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Alexander of Aphrodisias On Aristotle Meteorology 4 This page intentionally left blank Alexander of Aphrodisias On Aristotle Meteorology 4 Translated by Eric Lewis LONDON • NEW DELHI • NEW YORK • SYDNEY Bloomsbury Academic An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 50 Bedford Square 1385 Broadway London New York WC1B 3DP NY 10018 UK USA www.bloomsbury.com Bloomsbury is a registered trade mark of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc First published in 1996 by Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd. Paperback edition fi rst published 2014 © 2013 Eric Lewis (Appendix, Richard Sorabji) Eric Lewis has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identifi ed as Author of this work. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publishers. No responsibility for loss caused to any individual or organization acting on or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by Bloomsbury Academic or the author. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN HB: 978-0-7156-2684-9 PB: 978-1-4725-5805-3 ePDF: 978-1-4725-0185-1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. The present translations have been made possible by generous and imaginative funding from the following sources: the National Endowment for the Humanities, Division of Research Programs, an independent federal agency of the USA; the Leverhulme Trust; the British Academy; the Lev©entis Foundation; the Humanities Research Board of the British Academy; HEFCE; the Wolfson Foundation; the Jowett Copyright Trustees; the Royal Society (UK); Centro Internazionale A. Beltrame di Storia dello Spazio e del Tempo (Padua); Mario Mignucci; Liverpool University. The editor wishes to thank D. Russell, R. Sharples, D. Furley, M.L. Gill, J. Lennox, D. Sedley, and P. Lautner for their comments on the translation; I. Crystal for preparing the Greek-English index; and R. Wisnovsky for his help in preparing the volume for press. He also thanks Dr Coutant for his permission to put his earlier translation to use. Typeset by Ray Davies Printed and bound in Great Britain Contents Introduction 1 Translator’s Note 61 Translation 63 Notes 127 Appendix: The Commentators 149 Indexes English-Greek Glossary 159 Greek-English Index 166 Subject Index 183 This page intentionally left blank Introduction That the Meteorologica is a little-read work is no doubt due to the intrinsic lack of interest of its contents. Aristotle is so far wrong in nearly all his conclusions that they can, it may with justice be said, have little more than a passing antiquarian interest (cid:125) The main interest of the work is to be found not so much in any particular conclusions which Aristotle reaches, as in the fact that all his conclu- sions are so far wrong and in his lack of a method which could lead him to right ones. In this he is typical of Greek science.1 This passage comes from the introduction to H.D.P. Lee’s 1952 translation of the Meteorologica in the Loeb Classical Library, and was allowed to stand in the second edition of 1962. That such an eminent scholar of this text could be so disparaging about it might give us pause before delving into it, let alone into an ancient commentary on it. Indeed, one might be doubly wary, since the authenticity of Book 4, the work we are con- cerned with here, has been called into question. In the following essays I hope to convince the reader that Meteor. 4 is both genuine and of great, indeed central, interest to one concerned with Aristotelian natural philosophy and metaphysics. Estab- lishing the importance of Meteor. 4 itself will at the same time establish the interest of ancient commentaries on it. Further sections will concentrate on what is of most interest within Alexander’s commentary. The overt positivism of Lee’s comments points to his particu- lar prejudice, a disproportionate concern with the correctness of the scientific doctrines found in the Meteorologica. Even 1. H.D.P. Lee (trans.), Aristotle, Meteorologica, Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, Mass. 1952 (second edition, 1962), xxv-xxvi. 2 Introduction without entering into debates concerning the proper attitude to take when critically judging non-contemporary science, it is clear that the doctrines themselves, and in particular whether they are ‘true’ (itself a slippery issue), do not come close to exhausting the interest of Aristotelian scientific works. The recent explosion of interest in Aristotle’s biological works, equally full of ‘false conclusions’, and the great advances in our understanding of central concepts in Aristotle’s metaphysics and natural philosophy that such studies have engendered, should lay to rest reasoning such as Lee’s.2 Were we to discount the biological corpus for its antiquated biology, our under- standing of the rest of the corpus would be substantially impoverished. I hope to show that Meteor. 4 has the same importance as works from the biological corpus are now recognised to have. Indeed, I shall attempt to establish a rather close link between Meteor. 4 and the biological corpus. But more importantly, I shall argue that in Meteor. 4 Aristotle modifies, in radical ways, doctrines central to his physics. In particular, I will show how Aristotle’s views concerning form, matter and the elements undergo a radical transformation in Meteor. 4, and that this work should therefore be considered a fundamental text in the Aristotelian corpus. Such claims for the importance of Meteor. 4, and in particular for its revisionary nature, bring the issue of authenticity to the fore. Perhaps Meteor. 4 is so revisionary precisely because it is not by Aristotle. Therefore I will start by discussing the ques- tion of authenticity. In a sense all the sections that follow are an extended argument for the work’s authenticity, since they show just how interrelated it is with many other Aristotelian texts of unquestioned pedigree. I will then discuss the doctrines most central to the work, with the aim of establishing precisely its innovative nature. Often my notes to the translation will refer to this introduction. 2. Contrast Lee’s view with that of G.E.L. Lloyd, who recognises the importance of Meteor. 4, telling us that in it we ‘have, for the first time in Greek science, an attempt to discuss a quite wide range of physical changes and phenomena’ (Magic, Myth and Experience, 209). Introduction 3 1. The authenticity of Meteor. 4, and the question of pores The debate concerning the authenticity of Meteor. 4 (unques- tioned until the turn of this century), has as its locus classicus I. Hammer-Jensen’s 1915 paper ‘Das sogenannte IV. Buch der Meteorologie’,3 where it is argued that Meteor. 4 is spurious, in fact having Strato as its author. Ross and Jaeger agree with her as to the spuriousness of the work, while refusing to attribute it to a particular author.4 Its authenticity was then defended by H.D.P. Lee and I. Düring,5 but in 1961 it was again questioned by H.B. Gottschalk, who claimed that it is by Theophrastus, or at least extracted from a work of his.6 The debate seems to come to a close in 1983, with D. Furley’s rebuttal of Gottschalk,7 arguing that Aristotle is, after all, the author of Meteor. 4. One essential person has been left out of this debate, and that is Coutant. Gottschalk mentions him as someone who has defended the authenticity of the text, but he acknowledges in a footnote that he has ‘not been able to see this book’.8 Furley mentions Coutant in one footnote, yet chose not to mention any of his arguments in favour of authenticity, although they are quite congenial to those that Furley himself produces.9 In what follows I will sketch the main strands of the debate. I am in agreement with many of the arguments put forth by Coutant and Furley, and in the rest of the Introduction I will build upon some suggestions made by both. Jensen’s claim that Meteor. 4 is by Strato can be rebutted on chronological grounds. As Coutant notes, Aristotle at least saw 3. In Hermes 50, 113-36. 4. Jaeger, Aristoteles, 412f.; Ross, Aristotle, 11. 5. Lee, op. cit., xiii-xxi; Düring, Aristotle’s Chemical Treatise Meteorologica Bk IV, Goteburg 1944. 6. H.B. Gottschalk, ‘The Authorship of Meteorologica, Bk IV’, Classical Quarterly N.S. xi, 1961, 67-78. Lee, in the second edition of his Loeb of the Meteor., is unconvinced by Gottschalk’s arguments. 7. ‘The Mechanics of Meteorologica IV’, 148 of reprint in Cosmic Problems. 8. Gottschalk, op. cit., 67, n. 4. 9. For instance, Furley summarises approvingly Gottschalk’s arguments against Jensen’s thesis that Strato is the author of Meteor. 4, while the very same arguments are found much earlier in Coutant. See Furley, op. cit., 132, and Coutant, op. cit., 9.

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