Abstract
Scholarship on Plato's Timaeus has paid relatively little attention to Tim. 77a–81, a seemingly disjointed passage on topics including plants, respiration, blood circulation, and musical sounds. Despite this comparative neglect, commentators both ancient and modern have levelled a number of serious charges against Timaeus' remarks in the passage, questioning the coherence and explanatory power of what they take to be a theory of respiration. In this paper, I argue that the project of 77a–81e is not to sketch theories of respiration, circulation, and digestion (inter alia), but to explain how the human body is maintained in light of and despite constant environmental depletion. Further, I argue that in order to understand this account of “the replenishing system,” we need to understand Timaeus' striking analogy of the fish trap or nassa. Commentators have generally focused directly on the workings of the bodily construction that Timaeus likens to a fish trap, but without considering how we should understand the analogy qua analogy. I develop a functional reading of the analogy that yields a coherent account of the replenishing system on which previous criticisms of Timaeus' remarks on respiration do not arise. Aside from lending greater unity to the passage, both internally and within its immediate context in the dialogue, this account of the replenishing system contributes to our understanding of Timaeus' reason-and-necessity explanatory framework as applied to the human body and has noteworthy implications for specific explanatory principles, in particular like-to-like motion and circular thrust.
References
Barker, A. 2000. “Timaeus on music and the liver.” In Reason and Necessity: Essays on Plato’s Timaeus, edited by M. R. Wright. London: Duckworth.10.2307/j.ctv1n35804Search in Google Scholar
Berryman, S. 2009. The Mechanical Hypothesis in Ancient Greek Natural Philosophy. New York: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511605284Search in Google Scholar
Betegh, G. 2020. “Plato on Illness in the Phaedo, the Republic, and the Timaeus.” In Plato’s Timaeus, edited by Jorgenson, Karfík, Špinka. Leiden: Brill.10.1163/9789004437081_013Search in Google Scholar
Brisson, L. 2001. Platon: Timée/Critias. Paris: GF Flammarion.Search in Google Scholar
Cornford, F. M. 1937. Plato’s Cosmology. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Search in Google Scholar
Grams, L. 2009. Medical Theory in Plato’s Timaeus. Rhizai 6 (2): 161–92.Search in Google Scholar
Johansen, T. K. 2020. “Soul, Life, and Nutrition in the Timaeus.” In Heat, Pneuma, and Soul in Ancient Philosophy and Science, edited by Bartoš, Guthrie King, 121–39. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/9781108651714.008Search in Google Scholar
Joubaud, C. 1991. Le Corps Humain Dans la Philosophie Platonicienne. Paris: Vrin.Search in Google Scholar
Karfík, F. 2012. “The Constitution of the Human Body in Plato’s Timaeus.” Croatian Journal of Philosophy 12 (35): 167–81.Search in Google Scholar
Lloyd, G. E. R. 2003. In the Grip of Disease: Studies in the Greek Imagination. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/oso/9780199253234.001.0001Search in Google Scholar
Prince, B. D. 2014. “Physical Change in Plato’s Timaeus.” Apeiron 47 (2): 211–29.10.1515/apeiron-2012-0037Search in Google Scholar
Pelavski, A. 2014. “Physiology in Plato’s Timaeus: Irrigation, Digestion and Respiration.” Cambridge Classical Journal 60 (2014): 61–74.10.1017/S1750270514000086Search in Google Scholar
Zeyl, D. 2000. Plato: Timaeus. Indianapolis: Hackett.Search in Google Scholar
© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Xenocrates and the Two-Category Scheme
- Plato’s Medicalisation of Ethics
- Replenishment and Maintenance of the Human Body (Timaeus 77a–81e)
- Plato’s Master Argument for a Two-Kind Ontology in the Sophist: A New Reading of the Final Argument of the Gigantomachia Passage (249b5–249c9)
- A Peripatetic Argument for the Intrinsic Goodness of Human Life: Alexander of Aphrodisias' Ethical Problems I
- Keeping the Friend in Epicurean Friendship
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Xenocrates and the Two-Category Scheme
- Plato’s Medicalisation of Ethics
- Replenishment and Maintenance of the Human Body (Timaeus 77a–81e)
- Plato’s Master Argument for a Two-Kind Ontology in the Sophist: A New Reading of the Final Argument of the Gigantomachia Passage (249b5–249c9)
- A Peripatetic Argument for the Intrinsic Goodness of Human Life: Alexander of Aphrodisias' Ethical Problems I
- Keeping the Friend in Epicurean Friendship