Book Read Free

The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy

Page 52

by A. A. Long


  [515] Müri, W., ed. Der Arzt im Altertum, 5th ed. (Munich/Zürich, 1986).

  [516] Nickel, D. “Bemerkungen zur Methodologie in der hippokratischen Schrift De prisca medicina,” in P. Pellegrin and R. Wittern, eds. Hippokratische Medizin und antike Philosophie (Hildesheim/Zürich/New York, 1996) 53–61.

  [517] Perrilli, L. “Il lessico intellettuale di Ippocrate: sêmainein e tekmairesthai,” Lexicon Philosophicum 5 (1991) 153–80.

  [518] Rawlings, H. R. A Semantic Study of Prophasis to 400 B. C. (Wiesbaden, 1975).

  [519] Said, S. La faute tragique (Paris, 1978).

  [520] Sorabji, R. Necessity, Cause and Blame (London, 1980).

  [521] Vegetti, M. “Il de locis in homine fra Anassagora e Ippocrate,” Istituto lombardo di scienze e lettere, Rendiconti Classe di Lettere 99 (1965) 193–213.

  [522] Vegetti, M. La medicina in Platone (Venice, 1995).

  [523] Vegetti, M. “Iatromantis. Previsione e memoria nella Grecia antica,” in M. Bettini, ed. Il signori della memoria e dell’oblio (Florence, 1996) 65–81.

  [524] Vegetti, M. “Kompsoi Asklepiades: la critica di Platone alla medicina nel III libro della Repubblica,” in Algra et al. [139] (1996) 61–75.

  (R) The poetics of early Greek philosophy

  See Fränkel [97] and [147], Lloyd [128], Mourelatos [309], Sedley [377], Snell [128], and

  [525] Babut, D. “Xénophane critique des poètes,” L’Antiquité Classique 43 (1974) 83–117.

  [526] Babut, D. “Héraclite critique des poètes et des savants,” L’Antiquité Classique 45. (1976) 464–96.

  [527] Bernabé, A. “Los filósofos presocráticos como autores literarios,” Emerita 47 (1979) 357–94.

  [528] Bowra, C. M. “The proem of Parmenides,” CP 32 (1937) 97–112.

  [529] Buffière, F. Les mythes d’Homère et la pensée grecque (Paris, 1956).

  [530] Deichgräber, K. Parmenides’ Auffahrt zur Göttin des Rechts. Untersuchungen zum Proömium seines Lehrgedichts (Wiesbaden, 1959).

  [531] Deichgräber, K. Rhythmische Elemente im Logos des Heraklit (Wiesbaden, 1963).

  [532] Delatte, A. “Les conceptions de l’enthousiasme chez les philosophes présocratiques,” L’Antiquité Classique 3 (1934) 5–79.

  [533] Feyerabend, B. “Zur Wegmetaphorik beim Goldblättchen aus Hipponion und dem Proömium des Parmenides,” RM 127 (1984) 1–22.

  [534] Humphreys, S. C. “From riddle to rigour. Satisfactions of scientific prose in ancient Greece,” in S. Marchand and E. Lunbeck, eds. Proof and Persuasion. Essays on Authority, Objectivity, and Evidence (Princeton, 1997).

  [535] Kranz, W. “Gleichnis und Vergleich in der frühgriechischen Philosophie,” Hermes 73 (1983) 99–122.

  [536] Lanata, G. Poetica pre-platonica. Testimonianze e frammenti (Florence, 1963).

  [537] Laks, A. and G. W. Most, eds. Studies on the Derveni Papyrus (Oxford, 1997).

  [538] Long, A. A. (1985) “Early Greek philosophy,” in Easterling/Knox [95] 245–57.

  [539] Maehler, H. Die Auffassung des Dichterberufs im frühen Griechentum bis zur Zeit Pindars (Göttingen, 1963).

  [540] Most, G. W. “Sophistique et hermeneutique,” in B. Cassin, ed. Positions de la sophistique. Colloque de Cérisy (Paris, 1986) 233–45.

  [541] Most, G. W. “The fire next time. Cosmology, allegoresis, and salvation in the Derveni papyrus,” JHS 117 (1997) 117–35.

  [542] Murray, P. “Poetic inspiration in early Greece,” JHS 101 (1981) 87–100.

  [543] Pépin, J. My the et allégorie. Les origines grecques et les contestations judéochrétiennes, 2nd ed. (Paris, 1976).

  [544] Pfeiffer, H. Die Stellung des parmenideischen Lehrgedichtes in der epischen Tradition (Bonn, 1975).

  [545] Pieri, A. “Parmenide e la lingua della tradizione epica greca,” Studi Italiani di Filologia Classica 49 (1977) 68–103.

  [546] Primavesi, O. Empedokles-Studien. Der Strassburger Papyrus und die indirekte Überlieferung (Göttingen, 1998).

  [547] Richardson, N. J. “Homeric professors in the age of the sophists,” Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 21 (1975) 65–81.

  [548] Riezler, K. “Das homerische Gleichnis und der Anfang der Philosophie,” Die Antike 12 (1936) 253–71.

  [549] Rösler, W. “Der Anfang der Katharmoi des Empedokles,” Hermes 111 (1983) 170–79.

  [550] Sassi, M. M. “Parmenide al bivio, Per un’interpretazione del proemio,” La Parola del Passato 43 (1988) 383–96.

  [551] Svenbro, J. Phrasikleia. An Anthropology of Reading in Ancient Greece (Ithaca, 1993).

  [552] Traglia, A. Studi sulla lingua di Empedocle (Bari, 1952).

  [553] Wöhrle, G. “War Parmenides ein schlechter Dichter? Oder: Zur Form der Wissensvermittlung in der frühgriechischen Philosophie,” in W. Kullmann and J. Althoff, eds. Vermittlung und Tradierung von Wissen in der griechischen Kultur (Tübingen, 1993) 167–80.

  INDEX OF PASSAGES

  Passages from the early Greek Philosophers are mainly cited under the name and numbering system of Diels/Kranz; see p. xv.

  Aelian

  Varia historia

  III.17 246 n5

  Aeschylus

  Agamemnon

  811 288 n17

  1116 288 n17

  Eumenides

  199 288 n17

  465 288 n17

  Libation bearers

  100 288 n17

  Aetius

  I.7.13 178 n14

  I.26.2 187

  I.29.7 187

  II.14.3 351

  II.20.1 48

  II.22.1 351

  II.25.1 351

  III.10.2 351

  IV.2 268 n15

  IV.3.5 268 n15

  IV.5 35

  IV.8 268 n15

  IV.19.3 188

  Alexander of Aphrodisias

  Commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics

  36.21-25 188

  Antiphon

  Tetralogies

  II.2.3 287 n6

  II.4.10 287 n6

  III.2.9 287 n6

  Gagarin/Woodruff [429]

  6 310 n21

  37 310 n21

  On truth Bastianini/Decleva Caizzi; see p. 330, n19

  1A.II-III 330 n19

  1B.I.5 323

  1B.I.6-11 323

  1B.I.14-23 324

  1B.I.28-30 330 n26

  1B.II.26-27 324

  1B.IV.9-22 325

  1B.V 325

  1B.V.25-VI.3 326

  1B.VI-VII 325

  2A.I.3-9 326

  2A.I.6-7 326

  2A.I.15-22 325

  2A.I.17-25 325

  2A.II.30-36 326

  Archilochus

  fr. 70 226

  Aristotle

  Fragments (Rose)

  fr. 4 77

  fr. 70 361 n32

  fr. 191 72

  fr. 192 73

  fr. 193 74

  fr. 195 73

  fr. 201 82

  fr. 204 83

  De anima

  I.1 402a7-10 29

  I.1 402a23-b3 29

  I.2 404a5 268 n15

  I.2 404a25-31 41 n16

  I.2 405a19 52

  I.2 405a25-27 111 n19, 111 n27

  I.2 405a19-21 268 n12

  I.4 408a13-23 248 n30 52, 268 n12

  I.5 411a8 205

  I.5 411a17 52

  II.2 413a21 ff. 250

  II.7 419a15-17 264

  III.3 427a21-22 255

  III.3 427a21-29 41 n16

  III.5 429a 248 n33

  De caelo

  II.13 293b25ff. 83

  II.13 294b15 351

  II.13 295b10-16 55

  III.1 298b29-33 99

  III.2 300b8-16 184

  Categories

  2, 4, 5 180 n32

  Eudemian ethics

  VII.1 1235a25 213

  VII.1 1235a25-29 106, 109 n2

  Generation of animals

  V.8 789b2-3 184–5

  On generation and corruption

  I.2 315b
6-15 193

  I.2 315b9 195

  I.2 316a13 ff. 179 n24

  I.2 316a14-b7 182

  I.6 325a24-26 193

  I.7-8 324a35-325a31 181

  I.8 325a2 ff. 179 n24

  I.8 325a13 258

  I.8 325a27-28 183

  Metaphysics

  I.1 981b23 21 n35

  I.3-4 176

  I.3 983b6-984a4 49

  I.3 983b20 226

  I.3 983b27-984a3 41 n16

  I.3 984a2 xxvii

  I.3 984a5-6 43 n36

  I.3 984a5-8 110 n4

  I.3 984a11 xxi, 177 n3

  I.3 984a11-13 42 n32

  I.3 984a18-20 54

  I.3 984a23-26 54

  I.4 984b23 78

  I.4 985a11-15 63 n15

  I.4 985b8 183

  I.4 985b15-16 203 n14

  I.4 985b18-19 202 n2

  I.4 985b22 42 n32

  I.4 985b23 68,78

  I.4 985b24 78

  I.5 986b18 xxviii

  I.5 986b18-25 179 n17

  I.5 986b21 230

  I.5 986b21-4 60

  I.5 986b27 258

  I.5 986b31 ff. 180 n27

  I.5 986b33-987a2 180 n29

  I.5 987a10 32

  I.6 987a29-b7 20 n15

  I.6 987a29 42 n32

  I.6 987a30-31 43 n35

  I.6 987a31 32

  I.6 987b29 68

  I.9 993a15-24 248 n30

  II.1 993a30-34 17

  III.2 997b35-998a4 310 n21

  III.4 1000b12 ff. 217

  IV.4 1007b18-25 302

  IV.5 1009a6-15 302

  IV.5 1009a38 ff. 194

  IV.5 1009b7-17 189

  IV.5 1009b11-12 194

  IV.5 1009b12-15 255

  IV.5 1009b12-32 41 n16

  IV.5 1010a10-15 41 n19, 99

  IV.7 1012a24-26 97, 110 n4

  V.2 1013a31-32 284

  VII.1 177

  VII.1 1028a36-37 249 n38

  VII.11 1036b8 85 n11

  IX.3 1047a4-7 310 n21

  XIII.4 1078b17-31 20 n15

  XIV.3 1091a15 246 n6

  Meteorology

  357a24 f. 361 n32

  Nicomachean ethics

  III.1-7 287 n8

  VI.1 1139a 248 n33

  Physics

  I.1 184b15-21 30

  I.1 184b18-22 179 n18

  II.1 179 n17

  II.4 196a24-28 186

  II.8 161

  III.4 203b7 64 n17

  III.4 203b10-15 206

  III.4 203b13-15 53

  IV.5 213a32-34 183

  VI.2 233a26-31 142

  VI. 3 234a24-b9 152

  VI.9 239b5-7 151

  VI.9 239b9 141

  VI.9 239b11 142

  VI.9 239b14 142

  VI.9 239b18-20 142

  VI.9 239b30-33 153

  VIII.1 252a32-b2 187

  VIII.8 263a5 142

  VIII.9 265b17 ff. 180 n36

  Poetics

  1 1447b17-20 333, 360, 361 n32

  4 1449a26-28 353

  19 1456b15 294

  Politics

  I.11 1259a9 347

  Posterior analytics

  II.1 89b24-35 29

  II.8-10 249 n39

  II.11 94b33 74

  II.19

  Rhetoric

  II.23 1399b6-9 210

  II.23 1400b5 211

  II.24 297, 308

  II. 24 1402a23 309 n6

  II.25.8-11 296

  III.5 1407a34 f. 361 n32

  III.5 1407b13 xxii

  III.5 1407b14-18 358

  De sensu

  442a29 265

  Sophistical refutations

  14 173b17 309 n3, 309 n14

  34 183b17-33 32

  Topics

  I.11 104b1-8 28

  I.11 104b21-22 99

  I.14 105a34-b25 29

  VIII.5 159b30-33 110 n13

  [Aristotle]

  On Melissus, Xenophanes, Gorgias

  974a12-14 127

  977a31 210

  Cicero

  On the nature of the gods

  I.10.26 178 n14, 223 n1

  I.25-41 42 n30

  On the parts of oratory

  64 42 n28

  Tusculan disputations

  V.4.10 359

  Clement of Alexandria

  Stromateis

  I.64 xxviii

  VI.15.1 40 n15

  Diels/Kranz

  11 Thales

  A12 49

  A22 52–3, 268 n12

  12 Anaximander

  A9 56, 228

  A10 47, 55

  A11 47, 55–6, 65 n26

  A18 56

  A26 55

  A30 48

  B1 56, 272

  13 Anaximenes

  A1 79

  A5 57

  A6 58, 79

  A7 59

  A10 53, 58

  A15 59

  A20 59

  B1 59

  B2 59, 223 n1, 252

  21 Xenophanes

  A1 79

  A1.20 229

  A22 xxviii

  A24 226

  A25 229

  A30 60

  A32 60, 229

  A33 60, 229

  A35 209, 229

  A39 209

  A40 60

  A49 230

  B1 210, 230

  B1.21-23 353

  B1-3 xxviii

  B2 211

  B2.11-12 353

  B5 59

  B7 52, 70, 211

  B8 xxviii

  B10 337

  B11 210, 337

  B14 xxviii, 59, 209

  B15 59, 209

  B16 59, 209

  B18 212, 227, 231

  B21a xxviii

  B23 210–11, 228

  B24 210, 229, 258

  B25 210–11, 229

  B26 210–11, 229

  B27 211, 229

  B28 230

  B29 60, 209

  B30 60, 231

  B31 230–1

  B32 60, 209, 231

  B33 60, 209

  B34 10, 81, 212, 229, 231, 246 n10, 257, 347

  B35 248 n25, 347

  22 Heraclitus

  A1a 357

  A15 111 n23

  A16 268 n18

  A17 111 n23

  B1 10, 89, 92, 257, 358

  B1.4-5 238 n34

  B2 92, 109 n2

  B3 100

  B4 95, 235

  B8 232

  B9 94

  B10 105

  B12 94, 235, 268 n18

  B13 95, 235

  B17 109 n2, 257

  B18 91

  B19 90

  B20 109 n2

  B23 235

  B24 111 n23

  B25 111 n23

  B26 268 n18

  B27 109 n2

  B28 109 n2, 110 n11

  B29 103, 109 n2

  B30 99–100, 132 n21, 178 n14, 233

  B31 99–100

  B32 108, 213, 233

  B33 214

  B34 90, 234, 257

  B35 89, 246 n14

  B36 111 n22, 268 n18

  B37 95, 235

  B38 110 n5

  B39 89

  B40 9–11, 62, 71, 89–90, 109 n2, 213, 233, 332, 338

  B41 107, 233

  B42 109 n2, 338

  B43 102, 111 n25

  B44 214

  B45 104, 232, 234, 268 n18

  B46 111 n25, 234

  B47 109 n2, 110 n11

  B48 357

  B49a 235

  B50 11, 91, 105, 232, 234, 348

  B51 95, 110 n15, 235

  B52 107

  B53 106, 218

  B54 91, 235

  B55 89, 234, 262

  B56 91, 94, 109 n2, 257, 338

  B57 95, 101, 109 n2, 233, 235, 337–8

  B58 94, 235

  B59 94, 235

  B60 94, 235

  B61 95, 301

  B62 103, 213

  B64 101, 178 n14, 233

 
B65 233

  B67 95, 101, 109 n2, 178 n14, 213

  B67a 268 n18

  B70 109 n2, 110 n11

  B72 257

  B74 110 n11

  B76 111 n2

  B77 102, 111 n25, 254, 268 n18

  B78 104, 246 n3

  B79 104

  B80 106, 110 n5, 224 n8, 232

  B81 71

  B82 95, 235

  B83 235

  B85 111 n25, 268 n18

  B86 109 n2

  B88 102, 235, 268 n18, 362 n39

  B89 93

  B90 100, 232

  B91 235

  B91a 99

  B92 235, 359

  B93 91, 213, 235, 359

  B94 106, 109 n2

  B96 103

  B97 110 n11

  B98 103, 268 n18

  B100 233

  B101 104, 234

  B102 110 n14, 111 n29, 214

  B103 94, 235

  B104 109 n2, 226, 234

  B106 338

  B107 90, 234, 262, 268 n18

  B108 89, 107

  B110 109 n2

  B111 94, 235

  B113 104

  B114 92

  B115 104

  B116 104

  B117 102, 111 n25, 254, 268 n18

  B118 102, 235, 268 n18

  B119 103

  B121 109 n2

  B123 91, 213, 235, 357

  B124 111 n31

  B125 94

  B126 235

  B127 109 n2

  B128 109 n2

  B129 129

  B136 111 n23

  23 Epicharmus

  B20 226

  24 Alcmaeon

  B1 226, 246 n11

  28 Parmenides

  A34 238 n27

  B1 208, 236, 262

  B1.1-3 354

  B1.4 216

  B1.8 215

  B1.11, 13 237

  B1.14 224 n9

  B1.22-31 354

  B1.27 215

  B1.28-32 20 n23, 170, 215, 241

  B1.29 215

  B1.29-30 236

  B1.30 123, 241

  B1.31-32 237

  B2.1-2 114, 354

  B2.2 247 n19

  B2.3-5 114

  B2.4 236

  B2.5-8 238

  B2.6-8 354

  B2.7-8 116

  B3 120

  B4 122

  B5 122

  B6.1 120

  B6.1-2 116

  B6.3-9 117

  B6.4-6 247 n19

  B6.4-7 236

  B6.4-9 114

  B7 117, 238, 262

  B7.2 247 n19

  B7.3-6 261

  B8 117, 261

  B8.1-4 238

  B8.2-4 118

  B8.4 237, 248 n34

  B8.5-6 118

  B8.6 179 n19

  B8.6-9 118

  B8.9-10 118

  B8.10 248 n34

  B8.11-13 118–19

  B8.12 236

  B8.13-15 118

  B8.15-16 115

  B8.22-25 119, 169, 183

  B8.26 79

  B8.26-33 119

  B8.27-28 122, 236

  B8.30-31 124

  B8.34-36 120

  B8.36-38 132 n5

  B8.34-41 119

  B8.37-38 120

  B8.38-41 120

  B8.42-44 121

  B8.42-49 119

  B8.5off. 123, 215, 236

  B8.50-52 165, 168, 239

  B8.53-54 123, 168, 179 n26

  B8.53-59 237, 239

  B8.54 179 n19, 240

 

‹ Prev