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Plato and Aristotle in Agreement? - Platonists on Aristotle from Antiochus to Porphyry (Hardcover)
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Plato and Aristotle in Agreement? - Platonists on Aristotle from Antiochus to Porphyry (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Philosophical Monographs
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George Karamanolis breaks new ground in the study of later ancient
philosophy by examining the interplay of the two main schools of
thought, Platonism and Aristotelianism, from the first century BC
to the third century AD. From the time of Antiochus and for the
next four centuries Platonists were strongly preoccupied with the
question of how Aristotle's philosophy compared with the Platonic
model. Scholars have usually classified Platonists into two groups,
the orthodox ones and the eclectics or syncretists, depending on
whether Platonists rejected Aristotle's philosophy as a whole or
accepted some Peripatetic doctrines. Karamanolis argues against
this dichotomy. He argues that Platonists turned to Aristotle only
in order to discover and elucidate Plato's doctrines and thus to
reconstruct Plato's philosophy, and they did not hesitate to
criticize Aristotle when judging him to be at odds with Plato. For
them, Aristotle was merely auxlilary to their accessing and
understanding Plato. Platonists were guided in their judgement
about Aristotle's proximity to, or distance from, Plato by their
own assumptions about what Plato's doctrines were. Also crucial for
their judgement were their views about which philosophical issues
particularly mattered. Given the diversity of views rehearsed in
Plato's works, Platonists were flexible enough to decide which were
Plato's own doctrines. The real reason behind the rejection of
Aristotle's testimony was not to defend the purity of Plato's
philosophy, as Platonists sometimes argued in a rhetorical fashion.
Aristotle's testimony was rejected, rather, because Platonists
assumed that Plato's doctrines were views found in Plato's work
which Aristotle had discarded or criticized. The evaluation of
Aristotle's testimony on the part of the Platonists also depends on
their interpretation of Aristotle himself. This is particularly
clear in the case of Porphyry, with whom the ancient discussion
reaches a conclusion which most later Platonists accepted. While
essentially in agreement with Plotinus's interpretation of Plato,
Porphyry interpreted Aristotle in such a way that the latter
appeared to agree essentially with Plato on all significant
philosophical questions, a view which was dominant until the
Renaissance. Karamanolis argues that Porphyry's view of Aristotle's
philosophy guided him to become the first Platonist to write
commentaries on Aristotle's works. Plato and Aristotle in
Agreement? offers much food for thought to ancient philosophers and
classicists.
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