Aristotle Select Fragments
Aristotle Select Fragments
Aristotle Select Fragments
THE
WORKS OF ARISTOTLE
TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH
UNDER THE EDITORSHIP
OF
VOLUME
XII
SELECT FRAGMENTS
OXFORD
AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
i95 2
Oxford University
PREFACE
It was suggested to me many years ago by Prof. A. E. Taylor
that a translation of some of the fragments of Aristotle's lost
works would be a useful addition to the Oxford Translation
of the extant works. I then thought that I had enough on
my hands without this addition. In the interval, however,
interest in the fragments has been quickened by the pioneer
work
and
Oxford Translation
make any
of Aristotle.
W.
D. R.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CONTENTS
AUTHORS QUOTED
ROSE'S
NUMBERING OF FRAGMENTS
150
155
BIBLIOGRAPHY
156
INDEX
l6l
INTRODUCTION
The oldest lists of Aristotle's works that have come down to
us from antiquity are those written by Diogenes Laertius, in
the third century a.d., and by Hesychius, probably in the
1
fifth. A strong case has been made out by E. Howald for the
view that both lists rest on the good authority of Hermippus
(about 200 B.C.).
Diogenes'
begins as follows:
list
On
On
On
4 books
3
Poets, 3 books
4
Philosophy, 3 books
5
Politicus, 2 books
Justice,
On
Rhetoric, or Gryllus, 1
book 6
book
book
Menexenus, 1 book
Eroticus, 1 book
7
Symposium, 1 book
On Wealth, 1 book
Protrepticus, 1 book
On Soul, 8 1 book
On Prayer, 1 book
On Good Birth, 9 1 book
Nerinthns,
Sophistes, 1
to
Diogenes Laertius,
book
work was
also
known
as
the work
8
We
p. 21
is
doubtful,
INTRODUCTION
viii
On
book
Pleasure, i
Alexander, or
On
Colonists,
book
On Kingship, i book
On Education, i book.
The
goes on to
list
and so on.
It is clear that the first nineteen works in Diogenes' list
formed for him a separate group, arranged according to the
number of books each work contained, and that from it he
went on to a second group similarly arranged. The same
nineteen works appear at the beginning of Hesychius' list,
except that the Alexander appears a little later and its place
is taken by the Economicus.
Some of these works are known to have been dialogues.
The works On Poets, On Philosophy, and On Soul (or Eudemus)
are explicitly so described by ancient authors. 2 The form of
Politicus fr. 1, Eudemus fr. 6, and On Good Birth frs. 1, 2, 4
shows that these were dialogues. Themistius' reference to
'the Corinthian dialogue' 3 is usually taken to refer to the
The Historia Augusta says that Cicero's Hortenwas modelled on the Protrepticus* and as the Hortensius
was a dialogue 5 the Protrepticus was probably one too. There
is thus good evidence that several of the nineteen works that
stand at the head of Diogenes' and Hesychius' lists were
Nerinthus.
sius
59, 61
and Athenaeus,
infra,
p.
61
infra,
confirm
its
genuineness.
probable.
See p. 24 infra.
infra.
4
See p. 27 infra.
INTRODUCTION
It
ix
of treatises
i.
2.
3. Politicus,
Before
it is
On Education.
On Poets, On Philosophy, On
we make any
necessary to
totle's life.
From
have
Justice.
Lyceum, in Athens.
We must make one alteration in our tentative grouping.
The work Alexander, or On Colonists, is, as Jaeger has pointed
out, suitable only to the time at which Alexander was engaged in setting up colonies in Asia, from (say) 331 B.C.
onwards, while the work On Kingship (also addressed to
Alexander) can most suitably be dated at or before Alexander's succession to the throne in 336. Thus the work Alexander
must be removed from the first group, and placed later than
On Kingship
in the
second group.
The
works
it is
See p. 7 infra.
for it
INTRODUCTION
is right.
The work On Philosophy, in which Aristotle
vigorously attacked Plato's theory of Ideas, must have been
written after Plato's death and Aristotle's withdrawal from
have survived to our day, and the very many lost works
other than dialogues that are named in the ancient lists of
his works.
There
is
an important point
of
form
in
which some
of
Aristotle's dialogues differed from Plato's. Plato never appears as a speaker in any of his dialogues. Cicero in one
2
passage speaks of 'the Aristotelian plan, in which the parts
De
As he had
Euthydemus.
4
Q-
Fr
for the
z
Eudemus
in the
3- 5- J P-
68
infra.
Fam.
1. 9.
fr. 2,
p. 17 infra.
23, p. 3 infra.
INTRODUCTION
xi
in person.
In his Aristoteles
of the fragments
the Alexander
among the dialogues (for him, the pseudoAristotelian dialogues), but in his Teubner edition he places
these works partly among the speeches and partly among the
in the latter case his ground seems to have been the
occurrence of the phrase tGsv amearahcoroiv (' the senders ') in
an extract from Strabo. 2 In this he was mistaken. Diogenes
expressly distinguishes these two works, which come in the
first section of his list of Aristotle's works, from the four
volumes of letters to Alexander, which come near the end of
the list and Hesychius places the two works near the beginning of his list, but the letters to Alexander among the
letters
p. 67 injra.
p. 65 injra.
p. 65 injra.
p. 65 injra.
INTRODUCTION
xii
work On Philosophy, formed Aristotle's earliest expresbreakaway from the Platonic system. Wilpert has
been able to show that much more of On the Good and On
the
sion of his
The ransacking
On
Philosophy.
In our numbering of the fragments, 'R2 refers to Rose's
to Walzer's
Berlin edition, R 3 to his Leipzig edition,
to
Rose's
refers
R
edition. In the notes on readings,
Leipzig
'
'
'
'
'
edition.
'
'
DIALOGUES
TESTIMONIA
Arist. Ph. i94 a 35~36: see p. 99 infra.
Arist.
see p. 83 infra.
Arist. Poet. I454 b i5-i8. All these rules one must keep in
mind throughout, and further, those also for such points of
stage-effect as directly depend on the art of the poet, since
no one knows
their precepts
who wish
him
all
as to
But
in the Aristotelian
645.29
i.e.
in
the dialogue
On Pods.
FRAGMENTS
Cic. Brut. 31. 120-1. For this reason I approve all the more
of your judgement, Brutus, in following the Academic school,
in
than Theophrastus ?
3. The obscurity of Aristotle's Topics has reand the great rhetorician replied, I fancy, that
he did not know the works of Aristotle. I have, indeed, been
Cic. Top.
pelled
you
1.
;
very little surprised that a rhetorician did not know a philosopher who is unknown to philosophers themselves, all but
a very few; for which they are the less to be pardoned
because they ought to have been attracted not only by the
things he has said and discovered, but also by the incredible
fluency
and charm
of his style.
one
and
DIALOGUES
in
my
discussion or dialogue
You know
On
the Orator.
the style of
my dialogues.
...
have completed
Cic. Q. Fr. 3. 5. 1
in this
manner
five
books On Ends.
see p. 68 infra.
works.
Dio Chr.
Or. 53.
1.
whom they
honouring him.
FRAGMENTS
Plu.
or.
447 f-448
a.
Why
is it
pleasure,
some
of their former
part remains calm and does not concern itself, so that reason
willingly turns towards the truth when it appears, and
abandons what is untrue.
With regard to the Ideas, about which Arischides Plato, misrepresenting them completely and
sophy so
;
far
it.
Diog. Oen. fr. 4, col. 1. 7-col. 2. 8. When they say that things
cannot be apprehended, what else are they saying than that
we ought not to study nature who will choose to look for
what he can never find? Aristotle and the members of his
school say nothing can be known, since owing to the mere
speed of their fluxion things escape our apprehension.
;
Eus. P.E.
opinions held about them. This Cephisodorus was not fighting the person he was attacking, but was fighting the person
he did not wish to attack.
1
i.e.
DIALOGUES
Them.
meant
Or.
c.
319
and translucent
is
Even
who wrote
dialogues, Aristotle
with the
facts,
Amm.
in Cat.
6.
25-27. 4.
evidently expressed
acroamatic works he
pressed, and
his
is,
full of questions,
14. Of the general works, some are hypothose which the philosopher put together to
memory and with a view to submitting them to
Simp, in Cat.
mnematic,
aid his
and
4.
viz.
own
1
19-20. Alexander says these works have
been hastily put together and do not aim at one end; for
which reason, and to distinguish them from these, he says
the others are called systematic. Of these some are in dialogue
further testing.
own
person.
De
discussions Aristotle
many,
the more
Aristotle
Eli as in Cat. 114. 15. In some of his systematic works Aristotle speaks in his own person (and these are also called
1
i.e.
of Aphrodisias.
FRAGMENTS
Ibid.
124.
dialogues,
i.e.
GRYLLUS,
or
i (r 2
ON RHETORIC
3
57 R 68)
>
2 (R 2 58,
R 3 69)
Quint.
Inst. 2. 17. 1.
sheer love of inquiry worked out in the Gryllus some arguments which show his usual subtlety. But he also wrote three
books on the art of rhetoric, and in the first of them admits
that rhetoric is not merely an art; he assigned to it an
dialectic.
3
2
3 (r 133, r 139)
Ibid. 3.
1.
13.
Isocrates
although
question
who
i.e.
Xenophon.
SYMPOSIUM
TESTIMONIA
Plu. Mor. 612 d-e. To forget entirely what has been said
and done in wine seems not only to conflict with the reputed
tendency of the table to promote friendliness, but also to
Plato,
of the
wine-table.
Macrob.
Sat.
7.
3.
23.
propound or yourselves to resolve questions suitable to the occasion. This kind of thing the ancients
were so far from thinking ridiculous that both Aristotle
either to
I 1 (R 2 175,
R 3 I00)
omit even
this small thing, that we ought to tend and wash our poor
bodies before going to a meal. At least he says of Odysseus
that before the feast at the Phaeacian court 'The house2
keeper straightway bade him bathe'. And of Telemachus'
the
polished baths and
companions he says, 'They went to
3
Aristotle
as
bathed'. For it was unbecoming,
says, to go to
a man of
dust
sweat
and
with
the drinking-party covered
or
unwashed
be
not
taste, as Heraclitus says, should
slovenly
Ath. 178
e-f.
Homer, exact
or delight in mire.
1
is
R 3 's
fr.
99
is
right, there is
Symposium.
2
3
Od.
Od.
8.
449
4. 48.
no reason
SYMPOSIUM
2 (r 2
r 3 ioi)
08,
we
'
on occasions of
up our
garlands.
2
3
3 (R 98, R 102)
it is
the taking of
wise
1
4
5
man
II. 1.
get drunk
'
'
470.
in
R.
is
Getting drunk
Od.
8. 170.
'
Od.
3. 420, etc.
99. 13 i$epewqa(ofiev,
FRAGMENTS
io
in
one
it is
when
silly
in wine.
said the wise man would neither drink too much strong
drink nor become maudlin. ... 35. 144. The others declared
that being in wine was becoming even to a good man, while
being maudlin was not. ... 38. 154. Unmixed drink the
ancients called not only wine but also liquor; at all events
the name is often used in poetry, so that if synonyms ('wine'
and 'liquor') are names for a single thing, words derived
'
'
from them (' being in wine and being in liquor ') will differ
155. If the good man is to be in wine, he
only in sound
will also get drunk.
156. We have mentioned one argument to show that the wise man will get drunk the second
is as follows.
39. 160. My purpose has been to show that
people do not now take strong drink in the way the ancients
161. Our fathers began every good work with sacred
did.
rites, thinking that so the result would be most propitious,
because they had begun with prayer and sacrifice and even
if the need for action was urgent, still they waited, thinking
that more haste is sometimes less speed. Speed without fore1
that even 2 the enjoyment and use of wine needs much care,
3
they did not take strong drink to their fill nor at all times,
and
fitting
offered sacrifices
'
Reading
Reading
Reading
in
in
in
R.
R.
R.
17,
SYMPOSIUM
ii
they say getting drunk gets its name, because it was the
custom of our forefathers to take wine after sacrifice. To
whom, then, could the manner we have described of using
2
strong drink be more fitting than to wise men, to whom the
sacrifice that precedes the drinking is also fitting ? For one
1
might almost say that no bad man really performs the sacred
rites, even if without cessation he brings ten thousand oxen
to the altar every day. For the most necessary sacrifice, his
mind, is blemished, and it is not lawful for blemished persons
to touch the altar. This is the second argument. ... 40. 165-6.
The third depends 3 on a different guess at the etymology.
Some people think that drunkenness is so called not only
because it is achie' xl after sacrifice, but also because it
causes relaxation ot soul. 4 Now when the reasoning of the
foolish is relaxed, tho.. leads to the strengthening of many
errors, but when that of the wise is relaxed, it leads to the
b.
3
2
4 (R 99, R I03)
in his book on
(Keller). Aristotle
he ate many
says that Andron of Argos, though
life without
his
foods, remained all through
Apollon. Mirab. 25
drunkenness
salty
thirst
and dry
and without
Ammon
drink.
but
through the desert, eating dry barley-groats
taking no liquid.
Ath. 44
Cf.
1.
d,
Diog. Laert.
11. 81,
9.
84.
1
fiedveiv
2
3
fieTa-\-dveiv
land.
4
fiedri-fiedeois.
5
Reading
in
R.
FRAGMENTS
12
3
2
5 (r ioo, r 104)
in Aristoph.
Cf. Schol.
Pacem
1.
772.
6 (r 2 2i8, r 3 io5)
Ps.-Jul. Ep. 391 b-c. The fig is not only pleasant to the
but also better for the digestion. It is so useful to mankind that Aristotle even calls it an antidote to every poison,
taste,
man
would
give.
3
2
7 (r ioi, r io6)
2
3
4
5
SYMPOSIUM
13
to the
liquors fall in all sorts of directions
to the right, on their faces, on their backs only those
by other
Ath. 34
fall
backwards and
left,
who
lie
on
b.
8 (r 2 102,
R 3 107)
with wine-plant.'
3
2
9 (R 103, R 108)
10 (R 2 104, R 3 109)
Ath. 429
pints
f.
mixed
forty men.
The cup
will,
called
FRAGMENTS
i4
II (R 2 IO5-6,
R 3 IIO-Il)
by cooling down
intercourse,
Cf. ibid.
496
their spirits.'
f.
12
Plu. Mor. 651 f-652 a. 'I want to learn whence came our
notion that wine is cold.' 'You think', said I, 'that that is
Whose is it, then ? he said. 'Well, I remember,'
our view ?
on a
said I, 'happening not lately but quite a while ago
'
'
'
by
Aristotle.'
SOPHISTES
i (r 2 54,
Diog. Laert.
Empedocles
8. 2.
first
Cf. ibid. 9. 5.
r 3 65)
25
(4),
1.
6-7.
2 (R 2 55, R 3 66)
Diog. Laert. 8. 2. 63 (9). Aristotle, too, says that Empedocles
was free-minded and averse to all rule, since he declined the
kingship which was offered him (as Xanthus says in his
account of him) no doubt because he preferred the simple
life.
3 (R 56,
R 3 67)
Diog. Laert. 9. 8. 54 (5). The first of his books that Protagoras read in public was that about the gods. ... He read it
at Athens, in the house of Euripides, or, as some say, in that
of Heraclides, while others say it was in the Lyceum; his
pupil Archagoras the son of Theodotus read it for him. He
was accused by Pythodorus son of Polyzelus, one of the Four
Hundred though Aristotle says his accuser was Euathlus.
;
EUDEMUS,
i (r 2 32,
or
ON SOUL
r 3 37,
i)
Cic. Div. ad Brut. i. 25. 53. What ? Is the great, the almost
divine, intellect of Aristotle in error, or does he wish others
to fall into error, when he writes that his friend Eudemus
his
life.
that he
whom
and
2 (r 2 33, R 3 38,
Them,
in
De An.
106. 29-107. 5.
W2)
EUDEMUS,
soul's likeness to
or
ON SOUL
17
w 3)
Elias in
it
make
instinctively
r 3 40,
(r 34,
W4)
argument.
2
5 (r 35,
r 3 4I,
W5)
Procl. in Remp.
1
i.e.
scientific
his school.
2
Reading
645.29
in
R.
47.
FRAGMENTS
18
yonder forgets the sights it saw there, but on going from here
remembers yonder its experiences here. We must accept the
argument for he himself says that on their journey from
health to disease some people forget even the letters they
had learned, but that no one ever has this experience when
passing from disease to health; and that life without the
1
6 (r 2 40, r 3 44,
it.
w 6)
Plu. Mor. 115 b-e. Many wise men, as Crantor says, not only
recently but long ago have bewailed the human lot, thinking
life a punishment, and merely to be born a man the greatest
of misfortunes. Aristotle says that even Silenus revealed this
to Midas when caught by him. But it is better to record the
philosopher's very words. He says this in the work called
or On the Soul: 'Wherefore, best and most blessed
of all men, not only 3 do we think the dead happy and blessed,
Endemus
men
And he
of
for
many
years.'
said in answer:
2
l,fjv
Reading
Reading
in
yap eVei
with Kroll.
Omitting in R.
fialvtiv,
3
4
5
EUDEMUS,
or
ON SOUL
19
and women not to be born), but the next best, and the best
achievable for men, 2 is, having been born, to die as soon as
3
may be." It is clear that by this he meant that the time
spent in death
is
life.'
W7)
22. Aristotle,
opinion
itself,
them
led
to
it.
2
3
4
5
6
7
.
Reading
Reading
Reading
Reading
Reading
Reading
Reading
in
in
in
in
in
in
in
FRAGMENTS
20
as
ment changes
ment
ment
of the tissues,
organs.
If,
ugliness,
soul
is
He must mean
147. 6-10.
'
It is
This
i.e.
in the
De
Anirna.
EUDEMUS,
Simp, in
De An.
53. 1-4.
discussion Aristotle
By
ON SOUL
or
21
means those
Them, in De An. 24. 13. Another opinion about the soul has
been handed down, which is as plausible as any, and has
rendered account of itself and been examined both in public
and in private discussions. Some people say soul is an attunement for attunement is a mixture and combination of con;
more and
harmony, so long as it is
preserved, does not admit disharmony, but soul admits
wickedness; if the disharmony of the body is disease, ugliness, or weakness, the harmony of the body must be beauty,
health, and strength, not soul all these things have been
said by the philosophers elsewhere but what Aristotle says
now is this. ... 25. 23-25. That those who say the soul is
a harmony would seem to be neither very near to nor very
far from the truth is clear, then, both from what Aristotle
has said now and from what he has said elsewhere.
of
less,
Olymp. in Phd.
obvious. Again,
if
Eudemus.
FRAGMENTS
22
Sophon. in De An. 25. 4-8. There has been handed down yet
another opinion about the soul, which many people find
plausible, as
much so
as
It has,
as well.
Some say
the soul
is
8 (R 2 42,
a harmony.
R3
46,
8)
and the
divisible,
3
2
9 (R 38, R 43)
life
except by breathing.
10
Plu. Mor. 382 d-e. The knowledge of that which is knowable,
pure, and simple, flashing like lightning through the soul,
EUDEMUS,
grants
it
at times to touch
or
and
ON SOUL
see.
This
is
23
why
Plato and
Aristotle call this part of philosophy a mystic vision, inasmuch as those who forsake these confused and various objects
II
al-KindI, cod. Taimuriyye Falsafa 55. Aristotle tells of the
Greek king whose soul was caught up in ecstasy, and who
for many days remained neither alive nor dead. When he
came to himself, he told the bystanders of various things in
the invisible world, and related what he had seen souls,
forms, and angels he gave the proofs of this by foretelling
to all his acquaintances how long each of them would live.
All he had said was put to the proof, and no one exceeded
the span of life that he had assigned. He prophesied, too, that
after a year a chasm would open in the country of Elis, and
after two years a flood would occur in another place and
everything happened as he had said. Aristotle asserts that
the reason of this was that his soul had acquired this knowledge just because it had been near to leaving his body and
had been in a certain way separated from it, and so had seen
what it had seen. How much greater marvels of the upper
world of the kingdom would it have seen, then, if it had
body
al-Kindi, cod.
the soul that
Aya
is
it
Sofia 4832,
fol.
manifested in bodies.
12
Serv. in Aen. 6. 448. 'Caeneus, now a woman.' Caenis was
a girl who won from Neptune as the price of her shame a
change
Virgil refers to the Platonic or Aristotelian
view that souls often by metempsychosis change their sex.
of sex.
NERINTHUS
i
Them.
(R
53, R3 64)
my
studies or
and
EROTICUS
1 (R 2 91,
Ath. 564
of the
R3
96)
b. Aristotle
body
dwells.
2 (R 2 92,
R 3 97)
Plu. Pel. 18. 4. It is said also that Iolaus, who was the
beloved of Hercules, shares in the contests of the Thebans
and throws the spear with them. Aristotle says that even in
his time lovers and their beloved still pledged their troth on
the tomb of Iolaus.
Cf.
When the young man said "Yes", greeted him lovingly, and
nodded consent, Cleomachus, emboldened by this, called the
best of the Thessalians together round him, made a brilliant
charge, and fell on the enemy with such vigour as to throw
the cavalry into confusion and rout them. When as a result
1
R 8 's fr. 95 is omitted, because iv hevrepa) epatTiK&v seems to refer not to
the Eroticus, which both Diogenes Laertius and Hesychius describe as having
one book, but to the deoeis epuiTtKal, which they both describe as having
four books.
FRAGMENTS
26
killed.
is
said in a
book
certain
assembled
While I was standing on a hill I saw a 3'outh, who stood on
a terrace roof and recited a poem, the meaning of which was
'
Whoever
there
Issos:
love.'
is
And
of
is
become mature
PROTREPTICUS
TESTIMONIA
Hist.
Aug.
2.
97.
in his Hortensius,
which
Nonius
if
you
Mart. Cap.
sophize
is
1 (R 2 47, R3 50,
we ought
to philo-
I)
Stob. 4. 32. 21. From Teles' Epitome. Zeno said that Crates,
as he sat in a shoemaker's workshop, read aloud the Protrepticus, which Aristotle had written to Themison king of
Cyprus, saying that no one had greater advantages for becoming a philosopher he had great wealth, so that he could
;
with his stitching, and Crates said: 'I think, Philiscus, that
I shall inscribe a
Protrepticus to you for I see you have more
for
the
advantages
study of philosophy than were his for
;
whom
Aristotle wrote.'
2 (R2 50, R3 51,
w 2)
149. 9-17. There are cases where, whichever interpretation we adopt, we can on the basis of it refute
the proposition proposed. Suppose someone said we ought
not to pursue philosophy. Then, since even to inquire whether
we ought
in
Reading
in
R.
56. 21
17
<L,
with Diels.
FRAGMENTS
28
Cf. Schol. in
An.
f.
263
a,
and Olymp.
Elias in Porph.
we ought
exist,
we ought
to philoso-
Reading
Reading
in
in
R.
R.
57. 4 tovtov,
with Wallies.
r)
tKaripov a\X'
with Wallies.
3
Omitting romiarw
in
R.
57. 21,
with Busse.
rj
eV rivos
rj
e/c
tivojv,
PROTREPTICUS
29
Stob.
w 3)
3. 3. 25.
of these
is
in
'
'
'.
4 (W
Iambl. Protr.
furnished for
1
b. 37. 3-22.
life
Reading in R.
with Wilamowitz.
The
4)
things
dewpovvras arvx^av
<f>evyeu>
<f .Mil
A./
Kal vo(iiCeiv,
FRAGMENTS
30
as tools,
of
them
is
dangerous
the contrary effect, for those who do not use them fittingly.
We ought therefore to desire knowledge to acquire it and
to use it aright if we are to attain all these good results. We
If, then, only the science that has correctness of judgement, that which uses reason, that which envisages good as
a whole which is philosophy can use and commend all
good.
5 (R3 52,
W 5)
we ought
itself
in
PROTREPTICUS
31
seen from
what
difference
them capable
any
theoretical explanations know nothing that is useful to mankind, while those who have what these others call the
navigational sciences can foretell for us storms, winds, and
many
Iambl. Protr. 6
FRAGMENTS
32
expedient, and also those that deal with nature and the rest
it is easy to show. The prior is always more knowable than the posterior, and that which is naturally better
more knowable than that which is worse. For knowledge is
of reality,
do not
among
first
prin-
Reading
Reading
with Wilpert.
in
R.
arise
60. 22 eortv
in R. 61.
PROTREPTICUS
of all things will be clear
from what
33
follows.
own
the brave
choose above
We
we think, the acquisition and use of wisdom, and wisdom is among the greatest goods; and if in pursuit of gain
we run many risks by sailing to the pillars of Hercules, we
as
is,
should not
me
all
men
feel at
home
in philosophy
it,
leaving
all
is
their
no small
645.29
Reading
Reading
in
in
R.
R.
with Pistelli.
with Pistelli.
63. 6 rrpooeBpeta,
FRAGMENTS
34
Thus
hold of
it.
tasted
its delights.
6 (W6)
Iambl. Protr. 7
and
its
nature
is
to be ruled. It
Reading
in
R.
63. 8 yvwoecos,
PROTREPTICUS
thought
for such
is
that which
35
commands and
forbids,
and
for
either alone or
the best of
them is always
its
is
the work
it
Now
than
all
of them,
FRAGMENTS
36
For
if
7 (w 7)
25-45. 3 Pistelli). Further, if we love sight
that
is sufficient evidence that all men love
sake,
and
knowing most of all. Again, if we love one
thinking
because
some property attends on it, clearly we shall
thing
Iambl. Protr. 7
for its
(43.
own
being true
of being, 2
and
in so far as
it is,
is
if
power
of this that
life
has
its
distinctive character
if
this is
PROTREPTICUS
37
sense-perception one kind the power of sight is distinguished by being the clearest, and it is for this reason that
we prefer it to the other senses; but every sense acquires
knowledge by means of the body, as hearing perceives sound
by means of the ears. Therefore if life is worthy of choice
for the sake of perception, and perception is a kind of
knowing, and we choose it because the soul can come to
know by means
of
it,
knowledge.
8 (R 2
l,
R 3 53,
w8)
philosophers
Iambl. Comm. Math. 26 (83. 6-22 Festa). The study of precision with regard to the truth is admittedly the youngest
of all pursuits. For after the catastrophe of the flood men
FRAGMENTS
38
dence
for that
which
is
later in
coming to be
is
prior in
9 (R 55>
w 9)
Now
wisdom and
;
of
all
men,
and can
a child throughout his life. For this reason too, though sleep
is a
very pleasant thing, it is not a thing to choose even if
R. 64. 12 ttXciotov, with Festa.
R. 65. 7 8iu>Keiv for t,a>eLv, with Diels.
3
in R. 65. 13-14 ov 81' erepov n, with the MSS.
4
in R. 65. 18-19 aiodavovrai rov <j>povetv xal yeveoOcu Swavrai
tovtov tov Trpdy^aros, ovbev oiovrai, with the MSS.
1
Reading
Reading
Reading
Reading
in
in
PROTREPTICUS
39
we suppose
and a
is
an image
lie.
why we
living
10 a (R 2 49, r3 59,
10
a)
Iambl. Protr. 8 (47. 5-21 Pistelli). One might know this even
from the following facts, if one viewed human life in a clear
light. For one will find that all the things men think great
are mere scene-painting whence it is rightly said that man
;
Reading
Reading
MSS.
FRAGMENTS
40
things.
What
is
there
among human
things that
is
long-lived
and the
or lasting
owing
shortness of our life that even this appears great.
?
It is
Boeth. Consol.
who
those
by which they
passing more
As
are ruled.
how
for beauty,
swift
is
its
beautiful.
fire of
a tertian
fever.
Cic. Titsc.
What
1.
39. 94.
possession of
man
is
lasting
called old?
Because we have
nothing more, we call this lasting all these things are called
long or short according to the proportion of each that is
given to each of us. By the river Hypanis, which flows into
;
Reading
Reading
PROTREPTICUS
41
creatures.
Sen. Brev.
things
is
unsuitable to a wise
most
has indulged the animals so much that they live for five
of our generations, while man, born to so many and such
great achievements, has so much nearer a limit fixed for him.
10 b (r 2 36, R 3 60,
10
b)
Iamb. Protr. 8
(47.
and that we
punishment
of
Aug.
all
the sensitive
How much
members
truth than yours were the views about the generation of men
held by those whom Cicero, as though led and compelled by
evidence of the facts, commemorates in the last
the
very
the many
part of the dialogue Hortensius After mentioning
facts we see and lament with regard to the vanity and the
of men, he says: 'From which errors and cares
!
unhappiness
of
human
life
it
results that
Reading
in
R.
71. 16 injelicitale,
with Migne.
FRAGMENTS
42
of sacred rites
sins
of the truth,
with our bodies, are like the living joined with the dead.
Cf.
10
Iambl. Protr. 8
i. 7. 4.
(R 48,
(48.
9-21
R3
61,
Pistelli).
w 10 c)
Mankind has nothing
'
of
is
action.
Reading
in
R.
71. 25 aptissime,
PROTREPTICUS
'
To us
hope
that
perishable,
43
if,
II (w II)
(49. 3-52. 16 Pistelli). Of things that come
some come from thought and art, e.g. a house or
a ship (for the cause of both of these is a certain art and
process of thought), while others come into being through
no art, but by nature; nature is the cause of animals and
plants, and all such things come into being according to
nature. But some things, also, come into being as a result of
chance for of most of the things that come into being neither
by art nor by nature nor of necessity, we say that they come
into being by chance Now of the things that come into being
by chance none comes into being for the sake of anything,
nor have they an end but in the case of things that come
into being by art there is an end and an object of purpose
Iambl. Protr. 9
into being
(for he who possesses the art will tell you the reason why he
wrote, and for what purpose he did so), and this is better
than that which comes into being for its sake. I speak of the
things of which art is the cause by its own nature and not by
accident for we should describe the art of medicine as properly the art of health and not of disease, and architecture
;
as the art of
of pulling
them down.
FRAGMENTS
44
end everything that comes into being rightly. Now that which
comes into being beautifully comes into being rightly; and
everything that comes into being or has come into being
according to nature comes into or has come into being
beautifully, since that which is contrary to nature is bad and
contrary to that which is according to nature natural coming
into being, 2 therefore, is for an end. This one can see from
any one of our parts if you were to consider the eyelid, you
would see that it has come into being not at random but to
aid the eyes
to give them rest and to ward off things that
are falling on to them. Therefore that for the sake of which
something has come into being is the same as that for which
if it was right that a ship
it ought to have come into being
1
Omitting n-qv.
Reading to> Kara
<f>vaiv
ivavrtov
ij
ovv Kara
<f>vaiv
yeveois,
with \
itelli.
PROTREPTICUS
45
all animals belong to the class of things that have come into
1
being by nature, or the best and most honourable of them
do for it makes no difference if someone thinks most animals
;
'
',
when
of generation
we note
better
exercise
and to
it
learn,
we
According
was
man
every
to observe.
if
Reading
in
twv
<f>voct.
yeyev7//ueVcoi',
46
FRAGMENTS
and
12 (R 3 58,
Aug. Trin.
W 12)
when we depart 2
this
Hortensius argues
were permitted to
life,
live for ever, as the fables say, in the islands of the blest,
We
Reading
Reading
avru>.
in
R.
68. 3
MSS.
PROTREPTICUS
47
'
'
'
we should take
13 (w 13)
Iambl. Protr. 10
wisdom
(54.
also provides us
Reading after
Kaya96v ovhe
ei'Sdri
KaXov
navTos
FRAGMENTS
48
human
life,
For as
all skilful
one
well-
far more.
ill-being of the state need philosophy
in the mechanical arts the best instruments have been
As
what
all
is just,
others, so the
best.
Now
this
do
sophy and learned the truth. And in the other arts men
not take their tools and their most accurate calculations
from the originals themselves and so attain something
at
approaching to knowledge they take them from copies
their
second or third hand or at a distant remove, and base
the
reasonings on experience. The philosopher alone copies
exact originals he is a spectator of them and not of copies.
;
As, then, he is not a good builder who does not use a straight
rule or any other such instrument but compares his own
down
building with others, so, presumably, if one either lays
to
and
laws for cities or does actions of his own, looking
of
whether
copying other actions or human constitutions,
a
not
is
good
Sparta or of Crete or of any other state, he
what is not
lawgiver nor a virtuous man for an imitation of
what is not
good cannot be good, nor can an imitation of
durable
and
divine and durable in its nature be immortal
;
is
The text
Reading dXXa
is
8rj\ov
on
kt\.,
with
Yitelli.
is
clear.
PROTREPTICUS
49
divine,
gain as a result of
it all
the goods
we
possess.
14 (W 14)
Iamb. Protr. 11 (56. 13-59. I ^ Pistelli) That those who have
chosen the life according to reason also enjoy life most will
be clear from the following argument. The word 'live' seems
to be used in two senses, one implying a potentiality, the
other an actuality; for we describe as 'seeing' both those
animals which have sight and are born capable of seeing,
even if they happen to have their eyes shut, and those which
.
the possession of the faculty of knowledge. If, then, we distinguish life from non-life by the possession of perception,
and 'perception' has two meanings, meaning properly the
645.29
<f>afxev
FRAGMENTS
50
we
describe
'
'
is
prior; e.g.
4
higher degree, since the natural purpose and the natural
manner belong to the man who uses the thing well and
2
3
Placing the
full
PROTREPTICUS
51
highest degree, and that this is the man who thinks and
theorizes according to the most precise knowledge and it is
then and to these men that living completely must be
;
to
those
who
capacity to think.
true being, it
Now
ascribed
its
is
who have
the
we
chief of all
life
is
and enjoyment,
sophers, or to
therefore, belong in truth only to philoof all. For the activity of our truest
them most
1
Reading on
na\t.cna,
with Walzer.
FRAGMENTS
52
is
receives, this
is
Thus even
men
15 (w 15)
Iambl. Protr. 12
(59.
19-60. 15 Pistelli). If
we ought
to
draw
which we have well-being are such because they are necespleasant. Now we define welleither
as
being
thoughtfulness (a sort of wisdom), or as virtue,
or as the extreme of enjoyment, or as all of these together. If
sary,
thoughtfulness, clearly philosophers alone will live happily if it is excellence of the soul or enjoyment, then, too, it
will belong to them alone or most of all for the highest element
it is
and thinking
in us is virtue,
is
is
most truly
I suppose
unnatural to our race, learning and in2
sight are difficult, and perception scarcely to be obtained
because of our awkward and unnatural mode of life but if
we can ever escape back to the place from which we have
because
life in it is
come,
is
it
clear that
we
shall all
easily.
16 (R 2 77, R 3 90,
Ath. 335
f.
1
enjoying the
life
W iC)
of Sardanapallus, son of
Pistelli.
PROTREPTICUS
whom
53
sillier
Anacyndaraxes,
than the name of his father would suggest.
1
'
enjoyment.'
Cf.
Strabo
14. 5. 9, p.
C 672
17
Cic. Fin.
2.
32. 106.
R3 54)
men
very
little
from a
1
child's.
77
mind
differs
FRAGMENTS
54
18 (W 18)
Cic. Tusc. 5. 30. 85.
unfolded
The
has been
case of the
Peripatetics
apart from the views of Theophrastus
and those
torture,
and
Aristotle,
1
into the tyrant's bull, with
Speusippus, and Polemon, to en-
descend with
will
Xenocrates,
it
it;
my
friend
'
beautiful
title,
most worthy
of Pythagoras, Socrates,
and
to despise
reckon as a good.
Cf. ibid. 5. 13. 39.
But
since the
happy
life is
PROTREPTICUS
55
him by
19 (R3 25,
W 19)
Censor, c. 18. 11. There is, too, a year which Aristotle calls
not the great but the greatest, which the spheres of the sun,
the moon, and the five planets complete when they return
together to the same constellation with which they were
formerly in conjunction.
Cic. N.D. 2. 20. 51-52. Most admirable are the motions of
the five stars which we wrongly call wandering stars. ... It
is
to the
same
relative positions.
it
How
is,
is
definite.
7.
20
Tert. De An. 46. How many writers have commented on
this matter 2 and asserted its existence
Artemon, Antiphon,
Reading
sc.
Aristotelis,
interpretation of dreams.
FRAGMENTS
56
Strato, Philochorus, Epicharmus, Serapion, Cratippus, DionyHermippus, the whole literature of the age!
sius Rhodius,
my
laughter
ON WEALTH
i (r 2 86, r3 56)
Plu. Mor. 527 a. Aristotle says that some men do not use
wealth, others misuse it, implying that both are wrong;
the former get no benefit or grace from what they have, the
latter derive injury and disgrace.
2 (R 2 87, R 3 89)
How
there
we pardon
and boundless
3
Philod. Pap. Here. 3, p. 41, col. 211. Which happened to
Aristotle (as Metrodorus proved) in respect of the argument,
in the work On Wealth, to show that the good man is also
a good money-maker, and the bad
man
a bad money-maker.
ON PRAYER
I (R 2 46,
R3
49,
W i)
De
Simp, in
ON GOOD BIRTH
2
T (R 82, R3 9 i)
$7(^3 A e US
Stob. 4. 29 A 24. From Aristotle On Good Birth. 'With regard
I for my part am quite at a loss to say whom
one should call well-born.'
'Your difficulty ', I said, 'is quite natural; for both among
the many and even more among the wise there is division
of opinion and obscurity of statement, particularly about
to good birth,
What
mean
is this:
Is it
R 3 92)
what
4.
size is
so
is
is
himself
'
poor
'Surely,'
he
said.
to
it is
2 sc. in
people of long
6 oofaorris Zypatpe,
3
FRAGMENTS
60
much
are well-born
recent goodness
is
see
what
'
it
consists in
praiseworthy and
on
he said.
Well then, having a good face means having the goodness
proper to a face, and having good eyes means having the
goodness proper to eyes, does it not ?
'Yes,' he said.
'But one stock is good, another bad and not good.'
Certainly,' he said.
And we say each thing is good in virtue of the excellence
'Certainly,'
'
'
'
'
is
good
in the
is
same way.'
excellence of stock.'
ON GOOD BIRTH
61
who
those
and Myrto
4
Stob.
29 c 52.
4.
From
Aristotle's
work On Good
Birth. 'It
is
recent.
claiming to disprove
birth
by
this
of
good
who
right
power
of
stock, a
man
so
men
if
the stock
is
fr.
345 Nauck.
if it is
equine,
FRAGMENTS
62
and so too with the other animals. Thus it is natural that not
rich men nor good men, but those whose ancestors have long
been rich or good, should be well-born. The argument has
the origin counts more than anything
its eye on the truth
else. Yet not even those born of good ancestors are in every
case well-born, but only those who have among their ances;
tors originators.
When
not
not
not
of
the
stock
if
but
the
if their father is well-born,
originator
is so. For it is not by his own strength that a father begets
a good man, but because he came of such a stock.'
'.
ON PLEASURE
I 1 (R 2 72,
Ath. 6
d.
Others
call
R3
83)
more
to say.
2
The Rion
or the Dnieper.
ON EDUCATION
1 (R 2 51,
R 3 62)
Aristotle's
saying
that
much
learning
brings
many
vexations.
2 (R 2 52, R 3 63)
Diog. Laert. 9. 8. 53 (4). Protagoras was the first to discover
the so-called knot on which porters carry their burdens so
'
'
way
critus,
Cf.
Ath. 354
c.
Demo-
ON KINGSHIP
TESTIMONIA
Cic. Att. 12. 40. 2. I often try a letter of advice
ing to say. I have, indeed, with me the books
and
l
;
find noth-
both
of Aris-
of
my
mind.
You
see
what
shall
redound to
Ps.-Amm. in Cat. (Ven. 1546, f. 9 b). Those works are 'personal' which were written to some individual in particular,
as for instance letters or what Aristotle wrote at the request
of Alexander of Macedon about kingship and about the right
way
of establishing colonies.
I (R 2 78, R3
646)
Marc.
a benefit on
p. 430.
men,
Alexander on kingship, instructing him how he should rule.
This had such an effect on Alexander's mind that when he
had failed to confer a benefit on anyone he said: 'Today
I have not been king; I have done good to no one.'
1
645.29
To
all
Caesar.
Reading
in
66
FRAGMENTS
2 (r 2 79,
R 3 647)
words.
ALEXANDER
i (r 2 8o,
f.
r 3 648)
gb). See p. 65 supra.
2 (R 2 81, R 3 658)
Strabo i. 4. 9, p. C 66. At the conclusion of his memorandum, Eratosthenes refuses to praise those who divided the
whole human race into two Greeks and barbarians and
POLITICUS
TESTIMONIUM
Cic. Fin. 5. 4. 11. Aristotle and Theophrastus had, each of
them, taught what sort of man the ruler in a state should be.
I (R 2 70,
R 3 78)
my
to
outstanding
man.
2 (R3 79)
2
3 (R 94-95, R3 80)
Sen.
De
Ira
1. 3. 3.
Aristotle's definition
Ibid.
1. 9. 2.
is
battle be
the
is
a soldier.
1
POLITICUS
Ibid. 1. 17.
if
we
1.
69
it,
and invokes
it
life,
as useful,
and as supplying
spirit for
demands a
certain
heat.
Ibid.
1. 7.
1.
been useful.
Is
It
has often
It raises
nothing splendid in
flamed by anger, unless anger has goaded men into boldness
in face of danger. Some therefore think it best to temper
anger, not to root it out to reduce it to healthy proportions
by eradicating what is excessive, but to retain that without
;
What
shall
we say
of the
of the Peripatetic
nature
of anger
This
;
is
call
it
by
FRAGMENTS
7o
may kindle
seems no man who
action
praise
for
it,
is
craving for
is a most
in general
punishment, blame, and disgrace. For those who bear without pain disgrace and infamy seem to be granted immunity
for their sins it is better to suffer the gnawing of conscience.
46. They say the other forms of pain also have their
uses pity leads men to help others and relieve undeserved
suffering even envy and disparagement are not without use,
when one sees that one has gained less than another, or that
another has gained as much as oneself if anyone took from
;
mean
is
all
things
the best.
Philod. De Ira,
p. 65.
Peripatetics, as we
to individuals, say that those
men would
Reading
in
R.
with Wilke.
POLITICUS
is
noble, just,
71
pleasant to boot.
4
fr. 15. 1-6. A hare that makes its
cannot
hounds
escape (Aristotle says), nor
appearance among
can that which is deemed shameless and despicable survive
among men.
Philod.
From
it follows that
Pap. Herc. 1020.
or err, and
deceived
be
cannot
Aristotle
wise men (as
says)
do
all
things well.
ON POETS
TESTIMONIA
Arist. Poet. I454b i5-i8. All these rules one must keep in
further, those also for such points of
as
stage-effect
directly depend on the art of the poet, since
in these too one may often make mistakes. Enough, however,
was still
shown
is
by
and the
rhetorical treatises.
Dio Chr.
1 (r 2 59, R3 70)
8. 2.
politics.
2 (R 2 60, R 3 71)
Diog. Laert.
8.
2.
51-52
of
.
(1).
Empedocles, according to
of Empedocles, and
Eratosthenes in his list of
Meton son
.
ON POETS
73
74 (n).
2
3
3 (R 6i, R 72)
Diog. Laert.
48
3.
(32). It is said
was
the
first
to me,
Ath. 505 b-c. The writer who has utterly condemned the
others recounts the praises of Meno in the Republic he
banishes Homer and imitative poetry, but he himself wrote
his dialogues in an imitative way. He was not even the inventor of this type; for before him Alexamenos of Teos
invented this type of writing, as Nicias of Nicaea and Sotion
1
2
3
i.e.
Plato.
Reading
Reading
in
in
R.
R.
with Kaibel.
suggested by Kaibel.
FRAGMENTS
74
'
Diog. Laert.
3.
(25). Aristotle
37
and
prose.
2
5 (R 63, R3 81)
Procl. in Remp.
1.
42. 2 (Kroll).
We must
first
mention and
...
10.
Iambl. Myst.
1.
passions in us,
hemmed
11 (Parthey).
The powers
in everywhere,
modest
wax
of the
human
stronger, but
if
ON POETS
75
is
by no means
for
to be called an elimination, or
innate in us not as a result
it is
it is
divine.
Macr.
go to
ger
is
'
Aetolians
light
fixed.'
Diog. Laert.
Reading
in
R.
79. 3
secundum
scripsit,
with Eyssenhardt.
FRAGMENTS
76
when
8 (R 2 66, R^ 76)
Ps.-Plu. Vit. Horn. 3-4. Aristotle in the third book of his
work on poetry says that in the island of Ios, at the time
when Neleus the son of Codrus ruled this Ionic colony, a
certain girl who was a native of the island became pregnant
by a spirit which was one of the companions of the Muses
in the dance. When she saw the signs of her pregnancy she
was ashamed of what had happened and betook herself to
girl,
king of Lydia and their friend. He fell in love with the girl
for her beauty and married her. While she was living near
the Meles the birth-pangs came upon her and she gave birth
to Homer on the bank of the river. Maeon adopted him and
brought him up as his own son, Critheis having died immediately after her delivery. Not long after, Maeon himself
died. When the Lydians were being oppressed by the
Aeolians and had decided to leave Smyrna, and their leaders
had called on any who wished to follow them to leave the
town, Homer (still an infant) said he too wished to follow
for which reason he was called Homer 2 instead of Melesigenes.
When he had grown up and already become famous for
his poetry, he asked the god who were his ancestors and
whence he came, and the god replied thus Ios is thy mother's
native island, which will receive thee dead but beware of
the riddle of young men.'
Not long after, while sailto
to
the
festival
of
Kronos (this is a musical
Thebes,
ing
contest which they hold), he came to Ios. Here he sat on a
rock and watched the fishermen sailing in, and asked them
;
'
R.
Reading
in
6fiT)peiv
"O/irjpos.
79. 17 '^^i/xe'n?j,
ON POETS
77
'
Homer, divine
Cf.
Gell.
glorifier of heroes.'
3. 11.
7 and
Homeri Opera,
251-2.
Rose's
fr.
77
to the dialogue
is
On
Poetics.
1
Reading
in
R.
80. 22 <j>9eiplt,eo9at.,
ON PHILOSOPHY
TESTIMONIA
Philod.
On
Piet. 7 b 4~8.
in the third
book
of Aristotle's
work
Philosophy.
Simp, in
De
R3
I,
W i)
'
2 (R 2 3,
Diog. Laert.
2. 5.
23
(7).
R3
2,
W 2)
went
3 (r 5,
3,
w 3)
3. 21. 26.
injunction at Delphi,
1
R3
Of the Metaphysics.
i.e.
his dialogues.
ON PHILOSOPHY
79
in his
work On Philosophy
4 (R
6, R3 4,
w 4)
is
5 (r
7, R^ 5,
w 5)
Seven Sages.
6 (r 2
8, 29,
R3 6, 34,
w 6)
Diog. Laert.
his
3.
The
art of
made by
it
bees out of
is
not
wax and
FRAGMENTS
80
Plu. Mor. 370 c. Of the planets, which they call the gods of
Chaldaeans describe two as beneficent, two as
birth, the
7 (r
9,
w 7)
R3 7,
N.D.
Cic.
existed
8 (r 2 2, r 3 13,
Synes.
Calvit.
Enc. 22. 85
c.
...
if
W 8)
indeed a proverb
is
a wise
cleverness
1.
1.
Wisdom
(oofta)
was
((f>aes),
(cj)dos, <j>a>s),
Reading
Reading
in R. 26. 19 4>aaiv,
in
R.
with Hayduck.
with the MSS.
26. 22 Cerconis,
ON PHILOSOPHY
81
wisdom, and
and
<
j'.i
Horn.
//. 20.
it',
215-18.
Od.
16. 233.
FRAGMENTS
82
laws, and
all
for such
and such
in
9 (w 9)
Em p.
Sext.
2.
10 (R 2 10, R 3
8,
10)
Metaphysics
most
if
of polemic.
Plu. Mor.
1 1 15
11 (R 2 11, R 3 9,
11)
Omitting
the word
ttJs <f>voecos,
oto.oiu)tt]s.
ON PHILOSOPHY
and quite
83
standing of
it
fails to
comprehends
addressed his refutation to the multitude who know no number other than that which is composed of units, and did not
begin to grasp the thought of these divine thinkers.
Arist.
the same
way
Plato, in the
for like, he
known by
holds,
is
like,
1
Mind
Simp, in
De An.
sc.
sc.
the objects of
must be so
its
cognition.
too.
FRAGMENTS
84
lectures), in
Cf.
1 (see p.
116 infra).
magnitudes by participation
12 a (r 2 12, R 3 10,
12a)
Homer
Patroclus, in the
was from such events (he says) that men came to suspect
the existence of something divine, of that which is in its
nature akin to the soul and of all things most full of knowledge. But the heavenly bodies also contributed to this be1
Cic. Div.
the
ad Brut.
1.
Reading
30. 63.
When,
R.
28. 13 detov,
with Mutschmann.
ON PHILOSOPHY
85
remembers the
future
active
is
and
much more
it is
alive
divine.
approaches
have foreknowledge Posidonius confirms by the example he
Another instance of this is Homer's Hector,
adduces.
who when dying announces the approaching death of
.
Achilles.
12 b (r 2 13, R 3 II,
12
b)
Sext. Emp. Math. 9 (Phys. 1) 26-27. Some men, when they come
to the unswerving and well-ordered movement of the heavenly
bodies, say that in this the thought of gods had its origin
for as, if one had sat on the Trojan Mount Ida and seen the
array of the Greeks approaching the plains in good order
and arrangement, 'horsemen first with horses and chariots,
and footmen behind', such a one would certainly have come
to think that there was someone arranging such an array and
commanding the soldiers ranged under him, Nestor or some
other hero who knew 'how to order horses and bucklered
warriors'. 2 And as one familiar with ships, as soon as he
sees from afar a ship running before the wind with all its
;
steering
looked up
2
13 (R 14, R3 12,
13)
Cic. N.D.
95-96. Great was the saying of Aristotle:
Suppose there were men who had lived always underground,
in good and well-lighted dwellings, adorned with statues and
pictures, and furnished with everything in which those who
are thought happy abound. Suppose, however, that they had
2. 37.
'
Horn.
//. 4.
Reading
in
297.
R.
29. 6 Ka.Ta.ywv,
Ibid.
with Mutschmann.
2.
554.
FRAGMENTS
86
3. 32.
97-99.
The
how we came
ON PHILOSOPHY
Cf.
Philo, De Praem.
Poen.
et
7.
40-46,
87
De
1.
Spec. Leg.
35.
185-36. 194.
2
14 (r 44, R3 14,
14)
how much
compose ourselves before we enter temples
more should we do this when we discuss the constellations,
the stars, and the nature of the gods, to guard against
saying anything rashly and imprudently, either not knowing
.
it
to be true or
Cf.
knowing
it
to be false
c-f.
15 (R 45> R3I5,
15)
i.e.
to be fitted for
some purpose.
Michael Psellus,
The
first
reason
itself
16 (R 2 15, R 3 16,
De Caelo 289.
work On Philosophy. In
Simp, in
16)
is
Reading
with Gercke.
in
R.
FRAGMENTS
88
be the divine.
Now
changed either by
something
by
by something else, either
better
or
by something worse, and if by itself,
by something
either to something worse or through desire for something
better but the divine has nothing better than itself by which
it may be changed (for that other would then have been more
divine), nor on the other hand is it lawful for the better to be
affected by the worse besides, if it were changed by something worse, it would have admitted some evil into itself, but
else or
itself,
and
is
if
17)
principle or
many.
If
there
is
one,
we have what we
are
there are
looking for;
many, they are either ordered or
disordered. Now if they are disordered, their products are
more so, and the world is not a world but a chaos besides,
that which is contrary to nature belongs to that which is
if
by nature
principle.'
18 (R 2 17, R 3 18,
Philo,
18)
ungenerated and imperishable, and convicted of grave ungodliness those who maintained the opposite, who thought
that the great visible god, which contains in truth sun and
moon and
ON PHILOSOPHY
no better than the work
89
of
but that
3
19 a (r 19,
W 19 a)
ordained two causes of destrucone inward, the other outward. Iron, bronze, and suchlike substances you will find being destroyed from within
when rust invades and devours them like a creeping disease,
and from without when a house or a city is set on fire and
they catch fire from it and are destroyed by the fierce rush
of flame and similarly death comes to living beings from
themselves when they fall sick, and from outside when they
have their throats cut or are stoned or burned to death
or suffer the unclean death by hanging. If the world, too, is
destroyed, it must be either by something outside or by one
of the powers in itself. Now each of these is impossible.
of being destroyed there are
tion,
For there is nothing outside the world, since all things have
contributed to its completeness. For so will it be one, whole,
and ageless; one because only if something had been left
out of its composition would there be another world like the
present world whole because the whole of being has been
expended on it ageless and diseaseless because bodies caught
by disease and old age are destroyed by the violent assault
from without of heat and cold and the other contrary forces,
of which none can escape and circle round and attack the
;
void or an impassive nature which cannot suffer or do anything. Nor again will the world be destroyed by anything
within it firstly because the part would then be both
FRAGMENTS
go
greater and more powerful than the whole, which is the most
incredible of all things for the world, wielding unsurpassable
power, directs all its parts and is directed by none secondly
;
the internal. Since, then, it was shown that the world will
not be destroyed by anything without, because absolutely
nothing has been left outside, neither will it be destroyed
by anything within, because of the preceding argument to
the effect that that which is susceptible to the one cause
is also susceptible to the other.
3
19 b (r 20,
19
b)
seems to be so beyond a doubt. For we men were put together by borrowing little parts of the four elements, which
belong in their entirety to the whole universe earth, water,
air, and fire. Now these parts when mixed are robbed of
by the
is
that which
it is
Reading
in
R.
with Diels.
ON PHILOSOPHY
91
For
all
things that perish, then, this is the law and this the
when the parts that have come together in
rule prescribed
back to
the disorder
we have spoken
Now
of
world
is
19
c (R 3 21,
19
c)
Philo, De Aet. Mundi 8. 39-43. The most conclusive argument is that on which I know very many people to pride
themselves, as on something most precise and quite irrefutable.
1
Reading
Eur.
fr.
e<f>'
6v.
FRAGMENTS
92
God
Why
They
ask,
to save himself
should
from continuing
if
in the product. The second alternative deserves full examination. For if instead of the present world he is to make an-
these possibilities
artificer will
who
20 (R 2 18, R 3 22,
Cic. Lucullus 38. 119 (Plasberg).
1
2
3
Reading
Reading
Reading
in
in
in
20)
When
ON PHILOSOPHY
93
is
great
fall
to pieces
and
perish.
and as
is
it
pro-
world
itself
21 (R 2 19-20, R 3 23-24,
2l)
Cic.
N.D.
are born,
and
it is
intelligence.
things that
or
by
are in
is
move do
choice, and that the sun and moon and all the stars
movement, and that things that move by nature move
FRAGMENTS
94
either
downwards by
virtue of weight or
of lightness, neither of
because their movement
upwards by virtue
which could happen to the stars,
is in an orb or circle. Nor again can
22 (W 22)
1. 43
Dox. Gr. 432. 4-8. Plato and Aristotle say
there are four kinds of animals of land, of water, winged,
heavenly. For the stars too, thej' say, are said to be animals,
Stob.
itself is divine,
Cf.
f,
2
23 (r 37, R3 42,
Olymp. in Phd.
circle.
ch. 35.
23)
a whole race of
the
case of the
the
seen him.
Ibid. 239. 19-21. If Aristotle recorded the case of a
this
world
sun's rays,
who was
sleepless
man
in
of things in another
2
24 (R 39, R3 48,
world
24)
Reading Aeyeodai
2
i.e.
ON PHILOSOPHY
also
would;
of the senses
95
w 25)
we
said,
mese has
Horn.
//. 3.
the
fourth,
(neate).
FRAGMENTS
96
the
3,
fifth,
2,
and the octave, involving the ratio 2:1. But the ratio 9 8
is also found, which gives the interval of a single tone. The
notes of the scale exceed, and are exceeded by, the notes, and
the intervals by the intervals, by the same excesses, both in
geometrical progression and in arithmetical. Aristotle, then,
describes them as having such values, neate exceeding mese
:
harmonic progression
if
and
o.
b-\
c-\
12
12
8-\
and 8 =6-\
3
so that 12, 8, 6 (neate, mese, hypate) formed a harmonic progression.
5
This sentence cannot be right as it stands in the Greek ; the sense requires
in
R.
\6yov
54.
loco
applied,
and confined,
to
was
ON PHILOSOPHY
97
of this
harmony perception
hearing exhibit harmony by
And
to
men
namely
sight
and
accompany them
are,
qua senses,
26 (R 2 21, R 3 26,
26)
Cic.
N.D.
1.
'
movement
of the world
movement
'
Reading
MSS.) after
aioQ-qciv in
645.29
R.
FRAGMENTS
98
27 (w 27)
Cic. Acad.
1. 7.
this
as
Cic. Tusc.
Plato
i.
always
except both
who
far
exceeded
all
others
any
he adds a
fifth,
so calls the
nameless
class,
and
eVSeAe'xeta, as being
Ibid
first
1.
2
sc. aer.
MSS.
ON PHILOSOPHY
99
Clem. Rom. Recogn. 8. 15. Aristotle introduced a fifth element, which he called aKarovo^aarov, i.e. unnameable, doubtless
in
who by
28 (w 30)
Arist. Phys. i94 a 27-36. The end and the means must be
studied by the same science and the nature is the end (for
the terminus of a continuous process is also its final cause; 1
hence the poet's 2 absurd remark, He has the end for which he
was born', 3 which is absurd because not every final point
;
'
but only that which is best is a final cause). Indeed, some arts
make their matter and others make it workable, and we use
their matter as existing for our own sake (for we are the
end, in one of the two senses we have distinguished in
the
work On Philosophy).
1
Reading com
An
i.e.
ti reXos,
ON JUSTICE
TESTIMONIUM
Cic. Rep. 3. 8. 12. The other writer 1 filled four
with his views on justice itself.
1 (R 2 71,
Demetr.
huge books
R 3 82)
then, as I
for pathos
'
To
tears.
is,
in
2 (R 2 73, R 3 84)
Suet. De Blasph.
p.
416
criminal,
book of his
work On Justice says he was a thief who when he was caught
and put in chains and encouraged by the warders to show how
he got over walls and into houses, 'on being set free, fastened
spikes to his feet and took the sponges, climbed very easily,
escaped from the roof, and got away'.
also called Eurybates.
Cf.
c.
19,
and Suidas
s.v. Evpvfiaros.
Aristotle.
Reading
in
R.
87.
Kivrjaei
MSS.
ON JUSTICE
101
2
3 (r 74, R3 85)
Lact.
Inst. 5. 15.
Carneades,
Lact. Epit. 55. A great number of philosophers, but principally Plato and Aristotle, said much about justice, defending
it and bestowing the highest
praise on it because it assigns
to each
man what
is
his
own and
preserves equity in
all
2
4 (r 75, R3 86)
August.
C. ltd. Pel.
4. 14. 72.
2
5 (r 76, R3 87)
Porph. in De
6 (R3 88)
Them.
b.
d-27
though he was in
all
In Cicero's
De Re Publico
FRAGMENTS
102
a Phoenician
is it
heedless of Aristotle,
whom
He
man who
is
is afflicted
vanity
while the
Reading
in
R.
89. 22
biopl^v.
LOGICAL WORKS
TESTIMONIA
Alex, in Top. 5. 17-19. Of this so-called dialectic Aristotle
has treated both in other books and particularly in these,
which are called Topics.
Ibid. 27. 11. Perhaps he would apply the phrase 'mental
gymnastic' to a discussion which probes both sides of a
question. This type of discussion was not unusual with the
ancients.
14-18. They put forward a thesis, and practised
.
on
it
both of Aristotle and of Theophrastus containing such arguments from probable premisses to opposite conclusions.
Cf.
Theon, Prog.
2, p.
165.
Examples
of training in theses
may
Reading
Reading
in
in
ON PROBLEMS
I (R
IO9,
R 2 112)
problems at
physical
problems.
Still,
there
are
dialectical
is
Ch".
1.
DIVISIONS
i
(r
iio,
r 3 113)
'
'
'
'
2 (R 2 III, R 3 114)
Diog. Laert.
80
3.
(45). Plato,
3 (r
Cod. Marc. 257,
f.
112, R 3 115)
The
soul
is
4
Simp, in Cat. 65. 4. In the Divisions
7-8 after putting
forward the categories he adds: 'I mean these with their
.
cases'
(i.e.
inflexions).
DISSERTATIONS
I (R 2 113,
R 3 116)
?
They also ask where the articles are to
be placed. The same account must be given of these. These
words also are, as it were, conjunctions which in addition
indicate indefinitely the male and the female sexes for they
do not show the essence of anything which is why some
people call them indefinite. But where are negations, privations, and the various inflexions of verbs to be placed ? This
question Aristotle himself answered in his Dissertations. For
both in his works on method, in his Dissertations, in his
Divisions, and in another dissertation called Fallacies depending on Language (which, even if it is thought by some
not to be a genuine work of Aristotle, is at all events the
cant utterances
work
of
some member
of the school)
Cat. 33. 8-13. But where, they say, are negations, privations, and indefinite terms, and the inflexions
Dexippus, in
Reading
in
R.
108. 3 npodels,
with Kalbfleisch.
CATEGORIES
TESTIMONIA
Ps.-Amm. in Cat. (Ven. 1546), f. 13 a. Indeed, they say that
in the Great Library there have been found forty books of
Analytics and two of Categories; it was judged by the commentators that of the Categories this one was a genuine work
of Aristotle.
This judgement was based on the thoughts
expressed, on the language, and on the fact that the Philosopher has in his other treatises always mentioned this book.
.
Cf.
R 3 117)
'
Ammon.
are called
'
Omitting ttjv
fani in R. 108. 28, with Busse.
This is almost identical with the beginning of the Categories which have
.
come down
to us.
FRAGMENTS
108
Cf.
Ps.-Ammon. in
f.
17
a,
and Schol.
in
Boeth. in
of Aristotle
1. p.
and
of
ON CONTRARIES
TESTIMONIA
Arist. Metaph. ioo3 b 33-ioo4 a 2. There must be exactly as
many species of being as of unity. To investigate the nature
I
of these is the work of a science that is generically one
Ibid. io54 a 2o,-32. To the One belong (as we indicated graphically in our distinction of the contraries) the same, the like,
Syr. in Metaph. 61. 12-17. The same, the like, the equal,
the straight, and in general the terms on the better side of the
list of cognates, are differentiae and as it were species of the
One, as the terms on the worse side belong to the Many. The
Philosopher himself treated of the subject separately, making
a selection of all contraries and classing some under the One,
others under the Many.
Cf.
(p.
122 infra).
FRAGMENTS
no
has been
clarified, let
show that Aristotle furnished the starting-point for everything in one book which he called On Opposites, in which, too,
there is an immense number of problems set forth of which
they have set out a small portion. The others of these it
would not be reasonable to include in an introduction, but
to
He
2
3
ON CONTRARIES
in
2 (r 2 116, r 3 119)
Simp, in Cat. 388. 21. The Stoics used all these distinctions,
in the other distinctions with regard to contraries they
and
teaching, let us see how they distorted the Aristotelian tradition. Aristotle in his book on opposites says that justice is
man
is
said not to be
'
or to the good
3 (R
117,
R 3 120)
that
wisdom
is
'
'
'
i.e.
of the same.
to ignorance
FRAGMENTS
ii2
it is
suffice.
2
3
4 (r 118, r 121)
be a
mean between
man who
is
5 (r
3
119-20, r 122-3)
customary
states,
things
a privation of a customary state, loss of
of
something acquired
in practice.
money
it is impossible, others it is
403. 5-24. But the full account of
can get both from Aristotle's book and from
possible, to lose.
privations
we
a privation
Reading
in R.
in. 29 ko\
of.
ON CONTRARIES
113
nor an
evil.
Thus no privation
is
is
indifferent, neither a
a good
privation
is
good
either
privations.'
is
But
why
pity
here 1 Aris-
and privations
6 (R 2 121, R 3 124)
Simp, in Cat. 409. 15. Aristotle adds this to what he has said
about contraries ... 17 that the contrary of a good is always
an evil, but the contrary of an evil is sometimes a good and
sometimes an evil. ... 30. In the book on opposites he added
to these types of contrariety that of things neither good nor
evil to things neither good nor evil, saying that white is thus
contrary to black, sweet to bitter, high to low in sound, rest
to movement.
410. 25-30. Nicostratus urges, as one
that
Aristotle's
division of contraries is incomcriticism,
since
he
did
not
add
that indifferent can be opposed
plete,
.
i.e.
in the Categories.
i.e.
tions of.
645 29
FRAGMENTS
ii4
Reading
in
R.
114. 9 Stdrt,
PHILOSOPHICAL WORKS
ON THE GOOD
TESTIMONIA
Aristox. Harm. 2. 30. 16-31. 3 (Macran). This, as Aristotle
always used to say, was the experience of most of those who
heard Plato's lecture On the Good. Each of them attended
on the assumption that he would gain one of the recognized
human goods, such as wealth, health, strength in general,
some marvellous happiness. When Plato's discourses turned
out to be about mathematics numbers, geometry, astronomy and, to crown all, about the thesis that there is one
Good, it seemed to them, I fancy, something quite paradoxiand so some people despised the whole thing, while
cal;
others criticized
it.
'
'
'
is
different
from what he
he
Them, in Ph.
106. 21-23.
Yet
in the
doctrines
by
assimilation.
in
Timaeus and
i.e.
naming matter
differently
i.e. in the
FRAGMENTS
n6
Timaeus he
(which he said was indefinite) the great and the small, and
all sensible things are enclosed by the infinite,
and are unknowable because their nature involves matter and
is indefinite and in a state of flux.
said that
in the
Arist.
Philop. in
Aristotle
De An.
see p. 83 supra.
75. 34-76.
1.
By
the books
entitled
On
On Philosophy
Good
the
1
;
in
this
De An.
first principles.
are incidental, as
is
R 3 27)
Philoponus
is
ON THE GOOD
117
'
2 (R 2 23, R 3 28)
Alex, in Metaph. 55. 20-57. 2 %- Both Plato and the Pythagoreans assumed numbers to be the first principles of existing
things, because they thought that it is that which is primary
and incomposite that is a first principle, and that planes are
prior to bodies (for that which is simpler than another and
not destroyed with it is prior to it by nature), and on the
same
to
them but
them and derive their being from them (the existence of these he tried in several ways to establish), he called
the Forms numbers. For if that which is one in kind is prior
relation to
reason
why
he called the
principles of the
all
first
number
principles of
first
first
principle of
things.
Again, the Forms are the first principles of all other things,
and since the Ideas are numbers the first principles of number
are first principles of the Ideas and he used to say that the
first principles of number are the unit and the dyad. For,
since there are in numbers both the One and that which is
other than the One (i.e. the many and few), he assumed
that the first thing there is in numbers, apart from the One,
;
is
the
first
many and
of the few.
Now
the dyad
is
the
first
ovtojv.
FRAGMENTS
n8
is
small,
is
why he
first
principles are
in the dyad that
its first
it is
and the
And
since the
limited
is
One
(for
each thing
is
one in so far as
it is
a 'this' and
is
limited), the One and the great and the small must be
elements in the numerical dyad. But the dyad is the first
'made one
i.e.
in the Metaphysics.
ON THE GOOD
of the things to which it
not allowing it to remain
is
applied,
what
119
in a sense divides
it
it,
'
'
By
out exception
'first
numbers'
all
even
numbers' simply is meant numbers
divided only by the unit, e.g. 3, 5, and 7 (though 2 also has
this characteristic) by numbers first relatively to one another' those that have 1 as their only common factor, though
they are themselves measurable also by some number. 8 and
numbers.
By
'first
'
Cf.
11.
Alex, in Metaph. 85. 16-18. The first principles are the One
and the indefinite dyad, as he has said shortly before and
has himself related in the work
On
the Good.
FRAGMENTS
120
the
first
are the
of all things is
one,
very natural
and Plato
goreans)
(for
the account
is
a Pythagorean
respects clearly follows the Pythabut to call the indefinite dyad, i.e. the great and
in
many
the
He
and used to call it 'indeterand he made the great and the small first principles
and called them indeterminate, in his lectures on the Good
Aristotle, Heraclides, Hestiaeus, and other associates of
Plato attended these and wrote them down in the enigmatic
style in which they were delivered. Porphyry, undertaking
to put them into articulate shape, has written as follows
about them in his Philebus: 'The Master assumes the more
and the less, and the more and the less intense, to fall under
the heading of the indefinite. For where these are present,
alternately intensified and relaxed, that which shares in them
does not stand still and come to an end, but goes on towards
the indefiniteness of infinity. So too with the greater and the
smaller, and with Plato's equivalent for them, the great and
the small. For let there be a limited magnitude such as a
cubit. Let it be bisected and let us leave one half-cubit
minate
',
Reading
in
R.
41. 9 a.px a h
with Diels.
ON THE GOOD
121
little
let
divided into ever divisible parts. Such an uninterrupted process of cutting shows that there is a certain
character of indefiniteness enclosed in the cubit, or rather
more than one, the one proceeding towards the great and
the other towards the small. In this example the indefinite
continuum
dyad,
is
also, is
of the great
and that
it.
He
rests his
argument on a rather
illustration.
Cf.
1.
412.
FRAGMENTS
122
2
4 (r 25, R3 30)
'
Plato does not treat these as causes of things that come into
being and perish, and did not even work out any theory
about them
5 (R
26, R3 31)
first
traries,
Good.
Cf. ibid. 262. 18-26.
book On
the Good.
Ps.-Alex. in Metaph. 615. 14-17. Aristotle has made a disbook On the Good ... by which he reduced all
contraries to Plurality and the One. To the One belong the
tinction in his
same,
like,
38-643.
1
Tim. 28
3,
c.
695. 23-26.
-
Ep.
2.
312
e.
ON THE GOOD
123
6
Asc. in Metaph. 79. 7-10. The Platonists are more, and indeed
most, zealous for the existence of the first principles; for in
their eyes these are first principles even of the Ideas themselves. They are, as has been said a little earlier, the One and
the indefinite dyad and Aristotle has himself stated this
in his book On the Good.
;
ON IDEAS
i (r 2
3
180, r 185)
having opposed
we have
;
arguments.
who assume
'
its
plan.
2 (R 2 l8l,
that
p. 116.
definitions
R 3 186)
must be
and
things
the work On Ideas which he
13-16 (Hilgard).
are
of
It
universal
ON IDEAS
125
eternal.
3 (R
182, R 3 187)
now
(2) The things of which there are sciences must exist
the sciences are concerned with things other than particular
things for the latter are indefinite and indeterminate, while
;
of health,
there
must be Ideas
every
FRAGMENTS
126
is
They
and each
of the
many
and
things of which
it
is
remains always
it
predicated. Again,
'
'
and similarly
'
not-man
'
men
so that
what
is
is
man and
ON IDEAS
127
common
different
must do
of a
is
common
to them,
81. 25.
of
of something real
sensible particulars,
exist and
when they
is
Form
or
11.
is
as follows:
When
is
Plato
is
FRAGMENTS
128
which
itself,
is
only
we
which
is
strictly
If this
be
so,
there
is
an
that
come
into being
by
reference to
83. 22-30. This is the argument which according to Aristotle implies Ideas answering even to relative terms. At all
is
Reading napaSeiyfiaTiKOv ov
tois kt\.
ON IDEAS
129
2
4 (R 183, R3 188)
Alex. Aphr. in Metaph. 83. 34. The argument which introduces the third man was as follows The Platonists say that
:
They say, too, that things that are like one another
by sharing in one identical thing, which is strictly
what it is and that this is the Idea. But if this be so, and if
Ideas. 1
are so
that which
if it is
numerically one.
why, according to
is
predicated truly
if this
particular men, and is other than they)
be so, there will be a third man. For if the 'man' which is
predicated is different from those of whom it is predicated,
of the
and
many
particular
man apart both from particular men and from the Idea.
On this basis, too, there will be a fourth man, predicated
both
of the third
and similarly a
identical
fifth,
Reading
045.29
in
R.
On
Ideas,
and
also,
little later,
150.
FRAGMENTS
130
all
Idea prior
primary, a
number
is
first
Platonists to be
the
first
for
if
this
principle of
relation to them,
of,
must be
ON IDEAS
131
sake of that which comes into being in relation to it, and that
which exists for the sake of something else is inferior to it,
the Ideas will be inferior to the things that come into being
in relation to
them.
of, first
principles
first
dyad
are not
first principles.
Again,
it is
paradoxical that
an Idea should derive its form from an Idea, for all Ideas are
forms; but if the One and the indefinite dyad are first
the
principles, one Idea will derive its form from another
for
itself
from
the
One
itself
that
is how they are said
dyad
to be first principles the One as form, the dyad as matter
But
to
it
the dyad
dyad
is itself
itself,
a dyad
first principles.
by
if
'
'
itself,
since
it is
FRAGMENTS
132
is
we say
is
true.
Thus
only to substances.
this
And
argument,
there are
also,
many
applies
not
ments.
5 (R
184, R3 189)
ON IDEAS
133
change. (5) The Forms must consist of like parts, if all the
things that contain a part of a certain Form are like one
another. But how can the Forms consist of like parts? A
piece of a man cannot be a man, as a piece of gold is gold.
(6) As Aristotle himself says a little later, in each thing there
there
Reading
Hayduck.
2 sc.
in
R.
not animal'.
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
i
(r
186,
r 3 191)
Apollon. Mirab.
of
Aelian, V.H.
4 i.e. Aristotle.
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
135
at
of
'
Pythagoras
Diog. Laert.
8.
1.
11
(9).
He
is
said to
and
river
Nessus
Iamb. V.P. 28. 140-3. The Pythagoreans derive their confidence in their views from the fact that the first to express
'Who
of their traditions
'
art thou,
Pythagoras?
they
say he is the Hyperborean Apollo. This is supposed to be
evidenced by two facts: when he got up during the games
he showed a thigh of gold, and when he entertained Abaris
the Hyperborean he stole from him the arrow by which he
was guided. Abaris is said to have come from the Hyperboreans collecting money for the temple and prophesying
pestilence he lived in the sacred shrines and was never seen
;
2
3
Reading
Reading
Reading
Reading
it is
Lacedaemon
in
FRAGMENTS
i 36
'
of his son, 3
that the
man who
R3
192)
6. 30.
Besides, they
2
3
Reading
Reading
Reading
in
in
in
R.
R.
R.
155. 17 Iotcu.
155. 21 5(f>iv 6?
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
division
137
as one of their
what
reluctant to believe
have just
6. 6. 53.
book
many
to Socrates
Gell.
says in the
first of his
Porph. V.P.
45.
FRAGMENTS
138
from other things as well, such as womb, the red mullet, the
sea anemone, and indeed almost all other sea creatures.
Diog. Laert.
8. i.
erythinus and
black-tail
heart or
19 (18).
;
womb
5 (R
or red mullet.
190, R3 195)
Reading
Reading
in
in
R.
R.
with some
in R. 158. 21-24 xal to
oovXois, with Diels.
yopelcov,
3
Reading
words
/cat Ae'^ouy,
words
Xcvkov
omitted by Rose.
twv Tlvda-
V tu> nepl
KaKov before
tuiv
IxQvwv
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
139
that
was
that
these.
6 (r 2 191, R 3 196)
that he called the sea the tear of Cronos, the Bears 1 the
hands of Rhea, the Pleiades the lyre of the Muses, the planets
e.g.
4.17. The origin of earthquakes was, Pythagoras said, nothing but a concourse of the dead the rainbow
was the gleam of the sun, and the echo that often strikes on
Aelian, V.H.
7 (R 192,
Porph. V.P.
R 3 197)
illustrated
'
',
'
FRAGMENTS
i 4o
'
tongue
not',
i.e.
'
'
'
'
'
',
'
;
i.e.
who
8 (r 2 193, R 3 198)
Mart. Cap.
one of
itself
asserts that
it
Reading
is
in
21.
into
R.
160. 25
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
141
was the first odd number. ... 22. 5-9. But Aristotle
work On the Pythagoreans says that the One partakes
of the nature of both kinds for added to an even number it
makes an odd, and added to an odd an even, which it could
not have done if it had not shared in both natures and that
for this reason the One was called even-odd.
said 1
in his
10 (R 2 195, R 3 200)
Simp, in
De
theses to
better
the
each
Cael. 386. 9. The Pythagoreans reduced all antilists of opposites, the one worse, the other
two
list
of
list
of evils.
They rounded
list
11 (R 2 196, R 3 20l)
Stob. 1. 18. i c (Wachsmuth and Hense). In the first book of his
work on the philosophy of Pythagoras Aristotle writes that
the heaven was one, and that time and breath and the void,
of different things,
were
12 (R 2 197, R 3 202)
is
a property of justice
FRAGMENTS
142
and finding
it
that justice is
a number of things that admit of the same definition
is most truly that which it is said to be. Now this number
first of
some declared
after
it
eighth,
and the
earth, ninth,
and
generates
odd
they called reason a unit, or one but they also applied these
names to substance, because it is primary. Opinion they
;
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
number
2 because
it
143
directions;
depends on the ratio 2:1, the frfth on the ratio 3:2, the
fourth on the ratio 4:3. They said, too, that the whole
universe is constructed in accordance with a certain harmony
39. 24-41. 15 because it consists of numbers and is constructed in accordance with number and harmony. For the
bodies that move round the centre of the universe have their
distances in a certain ratio, and some move faster and others
.
move
move
bodies to
move
On the basis of
and
first
principles of
numbers
all
things.
sc.
the addition of
to
1.
FRAGMENTS
i 44
of
make
as to
their
self-consis-
seven spheres
nine in
number
stars, the
of the
trines.
Pythagoras.
Omitting
fiev in
R.
162. 19,
with Hayduck.
ON THE PYTHAGOREANS
145
more
Simp, in
view
De
for this is
'
is
universe there
is fire,
'
Cf.
Procl. in Eucl.
p. 90.
Cf.
Procl. in Tim.
61
p.
c,
and
2
3
15 (R 200, R 205)
Simp, in De Caelo, 392. 16-32. Aristotle says that the Pythagoreans place us in the upper part and on the right side of
the universe, and those opposite to us in the lower part and
on the left side how can he say this if, as he himself relates
in the second book of his collection of Pythagorean tenets,
they say that one part of the whole universe is up and the
other down, the lower part right and the upper left, and that
;
645.29
Reading
in
R.
163.
with Karsten.
FRAGMENTS
146
we
on the
Them, in De
is
If,
that which
16
Stob.
1.
26.
3.
Some
Aristotle's account
it is
completely extinguished.
2 (R 2 201, R 3 207)
Damasc. Pr.
'
'
',
this
way
645.29
83 b.
L2
ON DEMOCRITUS
I (R 2 202,
R 3 208)
Simp, in
26.
those
in this state,
now
in that,
that which comes into being is not the same, except in kind,
as that which has perished, so too (they say) is it with the
universes.'
Now if the
from
sists of
Reading
in
R.
166. 5
rw
ON DEMOCRITUS
149
could ever become one. The fact that substances stay with
one another for some time the Atomists ascribe to the bodies
fitting into one another and catching hold of one another
for some of them are scalene, others hook-shaped, others
concave, others convex, and others have numberless other
differences. He thinks they cling to one another and remain
together until some stronger force arriving from the environ;
into being.
'
AUTHORS QUOTED
(a)
(c)
Ael. V.H. 2. 26
=
=
not in Rose.
fuller
not in Walzer.
(b)
quotation than Rose gives.
AUTHORS
AUTHORS QUOTED
in De An.
Philop.
152
Iambi. Protr.
(cont.)
V.P.
19-60. 15
6.
(a)
30-31
28. 140-3
Jerome, Adv. Libros Rufini 3
39
.
in
140
Pliny,
Plu.
Lact.
Epit. 55
101
16
5-
15
Macr.
18.
5.
93
29
101
16-19
75
8
44
27
140
3-23
7-
Mart. Cap.
5.
{b)
131
7-
Climacum 6. 171
Nemes. De Nat. Horn.
87
(a)
ch. 34
394. 26-28
Nonius
Olymp.
27
28
94
21
20-30
22-23 ( a >)
200. 3-6
239. 19-21
Pap. Here. 1020 (a)
Pap. Oxyrrh. 666
173.
180.
94
94
94
Mundi
7i
29
80
116
N.H.
115
79
30. 3 (a)
60
Aristid. 27. 2
Dion 22. 3
16
18
67
80
22
370
382
447
477
503
527
612
c (a)
d-e (a, b)
f-448 a (a)
c-f
87
(a)
e-504 b
a
d-e
650 a
651 f-652 a
733 c (6)
734 d
11
57
8
13
14
(a)
760 e-761 b
761 d-e
90S f (a, b)
1040 e
1 1 1 5 b-c (a)
1115 b-c
1118 c
22
64
25
25
94
6.
28-27. 34
8.
39-43
89
90
91
(a)
3,
"
1 1
fr.
15.
75- 34-76.
1.
1.
p.
42
45
Prise. Lydus. 41. 16-42
70
Procl.
90.
84
116
136
139
139
137
78
De Aet
Philop.
apud
Mundi, 31. 17-32. 8
in End., 28. 13-22
in
14-18
Remp.
1.
42. 2-50.
349. 13-26
in Tim. 61 c
33S c-d
78
101
27
41
2.
1 {a, b)
Int.
87
7i
75. 34-76.
De
Philop.
D An.
78
95
57
25
Porph.
1-6
82
18. 4
V.P. 23-28
57
78
101
.
38 c-1140 b
9
87
86
Philod.
Pap. Here.
88
10-11
3.
20-24
in
1.
Isagogen,
(a, b)
Pel. 3.
5.
De
Nicom.
in Ale. p. 144
in Phd. 26. 22-27. 4
Philo,
Aet.
19
80
94
(a, b)
(cont.)
141. 22-147. 10
186. 14-16
47
49
52
136
135
26
82
34
145
74
17
145
17
AUTHORS QUOTED
Simp. in Cat.
153
122
122
122
(a)
84
124
65
65. 67
107
108
(a, b)
836. 34-837- 3
in Cat. 5 b
Ps.-Amm.
9 b
13 ()
17
Ps.-Galen. PAi/.
.
a.
ff*s/. c.
35
(a, 6)
Quint. Inst.
1-14
2. 17.
13
3- r.
10. 1.
83
(a)
94
263 a
in Ca/. 33 b ^5-33
in Dion. Thrac. 116. 13-16
fol.
in Theocr. 3. 21
7m
De
1.
124
1. 9.
1.
69
68
17. 1
3- 3- l
Q.N.
7.
30
Serv. in Aen.
Sext.
6.
448
Emp. Dogm.
Geom. 57
(a, b)
1.
1.
82
11
(a)
16-21
288. 31-289. 2
387. 17-388. 14
402. 26-403. 24
(c)
1.
26. 3
1.
43
119
116
116
116
(a)
(a)
146
94
29
59
59
4.
25
29 A 24
29 A 25
29C 52
4.
32. 21
3- 3-
4.
4.
Strabo
1.
61
C 66
C672
27
67
53
100
100
4. 9, p.
14. 5. 9, p.
De Blasph.
Suet.
145
22
141
(a)
p.
(a)
416
Synes.
Calvit.
Enc. 22. 85 c
80
Dio. 10. 48 a
Syr. iw Metaph. 61. 12-17
120. 33- I2 i- 4
.
195. 10-15
Them.
in De An.
Tert.
De
/!.
46
De
(a, b)
24. 13-25. 25
55
55
21
16
87
109
124
124
(a)
106. 29-107. 5
in
(a)
82
68
159- 33- l6 - 5
168. 33-35
no
112
112
(a)
390. 19-25
i5
109
in
in
87
148
147
141
145
58
145
119
120
388. 21-389. 10
389. 25-390. 7
5.78
{a, b)
289. 1-15
107
106
64. 18-65. 10
4-8 ()
382. 7-10 (a)
15
121
121
65.
6-7
69
69
87
23
84
85
1. 20-23
26-27
1. 412
2. 45-46 (a)
Pyrr. 1. 84
Simp.
in Cat. 4. 14-22
P/rys.
18.
4i
68
3.
1. 7.
22
Caelo
485. 19-22
511. 25-512. 14
(.*>)
De
392. 16-32
Sen.
.Bra>. Vit. 1. 2
in
88
46 a
fol.
221. 20-33
174,
21
53- i-4
386. 9-23
28
108
83
116
(a)
28. 7-9
12
12
109
113
409. 15-410. 30
in De An. 28. 7-9
76
Schol.
in Aristoph. Pacem. 1. 772
in y4w. Pr., cod. Paris. 2064,
407. 15-20
294. 23-295. 26
296. 16-18
(cont.)
a)
146
"5
AUTHORS QUOTED
154
Them,
(cont.)
Or. 26
d-27 b
107 c-d
295 c-d
319 c
Theo. Sm. 21. 20-22.
.
Theon, Prog.
2.
165
ROSE'S
NUMBERING OF FRAGMENTS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Rose, V.,
,
Aristoteles
Pseudepigraphus 1863.
Librorum Fragmenta [1870].
Librorum Fragmenta, 1886.
,
Albeggiani,
Bernays,
J.,
F., Aristotele e
Aus dem
Hermias d'Atarnee,
Un
Atene
la polemica con il
primo Aristotele e la scuola Platonico-Aristotelica, ibid., 1934,
217-31 1, and 1935, 3-52.
Una nuova meta nella riconquista dell' Aristotele perduto, in
Civilta Moderna, 1935, 117 ff.
,
[1936].
1937. 119-29,
Conferme ed aggiunte
all'
Aristotele perduto, in
all'
Aristotele perduto, in
Ann.
de I'Inst.
Importanti conferme
1937. 217-34.
Atene
Roma,
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bignone,
E., Aristotele e
Diogene
di
Enoanda,
157
ibid., 1938,
214-32.
61-64.
Seneca, Marco Aurelio e il Protrettico di Aristotele, in Ann.
Sc. Norm. Sup. di Pisa, 1940, 241-9.
Bournot, W. Platonica Aristotelis Opuscula, Putbus, 1853.
,
Bywater,
I.,
On
Journal of
Aristotle's dialogue
d.
On
Philosophy
ibid., 1877,
64-87.
Protrettico, in
R. Accad.
d.
Linzei, Rendici
cl. sc.
Courcelle,
P.,
dore, 1943.
Diels, H., Ober die exoterischen Reden des Aristoteles, Ber. Berl.
Akad., 1883, 477-94.
Zu Aristoteles' Protreptikos u. Cicero's Hortensius, in Archiv f.
,
in Trans, of the
Festugiere, A.
J.,
222-63.
La Revelation d'Hermes Trismegiste, 1949,
(on the De Philosophia).
,
et
ii.
l'vangile, 1932,
219-59, 587-91
Gadamer, H. Der
138-64.
E., '.E^SeAeyeia e '.E^TeAeveia. nelle discussioni umanistiche,
in Atene e Roma, 1937, 177-87.
Garin,
Harder,
Aristotle's Theology, in
161-71.
scriptis histo-
lung, 1923.
trans,
,
by R. Robinson,
1934,
948.
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158
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Mariotti,
ital.
,
ital.
,
Nuove testimonianze ed
e
,
Roma,
La
1940, 48-60.
'quinta essentia' nell' Aristotele perd. e nell. Accademia, in
Moteur
et
revolution de
la
Needler, M. C, The
tal
Aristotelian Protrepticus and the developmentreatment of the Aristotelian ethics, in Class. Phil., 1928,
280-4.
Norsa, M.,
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Un frammento
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della R. Scuola
1-12.
Oellacher, H., Griechische literarische papyri aus der Papyrussammlung Erzherzog Rainer in Wien, in Etudes de Papyrologie,
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Orth,
E.,
Ein neues
589-90.
Philippson, R.,
II
aristotel.
13-25,
Diogene di Enoanda
Walzer,
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259-65.
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Walzer,
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INDEX
Academy,
Gorgias, x.
Great year, 55.
x.
vii, 7.
67.
Anger, 6S-71.
Antisthenes, xi.
Archytas, 109-10, 147.
Archytas, On the Philosophy
Aristotle's style,
Gryllus,
7.
Happiness, 54~55vii.
Hermippus,
147.
of,
1, 2, 3, 5, 6,
92-93
to
open-mindedness, 4; attitude
Plato, 4.
Art and nature, 43-46.
Hesychius,
E., vii.
Ideal numbers,
xi.
xii,
117, 124-33.
Immortality, 16-18.
Indefinite dyad, 1 17-21, 123.
Isocrates, x.
Corinthian dialogue,
viii,
24.
xii.
Delphi, 78-79.
Democritus, On, 148-9.
Deucalion, 81.
Kingship, On,
Diogenes Laertius,
Divisions, 105.
Dreams, 55-56.
Drinking and Drunkenness, 8-14.
vii, n. 7.
Love, 25-26.
Melissus, 82.
vii, ix.
Metaphysics, xii.
Music, 95-97Mysteries, the, 87.
Nerinthus,
16.
vii, n. 8, viii, ix,
Magi, 79-80.
Magicus, xi.
Mathematics, 30-31, 34.
Menexenus,
Eudemus,
Eudemus,
x, xi, 65-66.
Dissertations, 106.
Drunkenness, On,
viii, ix,
Numbers,
xi,
xii,
n 7-19.
16-23.
Eudoxus, 132.
11 7-21,
122.
Euripides, 75.
Euthydemus,
x, n. 1.
Exoteric works,
Fifth
5, 6.
element [aKarovo^aaTov)
98-
99-
Forms, Platonic,
Good,
Good
On
22.
78-99.
115-23.
viii, ix, 59-62.
Parmenides, 82.
Parts of speech, 106.
Phaedo, x, n. 1.
Philosophy, 27-30, 33-34, 37. 52Philosophy, On, vii, viii, ix, x, xi, xii,
Plato,
ix,
"5-33-
x,
xi,
74,
82-84,
88,
INDEX
l62
Pleasure, On,
viii, ix,
63.
Stage-effect,
Protrepticus,
Strabo,
Suidas,
1.
xi.
xi.
Symposium,
vii, ix,
8-14.
27-56.
Pseudo-Ammonius,
Themison, 27.
'Third man', 129.
xi.
Pythagoras, 134-9.
117,
Religion, origin
Rhetoric, 1.
Rhetoric, On,
Rose, V.,
of,
84-87.
vii, 7.
xi, xii.
Sardanapallus, 52-53.
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