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On the Eternity of the World de Aeternitate Mundi
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Proclus
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2002
About this book
In the fifth century A.D., Proclus served as head of the Academy in Athens that had been founded 900 years earlier by Plato. Proclus was the last great systematizer of Greek philosophy, and his work exerted a powerful influence in late antiquity, in the Arab world, and in the Renaissance. His treatise On the Eternity of the World formed the basis for virtually all later arguments for the eternity of the world and for the existence of God; consequently, it lies at the heart of neoplatonic philosophy and the controversy between pagans and Christians at the end of antiquity.
Proclus’s eighteen Arguments were quoted within John Philoponus’ polemic against him, written in the sixth century; but the opening pages of the sole extant manuscript, which contained the first Argument, have been lost. In this book, Helen Lang and A.D. Macro present the seventeen Arguments preserved by Philoponus and translate them as an independent work. The first Argument, which survives in Arabic, is also included and makes this the only complete edition of On the Eternity of the World since antiquity.
This bilingual edition comprises the seventeen Arguments (II-XVIII) in Greek and English, along with an introduction, synopses, and detailed notes which help readers with or without Greek to understand them philosophically and historically. Two appendices complete the volume: the Arabic text of the first Argument, also with English translation and notes, and the first modern edition of an important Latin translation from the Renaissance.
In a valuable introduction, Lang and Macro examine the complex history of these Arguments. Together with its excellent annotations, and English and Greek texts en face, the publication of Proclus’s On the Eternity of the Worldmakes available an influential work by a major figure in the history of late Greek philosophy.
Proclus’s eighteen Arguments were quoted within John Philoponus’ polemic against him, written in the sixth century; but the opening pages of the sole extant manuscript, which contained the first Argument, have been lost. In this book, Helen Lang and A.D. Macro present the seventeen Arguments preserved by Philoponus and translate them as an independent work. The first Argument, which survives in Arabic, is also included and makes this the only complete edition of On the Eternity of the World since antiquity.
This bilingual edition comprises the seventeen Arguments (II-XVIII) in Greek and English, along with an introduction, synopses, and detailed notes which help readers with or without Greek to understand them philosophically and historically. Two appendices complete the volume: the Arabic text of the first Argument, also with English translation and notes, and the first modern edition of an important Latin translation from the Renaissance.
In a valuable introduction, Lang and Macro examine the complex history of these Arguments. Together with its excellent annotations, and English and Greek texts en face, the publication of Proclus’s On the Eternity of the Worldmakes available an influential work by a major figure in the history of late Greek philosophy.
Author / Editor information
Proclus :
Helen S. Lang is Koeppel Professor of Classical Studies in the Department of Philosophy at Trinity College and author of Aristotle’s Physics and Its Medieval Varieties (1992) and The Order of Nature in Aristotle’s Physics: Place and The Elements (1998). A. D. Macro is Hobart Professor of Classical Languages in the Department of Classics at Trinity College.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
IX -
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Citations
XI -
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Introduction
1 -
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Argument II
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Argument III
43 -
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Argument IV
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Argument V
55 -
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Argument VI
61 -
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Argument VII
67 -
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Argument VIII
71 -
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Argument IX
79 -
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Argument X
85 -
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Argument XI
93 -
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Argument XII
101 -
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Argument XIII
105 -
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Argument XIV
111 -
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Argument XV
119 -
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Argument XVI
125 -
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Argument XVII
133 -
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Argument XVIII
139 -
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Appendix I. Argument I in Arabic with English Translation
153 -
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Appendix II. Procli Successoris Rationes ii—xviii
165 -
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Index Verborum Graecorum
183 -
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Index Nominum
189
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
January 2, 2002
eBook ISBN:
9780520925762
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
201
eBook ISBN:
9780520925762
Keywords for this book
neoplantonic philosophy; proclus; ancient literary criticism; classical literary criticism; translated text; late greek philosophy; the successor; eternity; history of philosophy; academy in athens; plato; late antiquity; existence of god; pagans and christians; bilingual edition; classical philosophers; the one; intellect; soul; western philosophy; john philoponus; history of platonism; history of aristotelianism; hellenic philosophy; christianity; cosmology; greek philosophy