Todd, 'Readings in Ancient Greek Philosophy from Thales to Aristotle', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9506
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9506-todd-readings
@@@@95.6.5, Cohen, Curd, Reeve (Edd.), Readings in Ancient Greek Philosophy
S. Marc Cohen, Patricia Curd, and C.D.C. Reeve (edd.), Readings in
Ancient Greek Philosophy from Thales to Aristotle. Indianapolis:
Hackett Publishing Company Inc., 1995. Pp. 786. ISBN 0-87220-313-1.
$42.95 (hb). ISBN 0-87220-312-3. $24.95 (pb).
Reviewed by Robert B. Todd -- University of British Columbia
bobtodd@unixg.ubc.ca
This collection of recycled, and in some cases precycled, material
from Hackett's list of translations of Greek philosophy is "intended to
introduce readers to a broad selection of some of the greatest of the
ancient Greek philosophers" (Introd. vii). Hackett's catalogue for Fall
1994 (p. 1) identifies these readers as "introductory students". These
translations, with little annotation and brief introductions, do represent
at least the raw material for introductory courses in Greek philosophy,
although some significant omissions (see below) ensure that they will be
more useful for courses in Philosophy than in Classics departments.
The editors advocate these texts (Introd. viii) on the general
grounds that Greek philosophy invented "critical rationality", and
advanced theories "to be accepted or rejected on the basis of evidence and
argument". But while the same editors also claim that Greek philosophers
"recognised that there were profoundly non-rational elements in the world"
(ix), and thereby resembled "their fellow poets and tragedians", they omit
the analysis of such compatriots found in Aristotle's Poetics, and
Plato's discussion of mimesis at Republic III, 392c-398b.
(This does not, however, prevent the cover of this book from being
decorated with a photograph of the theatre at Epidauros!) Also missing is
Socrates' speech at Phaedrus (243a-257b), a text that "essays to
describe an interaction of reason and inspiration as intimate as could be
wished" (to quote M.F. Burnyeat, BICS 24 [1977] 13), although
Hackett has available a new, and quite superb, translation of this work by
A. Nehamas and P. Woodruff. Rhetoric too deals with the interplay of
reason and emotion, yet we get nothing from Book 2 of Aristotle's
Rhetoric where the orator is coached on the emotions. Is this
excluded material itself lacking in critical rationality, or does the
fault lie with its subject matter?
The Presocratics and Sophists (1-82). This section will need
to be extensively complemented, probably by a textbook such as J.M.
Robinson's durable An Introduction to Early Greek Philosophy
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1st. ed. 1968), or Hackett's own useful
Philosophy Before Socrates by R.D. McKirahan jr. published last
year (and the source of most of the translations in this section). To
read, for example, Heraclitus' fragments (25-34) unaided is a fascinating,
if rather bizarre, experience that may not immediately convince beginners
that they are being exposed to critical rationality. The Sophists are
treated dismissively (one paragraph in the Introduction at p. 5) as an
appendix to the Presocratics, although outside Philosophy departments they
are being excitingly reevaluated in the burgeoning field of rhetoric.
Gorgias' Encomium of Helen, a very accessible piece of argument,
indeed a paradigm of critical rationality, should have been given in full,
not in the unhelpfully truncated form (78-79) taken over from McKirahan's
book (376-377).
Plato's early and middle-period dialogues (83-472). This
material will be more readily accessible, but that is due more to Plato's
qualities as a writer than to any contribution by the editors. There are
the usual works needed for introductions to Plato (Euthyphro, Apology,
Crito, Meno in full; Protagoras, Gorgias, Phaedo, Symposium,
and Republic in selections), mostly in the late G.M.A. Grube's
tried and trusted versions. There are also useful selections from
Hackett's forthcoming Parmenides (by M.L. Gill and P. Ryan, whose
version of 127b-128d is preferable to McKirahan's at 57-58), and
Timaeus (by D.J. Zeyl). Perhaps some material from the
Theaetetus could have been added to demonstrate Plato's continuing
preoccupation with epistemology. Selections from within dialogues create
a problem at Phaedo 77c (p. 215), where an "introductory student"
will not readily understand the reference to the argument from opposites
(at 70c-72e) when the selection begins just as that argument ends.
Aristotle (473-750). The translations here are mostly the work
of G. Fine and T.H. Irwin, in advance of their forthcoming anthology chez
Hackett. As noted, the Poetics and Rhetoric are not
represented, nor, despite a growing interest in Aristotle's biology in
recent years, and the late Montgomery Furth's efforts to establish its
philosophical significance, do we get anything more from this part of the
corpus than the methodological Parts of Animals I, chs. 1 and 5.
But there is more than enough to cover a strenuous journey from the
Categories to the Ethics and Politics, with stops en
route to consider problems in the philosophy of science, the theory of
change, and in teleology, metaphysics, and psychology. This material is
more heavily annotated than the rest of the volume, and supported by a
glossary (767-786). But these may not always help the beginner. The
notes are particularly elliptical (nowhere, for example, is "OCT"
explained), and it is puzzling to tell a student that phantasia
"might be"(!) translated "imagination" as well as "appearance" (see also
the confusing note on p. 768). The brief and despairing notes on De
Anima III.5 will also not help anyone appreciate the most influential
of all Aristotelian texts.
There are "Suggestions for Further Reading" (751-755) (Barnes ed.,
The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle [Cambridge, 1995] arrived too
late to be included), but with no guidance on their differing value to the
"introductory student".
Hackett has effectively served the interests of both teaching and
scholarship in Greek philosophy over the past twenty years by offering
well-produced and reasonably-priced volumes by major scholars. The
present derivative anthology may not be quite as effective as its other
recent ventures in this field. Even if the paperback price of
Readings makes it attractive to instructors, it is still only a
basic propaideutic. The contemporary trend (as in the revised Penguin
editions, the Clarendon Plato and Aristotle, and Hackett's own excellent
Nicomachean Ethics by Irwin) is towards presenting Greek
philosophical texts with notes and commentary. As the humanities continue
their precipitous decline, and classical texts in philosophy and many
other fields assume an increasingly hieroglyphic status for students, this
kind of presentation will become all the more essential. Perhaps it can
soon be achieved by machine-readable annotated texts that can be readily
revised and updated. Maybe there could be a students' version of the
elitist Project Archelogos, currently under way for Greek philosophy. The
kind of basic anthology reviewed here may indeed have outlived its
usefulness for instructional purposes.
The general quality of the translations in this volume is high, but
inevitably close engagement engenders queries. In conclusion I note just
one that arose in reading the selections from the Republic
(253-431), here in Grube's translations as revised by Reeve (first
published in 1992). Reeve has on the whole made Grube's prose rather more
supple, but in one famous passage has, I believe, incorrectly altered its
meaning. This is in Book I where Socrates asks Thrasymachus whether, if
justice is the interest of the stronger, a ruler who errs can still be
called a ruler, and says that he takes this to be Thrasymachus' meaning.
Thrasymachus reacts by saying that Socrates has done so because he is a
sukophantes (340d1), and in picking up on this remark later both
use the associated verb sukophantein (341a5, b9, c2). Here Grube
used locutions involving "be captious" and "trick", and so had
Thrasymachus represent Socrates as cleverly quibbling rather than arguing
seriously. In replacing this language with variants of "false witness",
Reeve sides with the majority of translators and commentators (e.g., Adam;
Allan; Bloom; Jowett; Robin; Waterfield) who see
sukophantes/sukophantein as metaphorical language. That is, they
all (though in slightly different ways) represent Thrasymachus as accusing
Socrates of unjustly denouncing him, in the manner of an informer. But
there are at least three problems with this. (1) Would the macho
Thrasymachus really whine in this way? (2) Can "shaving a lion" (i.e.,
attempting the impossible) be equated with the act of denouncing in
Socrates' remark at 341c1-2? Someone cannot stop you denouncing him or
her, but can scotch your quibbles. (3) "Sycophants" qua informers
denounced people behind their backs to the authorities, whereas Socrates
supposedly "denounces" Thrasymachus to his face, before an audience that
can hardly be identified as the metaphorical equivalent of the state.
Grube was, I think, on the right track, as earlier were Cornford, Lindsay,
and Rouse, all of whom used "quibbler" and "quibble", or Shorey who used
"pettifogger" and "pettifogging". This is how we would expect
Thrasymachus, who despises Socratic method (e.g., 336b-337a, 338b, 338d,
343a-344c, 349a, 352b, 354a), to respond to a query about the definition
of a term. "Quibble" etc. is the sense given at sukophantein I.2
by LSJ (who illustrate it from Republic 341b<9>, and c<2>, as well
as several other loci). LSJ, however, inconsistently omitted this
sense under sukophantes for Republic 340d1; see R. Renehan,
Greek Lexicographical Notes, 1st. Series (Goettingen, 1975), 183.