Todd, 'Arethas of Caesarea's Scholia on Porphyry's Isagoge and Aristotle's Categories (Codex Vaticanus Urbinas Graecus 35): a critical edition', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9512
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9512-todd-arethas
@@@@95.12.24, Share, Arethas' Scholia on Porphyry and Aristotle
Michael Share, Arethas of Caesarea's Scholia on Porphyry's
Isagoge and Aristotle's Categories (Codex Vaticanus Urbinas
Graecus 35): a critical edition. Pp. xvi + 293. Bruxelles:
Editions Ousia, 1994. ISBN 2-87060-046-1.
Reviewed by Robert B. Todd, Classics -- University of British
Columbia
bobtodd@unixg.ubc.ca
Aristotle Transformed was an apt title for a recently
published collection of essays on the Greek Aristotelian
commentators. It highlighted the main reason why the
Aristotelian tradition is studied: scholars want to reconstruct
and understand the transformations produced by the interaction of
the Aristotelian corpus with varying linguistic, philosophical,
and cultural constructions imposed on it by exgetes in a long
history that binds the Graeco-Roman world, the Near-East, and
Western Europe. In this vast mosaic the least studied element is
clearly the Byzantine, particularly for the period between the
ninth and fifteenth centuries. The neglect has been extensive
and long-lasting: many of the relevant texts remain unedited,
with some accessible only in Latin translations of the
Rennaissance. Whether such neglect represents the valid judgment
of the centuries on the quality of Byzantine Aristotelianism, and
its transformations of the Aristotelian fundament, is one
question raised by the appearance of the first volume of the
Commentaria in Aristotelem Byzantina, a series designed as
a complement to Philosophi Byzantini (inaugurated in
1984).
There have long been plans to continue the Commentaria in
Aristotelem Graeca, a series that included several
Byzantine commentaries (if we mark the beginning of the Byzantine
era as the foundation of Constantinople), but only selections
from the ninth to fifteenth centuries (Michael of Ephesus,
Sophonias, and Eustratius), and notably excluded Michael Psellus'
commentaries. There are around twenty works (depending on how
one counts) that lack modern editions, and it might have been
useful had the Series Editor (Linos Benakis) indicated plans and
priorities for the future in his preface (pp. vii-ix). The
present enterprise parallels a project for cataloguing the
manuscripts of the Greek and Byzantine Aristotelian commentators;
see G. de Gregorio and P. Eleuteri, "Per un catalogo dei
manoscritti greci dei Commentaria in Aristotelem Graeca et
Byzantina," 117-167 in Symbolae Berolinenses fuer Dieter
Harlfinger, ed. F. Berger et al. (Amsterdam, 1993).
Ultimately both these projects could contribute significantly to
a better understanding of the manuscript traditions of Aristotle
and his commentators, and well as to the history of
Aristotelianism.
Byzantine Aristotelianism is considerably more derivative that
its ancient counterpart, and frequently involves scholarly
scribes excerpting and adapting material from earlier
commentaries, particularly in the case of the logical treatises
that were widely used in higher education. This typical practice
is represented in the present edition of the scholia by Arethas
(c. 850-925) on Porphyry's Isagoge (pp. 1-130), and the
text to which it is a propaideutic, Aristotle's Categories
chs. 1-5 (pp. 131-229). Michael Share, a former student of the
late L.G. Westerink (1913-1990; BDNAC 682-684), offers a
transcription of 322 scholia (not 320; nos. 227 and 272 are
numbered twice) from the autograph, Vaticanus Urbinas
Graecus 35, of which, given the paper used for this edition,
some facsimiles might have been provided. An apparatus fontium
demonstrates dependence on earlier commentaries, and shows
Arethas not transforming Aristotle, but preserving earlier
transformations. For most of the text identifiable sources are
not extant, and Share (p. xiii) can only speculate about which
lost commentaries (probably of the sixth century) were used. The
editor argues that "it seems unlikely that [Arethas] excerpted
[the scholia] from the original commentaries"; he may even be
reproducing them from a single manuscript in which they had
already been assembled, or at best may have assembled them
himself from several manuscripts (p. xv). The abrupt conclusion
to the Categories scholia at the start of ch. 6 certainly
suggests use of an already truncated source.
We have, then, Arethas' scholia in the sense that he is their
scribe. The whole collection reveals his intellectual activity
rather than creativity, and is less valuable than the set of
scholia that he transcribed in the famous Bodleian manuscript of
Plato, Clarkianus 39. Nigel Wilson has concluded that "Arethas
enjoys a more flattering reputation than he deserves"
(Scholars of Byzantium [London, 1983], 135). Share's
edition will not encourage flattery, and may contribute to the
image of Byzantine Aristotelianism as a conduit between late
antiquity and the Renaissance without much independent
philosophical value. For the Categories the commentaries
by Ammonius, Dexippus, and Porphyry are now translated in the
Ancient Commentators on Aristotle series, and scholars
will look there rather than to Arethas. As for Porphyry's
Isagoge, Arethas' scholia represent only a minor episode
in the long history of that handbook.
Share's scholarly work is thorough. There are appendices of
diagrams (231-251), and of marginalia (253-256), and indices
locorum, nominum et verborum (257-293). Spot-checks
indicate accurate proof-reading. The text is sensibly corrected
in several places, although the object is to represent Arethas'
transcription faithfully; thus the Doric enti is not
restored for estin in the quotation from pseudo-Archytas
at 223.28. (But why is this text cited in the index locorum at
p. 257 from Hartenstein's 1833 edition, and not from Slezak's
edition with commentary, Pseudo-Archytas Ueber die
Kategorien [Berlin, 1972], p. 45? Was Share influenced by
Westerink's frosty review of the latter at Classical World
68 [1975] 478-479?) Share's edition is perhaps not quite in
the class of its closest modern precedent, Vittorio de Falco's
edition of John Pediasimus' scholia on the Analytics
(Naples, 1926; continued at Byzantinische Zeitschrift 28
[1928] 251-269), either in its engagement with the text of the
sources, or in its introduction. In the latter (xi-xv) the
manuscript is not fully described, and the casual reader will be
unaware of its importance for the text of Aristotle's logical
works. (See the entry at P. Canart and V. Peri, Sussidi
Bibliografici [Studi e Testi 261], 332-333.) Mention should
have been made of the discussion of Vat. Urb. gr. 35 by E.
Follieri, Archaeological Classica 25-26 (1973-74) 262-279,
noted by Wilson, Scholars of Byzantium 124, whose whole
discussion of Arethas at 120-135 is also not cited. At p. xv of
the Introduction there is an unconnected n. 16 following n. 21,
and in notes 9-15 the references to the text do not correspond
with the present edition but with an earlier recension
(presumably the editor's typescript). That is unfortunate, since
n. 15 includes references to texts not paralleled in extant
commentaries, an obviously important element in this edition, and
one that should have been addressed by an exhaustive listing. (I
can correct one of Share's references: in n. 14 the successive
citations, 306.10-307.7 and 307.8-308.6 = 228.4-229.15.) In
general, a less succinct introduction would have been both more
professionally appropriate, and might have advanced the cause of
Aristoteles Byzantinus. Westerink's informative introductions to
many of his editions surely provided a precedent. That scholar
also frequently included translations, and these might be offered
in future volumes of this series where material of wider interest
is involved. A related series, the Corpus des Astronomes
Byzantins, does include translations into modern languages.
One important product of this edition is a fragment of
Themistius' lost commentary on the Categories. This can
now join a handful of other references to this work, which also
survives in a residual form in the Latin tradition as the
pseudo-augustinian Categoriae Decem (Aristoteles
Latinus I.5). Share no. 227 (= 227a), on Cat. 1a24-25, deals
with inherence, or what it is to be "in a subject" (en
hupokeimenoi). At p. 152.34-153.4 in a section
(152.26-153.15) for which no fontes are cited, Themistius is
reported as claiming that yesterday (khthes) is a special
sense of inherence to be added to the eleven listed in the
exgetical tradition (see also, for example, Simplicius In
Categorias 46.5-14). (hendekakh"s at 151.9 Share was too
important to have been omitted from the Index Verborum.) Text
and context here both deserve further attention.
Linos Benakis describes (pp. viii-ix) the institutional and
administrative arrangements on which the Commentaria in
Aristotelem Byzantina are founded. Let us hope that these
ensure further editions, and the exposure that will allow the
status and significance of Byzantine Aristotelianism to be better
assessed.