Alcinous (philosopher)

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Alcinous (Greek: Ἀλκίνους) (alternatively, Alcinoos, Alkinoos), was a Middle Platonist philosopher of the second century A.D. Nothing is known about his life. He has, at times, been identified by some scholars with the Middle Platonist Albinus.

[edit] Writings

Alcinous is the author of work called The Handbook of Platonism (Greek: Ἐπιτομὴ τῶν Πλάτωνος δογμάτων), one of the few surviving manuscripts of the Middle Platonist period (ca. 150 B.C.E. - 150 C.E.). The book contains 36 chapters which cover topics ranging from logic to physics to ethics. It is thought to have been intended as a manual, not for students of Platonism, but for its teachers. The treatise is written in the esoteric manner typical of the Corpus Aristotelicum, and it often appropriates popular concepts from other philosophical schools - in particular the Peripatetic and Stoic schools - which could be seen as having been prefigured in the works of Plato.

Alcinous held the world and its animating soul to be eternal.[1] This soul of the universe was not created by God, but, to use the image of Alcinous, it was awakened by him as from a profound sleep, and turned towards himself, "that it might look out upon intellectual things and receive forms and ideas from the divine mind."[2] It was the first of a succession of intermediate beings between God and man.[3] The idea proceeded immediately from the mind of God, and were the highest object of our intellect; the "form" of matter, the types of sensible things, having a real being in themselves.[4] He differed from the earlier Platonists in confining the ideas to general laws: it seemed an unworthy notion that God could conceive an idea of things artificial or unnatural, or of individuals or particulars, or of any thing relative.[5] He seems to have aimed at harmonizing the views of Plato and Aristotle on the ideas, as he distinguished them from the eidos, forms of things, which he allowed were inseparable: a view which seems necessarily connected with the doctrine of the eternity and self-existence of matter.[6] God, the first fountain of the ideas, could not be known as he is: it is but a faint notion of him we obtain from negations and analogies: his nature is equally beyond our power of expression or conception.[7] Below him are a series of beings (daimones)[8] who superintend the production of all living things, and hold intercourse with men. The human soul passes through various transmigrations, thus connecting the series with the lower classes of being, until it is finally purified and rendered acceptable to God.[9] His system is understood as a synthesis of Plato and Aristotle, with some elements borrowed from the East, and perhaps derived from a study of the Pythagorean system, which experienced a revival of sorts concomitant to that which produced Middle Platonism.

Alcinous's handbook has been dated to the middle of the second century A.D. In 1879 the German scholar J. Freudenthal argued that Alcinous was really the philosopher Albinus, the teacher of Galen the physician. This theory remained largely unchallenged until 1990, when John Whittaker made a fresh case convincingly reaffirming Alcinous's authenticity.[10]

[edit] Resources

  • Alcinous, The Handbook of Platonism, John Dillon, Oxford 1993.
  • "The Virtues and 'Becoming Like God': Alcinous to Proclus", Dirk Baltzly in Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Volume XXVI, David Sedley (ed), (Oxford: 2004).
  • "Numenius and Alcionus on the First Principle", John Whittaker, Phoenix 32: 144-154 (1978).

[edit] References

  1. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 10.3.
  2. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 14.3.
  3. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 14.6-7, 15.1.
  4. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 9.1.
  5. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 9.2.
  6. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 9.3.
  7. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 10.4-6.
  8. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 15.1.
  9. ^ Alcinous, Handbook, 16.1-2.
  10. ^ Bryn Mawr Classical Review 94.10.14

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1870).