna, Marwan Rashed, and David Sedley 231 9 The Purpose of Porphyry's Rational Animals: A Dialectical Attack on the Stoics in On Abstinence from Animal Food G. Fay Edwards 263 10 Universals Transformed in the Commentators on Aristotle Richard Sorabji 291 11 Iamblichus' Noera Theoria of Aristotle's Categories John Dillon 313 12 Produs' Defence of the Timaeus against Aristotle: A Reconstruction of a Lost Polemical Treatise Carlos Steel 327 13. Smoothing over the Differences: Produs and Ammonius on Plato's Cratylus and Aristotle's De Interpretatione R. M. van den Berg 353 14. Dating of Philoponus' Commentaries on Aristotle and of his Divergence from his Teacher Ammonius Richard Sorabji 367 15. John Philoponus' Commentary on the Third Book of Aristotle's De Anima, Wrongly Attributed to Stephanus Pantelis Golitsis 393 vi Contents 16. Mixture in Philoponus: An Encounter with a Third Kind of Potentiality Frans A. J. de Haas 413 17. Gnostikos and/or hulikos: Philoponus' Account of the Material Aspects of Sense-Perception Peter Lautner 437 18. The Last Philosophers of Late Antiquity in the Arabic Tradition Peter Adamson 453 19. Alexander of Aphrodisias versus John Philoponus in Arabic: A Case of Mistaken Identity Ahmad Hasnawi 477 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 503 21. Simplicius' Corollary on Place: Method of Philosophising and Doctrines Philippe Hoffmann and Pantelis Golitsis 531 22. A Philosophical Portrait of Stephanus the Philosopher Mossman Roueche 541 23. Who Were the Real Authors of the Metaphysics Commentary Ascribed to Alexander and Ps.-Alexander? Pantelis Golitsis 565 The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle Translations 589 Bibliography 595 Index Locorum 625 General Index 661 Introduction: Seven Hundred Years of Commentary and the Sixth Century Diff usion to other Cultures Richard Sorabji Th e Advance in Knowledge Th ere has been an exponential increase in exploration of the ancient commentators on Aristotle, since 1985 when the translation series Ancient Commentators on Aristotle 1 was funded, since 1987 when the fi rst translation appeared, and since 1990, which saw publication of the series’ introduction to Aristotle’s commentators, A ristotle Transformed . 2 Th en there were very few experts on the commentators in the world and the general editor was not one of them. A review of the commentators on Aristotle was included in the introduction to the three-v olume sourcebook on the commentators on Aristotle published in 2004, which, however, included little more than the 400 years from 200 to 600 CE , not the present span of nearly 700 years. 3 Over a hundred volumes of commentary have been published in English translation in the series since 1987, some lost in Greek and preserved in Latin, Arabic, or Syriac, and translations are under way from the surviving Hebrew and Arabic and again from Syriac. It is a sign of the geometrical progression in discovery that sixteen of the chapters included here were produced in the last fi ve years, another so fully revised as to be almost a new paper and only six are older than that. Th ere are areas in which new detective work has been especially active. New fragments have been found or made accessible of the early Boethus of Sidon from the fi rst century BCE , 4 the original advocate and exponent of word by word commentary on Aristotle, who started up a good number of the subsequent controversies. Some of the Boethus fragments are addressed in Chapter 2 and, embedded in a new fragment 1 General Editor Richard Sorabji, Duckworth from 1987, Bloomsbury from 2013. 2 Edited by Richard Sorabji (London: Duckworth, 1990; 2nd edn Bloomsbury, 2016). 3 Richard Sorabji, Th e Philosophy of the Commentators 200–600 AD: A Sourcebook , 3 vols (London: Duckworth, 2004; repr. Bloomsbury, 2013). 4 I use ‘ BCE ’, ‘ CE ’, referring to the common era, not BC or AD , which refer to Christ, when Islam or faiths other than Christianity are included in the discussion. 1 2 Aristotle Re-Interpreted of Porphyry, in Chapter 8 below. Th e Porphyry fragment was invisible to the naked eye but deciphered under multi- spectral lighting, and it is a substantial fragment of what is possibly the most infl uential commentary of the third century Neoplatonist Porphyry, the lost larger of two commentaries by him on Aristotle’s C ategories . Turning to later Neoplatonism, a lost reply to Aristotle by Proclus in defence of Plato’s cosmology is reconstructed in Chapter 12 from the commentators Philoponus, Simplicius, and Proclus himself. New fragments of Proclus’ opponent Philoponus, lost in Greek but preserved in Arabic, are discussed in Chapter 19, and the author of that chapter has discovered many more fragments of Greek commentary, nearly all surviving in medieval Arabic, 5 but the most extensive one in Greek, the lost commentary of Alexander on Aristotle’s Physics Books 4 to 8. It is edited with French commentary and translation in over 600 pages. Th e vital and transformative study of Arabic has also made it possible in Chapter 19 to reassign Arabic fragments from Alexander to Philoponus. New fragments expand not only our knowledge of the original Greek texts, but also, when the fragments come from the languages of other cultures, our knowledge of the infl uence of the Greek texts in those cultures. Th e spread of Greek philosophy to other cultures is a marked feature of the sixth century CE . One stimulus was the construction by Ammonius in Alexandria of new introductions to philosophy with defi nitions of philosophy and of philosophical terms and divisions of philosophical fi elds and of other philosophical items. Th is became popular as making philosophy more accessible, and there has been work on these introductions and their spread, fi rst in the sixth century to Persian and Syriac, 6 then from the eighth century into Arabic, as described in Chapter 18 and elsewhere7 and in the seventh and eighth centuries to Fathers of the Greek Church, as described in Chapter 22. Th at chapter also provides a totally diff erent picture of the Alexandrian philosopher Stephanus, of the spread of his work on defi nitions and divisions, while Chapter  23 expands the known range of his commentaries. Th e Ancient Commentators on Aristotle series will match for comparison the translation of an Armenian version of David the Invincible’s Defi nitions and Divisions of Philosophy with a translation under way from the surviving Greek version of that same work. Th e record of conversations on philosophy and science between the sixth century Athenian philosophers and the Persian king who gave them refuge in 531 CE will appear as one of the next translations in the series. Th e spread of Greek Philosophy into Arabic has been the one most intensely studied of all, particularly in connexion with Philoponus, and is continued in Chapters 18, 19, and 20. Th ere have been new developments concerning Philoponus, thanks to Pantelis Golitsis, in studying the dating of his commentaries and of their divergence from his teacher Ammonius Th ese are the subject of Chapters 14 and 15. Golitsis also studies in Chapter 23 the twelft h century compilations through Michael of Ephesus of composite 5 See notes 27, 50, 51, 99 for Alexander and Th emistius, for Simplicius notes 289, 298, 299, 300, and for Philoponus, note 307 and the new fragments of Philoponus in Rashed’s Chapter 20. 6 See also notes 98, 217, 218, 221, 222, 224, 226, 304–6. 7 See also notes 228–233. Introduction 3 commentaries with the aid of surviving older commentaries, in order to fi ll gaps. In both contexts, it has become clearer in what ways later commentators used or re-u sed the interpretations of Aristotle by their teachers or predecessors. Many, not all, of the chapters below will focus on one commentator, and some on one or two topics discussed by that commentator. Th e purpose of the introduction is to provide a setting for these studies by off ering a quick, but more rounded, sketch of the commentators involved and of the development of the tradition of commentary as between earlier and later practitioners. Clearly, that does not make it possible to provide comprehensive details about each commentator. But an extra aid is now available in French in Richard Goulet, ed., D ictionnaire des philosophes antiques (Paris: CNRS , 1989-). In many cases, if not all, this major work supplies comprehensive available details on the lives and works of Greek philosophers, including, of course, the commentators on Aristotle and, progressing alphabetically, it has published between 1989 and 2016 the volumes up to Tyrsenos. Th e account in the introduction below off ers snapshots only, and fuller details should be sought in these volumes as they progress.8 Andronicus: In Athens First Century BCE Andronicus has been described already by Hans Gottschalk in A ristotle Transformed . Th e main controversy since then has been on what Gottschalk called Andronicus’ ‘critical edition’. Th e reputation of Andronicus in Athens in the fi rst century BCE as the man whose edition of Aristotle triggered the commentary movement received a check in the seminal 1997 article of Jonathan Barnes, ‘Roman Aristotle’. 9 Andronicus, he rightly said, did not produce a critical edition of Aristotle in the modern sense, one that compares diff erent manuscript copies and emends the text so as to reconstruct as far as possible the original. What he did do, however, is suggested by two pieces of evidence discussed by Barnes. According to Porphyry, who took him as a model for his own later editorial work, Andronicus had assembled separate discussions by Aristotle into the same place.1 0 In the same breath Porphyry cited his own practice of establishing a paedagogical order for reading the works being edited, and elsewhere approved putting Aristotle’s logic fi rst,1 1 a practice followed to this day, and ascribed by Philoponus to Andronicus, in opposition to the preference of Boethus, who is called Andronicus’ pupil, for putting Physics fi rst.1 2 Th e other piece of evidence was that he wrote a life of Aristotle and a catalogue describing his works. It is mentioned by Plutarch, but survives only in shortened form in an Arabic version, which refers to at least fi ve 8 I am very grateful to those who commented on parts of this introduction for me: Gillian Clark on Porphyry, John Dillon on Iamblichus, Marwan Rashed on Arabic matters and on what I said about his chapters, Carlos Steel on Proclus, Mossman Roueché on Ammonius and his school. 9 Jonathan Barnes, ‘ Roman Aristotle ’, in Jonathan Barnes and Miriam Griffi n, eds, P hilosophia Togata II (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), pp. 1–69, at pp. 21–44. 10 Porphyry, Life of Plotinus 24. 11 Porphyry, in Cat . 59,21–2. 12 Philoponus, i n Cat. 5,15–20. 4 Aristotle Re-Interpreted books.1 3 In addition to this, he wrote a ‘paraphrase’ of Aristotle’s C ategories , which Simplicius treats as something less than his pupil Boethus’ ‘exegesis’ (i n Cat . 26,17–20; 30,3–5). Andronicus’ ideas will have become known from his biography and catalogue, as well as from his paraphrase commentary. He formed a canon of Aristotle’s works, as well as arranging them in order, and in this he was largely followed except for two changes. In one, he treated the end of our C ategories as wrongly amalgamated with the rest; in the other, he rejected as spurious Aristotle’s On Interpretation , because when its chapter 1 treats spoken sounds as symbols or signs of eff ects produced in the soul, eff ects which Andronicus takes to be thoughts (n oêmata ), he cannot fi nd the corresponding passage to which Aristotle refers in his O n the Soul . 14 Boethus was decisively to reinstate On Interpretation as genuine, and to restore the addendum to the Categories . In Chapter 1, Myrto Hatzimichali explains why, with one possible exception, he did not engage in textual emendation. Th is was not because it had not been practised well before the time of Andronicus. Rather, Andronicus’ project of canon- formation and arrangement for Aristotle was far more seminal for the commentary movement than any critical edition could have been. Andronicus added some further impetus still. 15 Michael Griffi n has elsewhere given a sense of what Andronicus may have contributed in other ways to the study of the Categories . For one thing, he asked about the purpose (s kopos ) of Aristotle’s C ategories . But he also discussed its title and its utility, and why it should be the fi rst to be read of Aristotle’s works. Th ese four topics discussed by Andronicus were by the sixth century CE included among the standard topics for discussion in all introductions preceding the commentaries on Aristotle’s C ategories , so Andronicus was already setting the scene for more than 500 years later. In addition, his choice of logic as the starting point prevailed against his younger contemporary Boethus’ preference for physics1 6 except that by the sixth century a commentary on Porphyry’s I ntroduction (I sagôgê ) tended to precede in the curriculum the commentary on the C ategories . Andronicus also wrote a treatise on the division of a genus into species, a favoured ancient (though unsatisfactory) example being the division of animal into rational and 13 Translated in I. Düring, A ristotle in the Ancient Biographical Tradition (Göteborg: Elanders, 1957), pp. 221–31, fi ft h book cited in no. 97, p. 230; supplemented in I. Düring, ‘ Ptolemy’s Vita Aristotelis rediscovered ’, in R. B. Palmer and R. Hammerton-Kelly, eds, Philomathes, In Memory of Philip Merlan (Th e Hague: Nijhoff , 1971), pp. 264–9. 14 Ammonius, in Int . 5,28. 15 Th e classic work on the period of Andronicus and Boethus is Paul Moraux, D er Aristotelismus bei den Griechen von Andronikos bis Alexander von Aphrodisias: I Die Renaissance des Aristotelismus im I Jh. v. Chr . (Berlin: De Gruyter, 1973). For recent reinterpretation see Michael Griffi n, A ristotle’s Categories in the Early Roman Empire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), who supplies a much fuller bibliography at p. 3, n. 23, and his earlier Oxford D.Phil. Dissertation, 2009, Th e Reception of Aristotle’s Categories c. 80 BC – AD 220 ; Tobias Reinhardt, ‘ Andronicus of Rome and Boethus of Sidon on Aristotle’s C ategories ’, in Richard Sorabji and Robert W. Sharples, eds, G reek and Roman Philosophy 100BC- 200 AD , 2 vols (London: Institute of Classical Studies, 2007), vol. 2, pp. 513–29, and, on Boethus on the category of relative, Concetta Luna, ‘ Boéthos de Sidon sur les rélatifs ’, Studia graeco- arabica 3 (2013), 1–31. Th e publications of the important fi ve- year research project, ed. Cristina D’Ancona, are available in print (I SSN 2281–2687) and online at < http://learningroads.cfs. unipi.it/?page_id=111 >. 16 Elias, in Cat . 117,17–118,31. Introduction 5 other species. At least he wrote on this, if it is Andronicus to whom Boethius refers by the expression, ‘the later sect of Peripatetic wisdom’.1 7 Andronicus seems to have insisted on dividing the genus by a genuine diff erentia, not by a mere accident like paleness, which may or may not belong to humans. In all these ways, Andronicus encouraged the subsequent focus of early Aristotelian commentary on Aristotle’s Categories . A new fragment on Andronicus’ discussion of accidental features is included in the recently discovered fragments of Porphyry in Chapter 8, at 6,9–7,8, and is analysed there. Andronicus’ provocative ideas about the Categories were also stimulating to his younger associate in Athens, Boethus. He reorganised Aristotle’s ten categories extensively, including them all under Plato’s two distinctions of existing in itself or in relation to something else, with the alleged result of reducing their number. He treated Aristotle’s category of When, or at- a- time, as subordinate to Time, which he saw as a category of its own, and similarly Aristotle’s category of Where, or in- a-place, as subordinate to Place, which he also treated as a category. Th is last pair of substitutions did not aff ect the number of categories, but he also placed relation aft er all the categories as being like a mere sucker or side- shoot. Pamela Huby has suggested the reports would be compatible if he regarded in itself and in relation as super- categories , with time and place as categories falling under i n relation and quantity as a category that exists i n itself . 18 He further proposed an emendation of Aristotle’s second (and preferred) defi nition of the category of relatives, apparently to protect it from a charge of circularity. Boethus of Sidon in Athens First Century BCE Boethus of Sidon is crucial for the tradition of commentary on Aristotle, in that he is said to have recommended the remarkable project of writing a w ord by word commentary on Aristotle’s C ategories (e xêgoumenos kath’ hekastên lexin ), 19 and he did write such a commentary on Aristotle’s C ategories . Th is was eventually to have a momentous infl uence on the commentary tradition, although the earliest surviving commentaries aft er him are not as thorough.2 0 In addition, Boethus, in defending Aristotle’s system, seems to have downgraded his key terms, interpreting them as belonging to the lowest available level. Th is is true of Aristotle’s form, of diff erentia, of universal, and of his fi rst fi gure of syllogism. In Chapter 2, Marwan Rashed takes up Boethus’ downgrading of form as non- substance on the basis of Aristotle’s requirement in C ategories 2a11–13; 3a7–9, that a substance is a subject of predicates, and not a predicate, so not in a subject. From this, Simplicius 17 Boethius, D e Divisione 891–2. 18 Pamela Huby, ‘An excerpt from Boethus of Sidon’s commentary on the C ategories ?’, Classical Quarterly 31 (1981), 398–409, citing Simplicius, in Cat 63,22; 347,19–21; 134,5; 157,18–21. 19 Reported by Simplicius, i n Cat. 30,2. 20 On the origin of commentaries on Aristotle, see Michael Griffi n, A ristotle’s Categories in the Early Roman Empire (n. 15 above). 6 Aristotle Re-Interpreted tells us,2 1 Boethus concluded that, although a compound of matter and form, like Socrates, can be a substance, and so can matter, for example the fl esh and bones of Socrates, this is not possible for the f orm of Socrates, his soul. His form cannot be a substance, because form, though not mentioned in Aristotle’s Categories , is said in his Physics 4.3, to be present in matter. Th is exclusion of form was to prove unacceptable more than two hundred years later to Aristotle’s greatest defender, Alexander of Aphrodisias, discussed below in Chapters 3 and 4, because in works other than the Categories , Aristotle treats soul as substance, even though it is i n body as a subject (Aristotle, De Anima ( DA ) or On the Soul 2.1). Aristotle’s M etaphysics Book 7 also treats form as a good candidate for being substance, and M etaphysics 8 speaks as if a diff erent criterion for substancehood had already been implied in Book 7 (see 7.17): the cause of a thing’s being. 22 Alexander himself corrected Boethus2 3 by holding that form is a part of the compound substance, and a p art of a substance is a substance. Rashed in Chapter 2 below cites a treatise in Arabic O n Diff erence , existing in two versions, which he argues come from a lost Qu estion about diff erentiae by Alexander.2 4 It insists that the diff erentia of a genus, for example rational as diff erentiating a species of animal, is substance because it is a p art of a substance, apparently because the diff erentia (rational) is form and form is p art of the genus (animal). Th e Question also criticises someone who denies this by again relying on one of the criteria in Aristotle’s Categories for substancehood (just as Boethus relied on another one in his disqualifi cation of form from substancehood), and this is one of Rashed’s reasons for thinking that Alexander’s opponent is Boethus. Th is time, the unsatisfi ed criterion is that substances receive contrary characteristics. Alexander in the Arabic version replies that it is not diff erentiae but individual substances that have to receive contraries. Riccardo Chiaradonna has studied Boethus’ downgrading also of universals, again by reference to the C ategories ’ defi nition of substance. On this ground, universals are not even a something (a Stoic category, lower than substance). Simplicius tells us: ‘Boethus says fi rst that the universal does not even exist in reality (e inai en hupostasei ), according to Aristotle, and even if it did have any reality, it would not be a something . Aristotle rather said it was in something’.2 5 Chiaradonna concludes from a discussion of a number of passages that Boethus thought of a universal as nothing but a collection of particulars. Th e recently recovered fragments of Porphyry’s lost commentary on the Categories in Chapter 8 below, speaking of animal, similarly say ‘none of these generic items is a subject’. 26 Th e text of Porphyry translated and analysed in this chapter 21 Simplicius, i n Cat . 78,5–20. 22 Aristotle, Metaphysics 8, 1043a2–4; b13–14, aft er an opening at 1042a3–4 which announces recapitulation and fi nishing touches (so Christof Rapp in a lecture in Oxford). 23 Alexander, D A ( On the Soul ) 6,2–6. 24 Earlier in Marwan Rashed, L ’Essentialisme (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2007), pp. 63–4 and 76; ‘Priorité de l’ EIDOS ou du GENOS entre Andronicos et Alexandre: vestiges arabes et grecs inédits’, Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 14 (2004), 9–63, at 44, cf. 29–30. 25 Simplicius, i n Cat . 50,5–8; cf. Dexippus, i n Cat. 22,32–3. Discussed by Riccardo Chiaradonna, ‘ Alexander, Boethus and the other Peripatetics: Th e Th eory of Universals in the Aristotelian Commentators ’, in R. Chiaradonna and G. Galluzzo, eds, U niversals in Ancient Philosophy (Pisa: Edizioni della Normale, 2013), pp. 299–328. 26 p. 3, lines 16–26.

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