Revista de Filosofia Antiga (May 2024)

Les conséquences tragiques pour Parménide d'une erreur d'Aristote

  • Nestor-Luis Cordero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.1981-9471.v18i1p%p
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1

Abstract

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The difficulty of grasping the thought of Parmenides led interpreters already in antiquity to approach his philosophy according to later schemes of thought. This was the case of Aristotle, whose interpretation was inherited by his disciple Theophrastus and by his commentators, especially Simplicius. Simplicius, a Neoplatonist and Aristotelian at the same time, proposed an interpretation, strongly dualistic (dominated by the sensible/intelligible dichotomy), which is not found in the recovered quotations. The origin of this interpretation is an "error" of Aristotle, inherited by Simplicius, who attributed to Parmenides himself the paternity of the "opinions of mortals". In 1795 G.G.Fülleborn, inspired by Simplicius, proposed a division of the Poem into two "parts", unanimously accepted today, and which must be urgently revised and rejected.

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