Banchich, 'Cosmology in Antiquity', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9512
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9512-banchich-cosmology
@@@@95.12.27, Wright, Cosmology in Antiquity
M. R. Wright, Cosmology in Antiquity. New York: Routledge,
1995. Pp. x, 201. $17.95. ISBN 0-414-12183-3 (pb).
Reviewed by Thomas M. Banchich -- Canisius College
banchict@ccmac.canisius.edu
Wright begins with a programmatic introduction (pp. 1-10) in
which she justifies her topic, defines some key terms, and
previews what follows. Central to her approach and to the aim of
the Routledge series Sciences of Antiquity is the
proposition that many contemporary scientific problems "are more
sophisticated versions of issues which engaged the interest of
ancient cosmologists" (p. 1).[[1]] This, together with a survey
of cosmological texts from 3rd millennium Sumer through the 2nd
century A.D. (pp. 11-36) and a chapter entitled "Models, Myths
and Metaphors" (pp. 37-55), which shows how the ancients employed
models that differ significantly from their modern counterparts
mainly in degree to "assist in the simplification and
interpretation of the complexities of the observed data" (p. 37),
set the tone for the remainder of the booksix thematic chapters:
"Macrocosm and Microcosm," "Chaos and Cosmogony," "Elements and
Matter," "Air, Aither and Astra," "Time and Eternity," "The
Mathematical Bases of Greek Cosmology," and "The Cosmos and
God"--all largely variations on a theme.
The first of these chapters, which presents the notion of a vital
cosmos as the ancient cosmologist's most important and pervasive
model, may itself be taken as a sort of model for Wright's
subsequent chapters. A quick survey ticks off the most important
texts, from the so-called Memphite theology of Egypt (mistakenly
or misleadingly referred to by Wright [p. 57] as "from
Heliopolis"[[2]]) and the Akkadian version of Babylonian creation
myth preserved in the Enuma elish through Hesiod's
Theogony, the Presocratics, the Hippocratic corpus, Plato,
Aristotle, and, after an interesting, brief digression on Ovid
and Vergil, concludes with the Cynics and Stoics. Here Wright
does a particularly good job of noting how the
macrocosm/microcosm model led to the adoption of certain
otherwise illogical notions about characteristics thought to be
shared by man, the state, the individual components of the world
of nature, and the cosmos in general, e.g., birth and death,
soul, and law and justice. Passing observations suggest how much
this model has led current cosmologists to adopt positions much
like those of their ancient predecessors. So, Wright observes,
"The Renaissance image of the Great Chain of Being and
contemporary mapping of DNA molecules are descendants of an
ancient way of regarding all forms of existence from the smallest
to the greatest as on the one spectrum of universal life" (p.
57), and, "Today one might paraphrase this passage [Aeneid
6.724-731] in terms of cosmic energy and mass whereby the
energy-charge in the mass produces differentiation, first, of
galactic form, then of this particular galaxy with its sun, moon
and earth, and finally the population of living things within it
in one continuous and dynamic process" (p. 69).
This largely descriptive approach, interspersed with modest
linguistic, historical, and analytic commentary, has the
virtue--or vice (more on which below)--of importing to the fairly
small body texts that bear on ancient cosmology clarity,
cohesion, and relevance. In Cosmology in Antiquity, it
has also led to repetition. Indeed, several chapters read as
though they had been composed for separate presentation, for the
same points are made in the same language (cf. pp, 54 and 102,
for the analogy between the cosmic dodecahedron and a "football
made of twelve five-sided pieces of leather.") However, Wright's
comparisons of ancient to modern cosmology, regardless of their
persuasiveness, serve to break what might otherwise become a
monotonous read: non-Hesiodic notions of chaos are said to
approach "the contemporary understanding of chaos as a disordered
state of affairs that was yet susceptible to certain principles
of order arising from it or being imposed on it" (p. 78); "... [
in ancient atomic theory] the potential to swerve was thought to
be built into the very structure of the atom, in somewhat the
same way as inherent erratic behavior is now recognized in
subnuclear particles" (p. 86); and, "The assumption that all
things ... are temporary compounds of elemental parts of earth,
air, fire and water in different proportions is not so very
different from the contemporary views that the main ingredients
are the elements of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen or that the types
of life are reducible to arrangements of the four letters of the
DNA alphabet" (p. 100).
Unfortunately and, insofar as they betray carelessness and haste
at the least, frequent certain or probable errors of fact mar
this book. Wright labels Linear A a transcription of a Greek
dialect (p.16) and Plato's Academy, too anachronistically, "the
first European university" (p. 24). Plutarch she terms widely
traveled--an exaggeration, unless warranted by trips to Egypt and
Italy (p. 35). Mt. Olympus she locates in Thrace rather than
between Macedon and Thessaly (p. 38). Perhaps most unfortunate
of all are repeated references (pp. 10, 36, 158, 161, and 195) to
Ptolemy's Amalgest for Almagest, even in the
bibliographic entry for G. J. Toomer's Ptolemy's Almagest.
Other slips are trivial--e.g. Ohio State University Press for
Ohio University Press in the bibliographic notice of D. E. Hahm's
The Origins of Stoic Cosmology--but errors nonetheless.
The five-page bibliography is eclectic and reflects the same
faults noted above. A statement of the rationale might have
helped explain the mixture of a few specialized journal articles
and monographs, some general treatments of subjects ancient and
modern, Cherniss' eleventh volume of the Loeb Plutarch, and
fundamental works--Doxographi Graeci, Die Fragmente der
Vorsokratiker, and Stoicorum veterum fragmenta. All
but two modern entries are in English, the exceptions being in
French.
The glossary of terms is no less peculiar: inter alia,
anthropomorphism, geocentrism, heliocentrism, and genesis are
glossed, but doxography, four-color map theory, Great Chain of
Being, and second law of thermodynamics left unexplained. The
Index of Classical Sources will pose problems even to some
classicists. For example, in the entry Anonymus
Londonensis (Meno) 18.8:117, (Meno) 18.8 refers to the Berlin
Supplementum Aristotelem, the 117 to Wright's p. 117,
where there appears the parenthetical citation Menon 44A27,
clear enough to those familiar with Diels and Kranz, but to
others an odds-on mystery. There are no notes to the text, and
the parenthetical references to ancient authors are unsystematic.
Wright generally uses fr. to signify fragments from Diels and
Kranz, but pp. 172-173 provide neither references to Diels-Kranz
fragment numbers nor provenance for Protagoras fr. 4 or Critias
fr.25. For these one must turn to the Index of Classical
Sources. On p. 116, fr. designates fr. 13 of Sophocles--the
edition (Dindorf's?) unspecified--and, on p. 129, "fr. 18 trans.
Ross" refers to the fragmentary On Philosophy of Aristotle
in the translation of, and according to the enumeration of, Vol.
XII of Sir David Ross's The Selected Works of Aristotle.
On p. 62, Stobaeus 1.18.1, the provenance of Ross's fr. 11 of
Aristotle's On the Pythagoreans, appears instead of a
fragment number. Wright nearly always cites Stoic material
according to the numeration of von Arnim's Stoicorum veterum
fragmenta, though on p.142 one finds Stobaeus 1.106, the
provenance of Chrysippus fr. 509, SVF II, p. 164, from
that philosopher's De tempore. Aetius she cites according
to the numeration of Doxographi Graeci, though no
explanation is given and, without one, most readers will be at a
loss. No citation appears on p. 122 for IG I2 945, the epigram
for the Athenian dead at Potidaea. A book targeted at readers
thought to require assistance with terms such as "kosmos"
and "heliocentric" needs to be user-friendly to succeed, and, in
this respect, once one goes beyond a superficial reading of the
text itself, Cosmology in Antiquity does not quite measure
up.
But there is another, more serious problem with Cosmology in
Antiquity, one perhaps inherent in its method. Though it
offers to the intelligent layman a sound survey of mainstream
ancient cosmology peppered with provocative commentary--an
admittedly worthy achievement--, its basic approach differs
hardly at all from that of the ancient doxographers, and, as a
result, it risks a similar anachronistic distortion of the
thought of the individuals with whom it deals. Is there not
something essentially misleading in statements such as "Cosmology
is unique among ancient sciences in being based on a wide variety
of texts" (p. 11), when the very word "cosmology" is a New Latin
coinage? One looks in vain for KOSMOLOGI/A in LSJ, Lampe,
von Arnim, Doxographi Graeci, and E. A. Sophocles'
Greek Lexicon of the Roman and Byzantine Periods from B.C. 146
to A. D. 1100, though the Wortindex to Diels-Kranz
does list KOSMOLOGIKO/S, given by the scholiast to Aristophanes
Pax 835 as an alternative title of the TRIAGMO/S of Ion of
Chios.[[3]]
Yet, in spite of the problems described above, interested readers
from outside the field of classics and classicists only
tangentially concerned with ancient philosophy and science will
profit from Cosmology in Antiquity. It is a serviceable
book, but, even at that level, could have been a much better one.
NOTES
[[1]] Sciences of Antiquity intends "to show what it was
in the aims, expectations, problems and circumstances of the
ancient writers that formed the nature of what they wrote. A
consequent purpose is to provide historians with an understanding
of the materials out of which later writers, rather than
passively receiving and transmitting ancient 'ideas', constructed
their own world view" (p. ii).
[[]] Wright's concern is with Atum, a god of Heliopolis, who,
she says, "had within himself the primary sexual urge which
compelled him to draw out his own body's fluid with his hand" to
produce Shu (air) and Tefnut (moisture). The so-called Shabaka
Stone, an inscription from ca. 700 B.C. but preserving much
earlier material, gives this explanation of the genesis of Shu
and Tefnut, though there is no suggestion of Atum's actions being
the result of any "primary sexual urge." The earliest evidence,
a hieroglyphic inscription from the 24th c. B.C., has Atum spit
and sputter out Shu and Tefnut. A fourth-century Bremner-Rhind
Papyrus (British Museum 10188) preserves both versions. For
translations and commentary, see Ancient Near Eastern Texts
Relating to the Old Testament, ed. by J. B. Pritchard (2nd
ed.; Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1955), pp. 3-7.
[[3]] For the passage, see Diels and Kranz, 36A2, I, p. 378.
The place given cosmologia generalis in the taxonomy of sciences
proposed by Christian Wolff, Discursus praeliminaris de
philosophia in genera (Frankfurt and Leipzig: Regner, 1728)
seems to mark something of a watershed in the process of the
development of a perception of cosmology as an intellectual
activity in its own right.