Timaeus of Locri

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Timaeus of Locri (/tˈməs/; Ancient Greek: Τίμαιος ὁ Λοκρός Tímaios ho Lokrós; Latin: Timaeus Locrus) is a Greek Pythagorean philosopher who figures in two of Plato's dialogues, Timaeus and Critias. If Timaeus was a historical figure, he would have lived in the fifth century BC, but his historicity is uncertain since he only appears as a literary figure in Plato; all other ancient sources are either based on Plato or are fictional accounts.

He has been cited for reports about Pythagoras. For instance, according to Porphyry Timaeus mentioned the house of Pythagoras in Croton.[1]

Historicity

In Plato's works, Timaeus appears as a wealthy aristocrat from the Greek colony of Lokroi Epizephyrioi (present-day Locri in Calabria), who had served in high offices in his native town before coming to Athens, where the dialogue of Timaeus is set. Plato does not explicitly label Timaeus a Pythagorean, but leaves enough hints for the reader to infer this. He appears competent in all areas of ancient philosophy, especially natural philosophy and astronomy.[2]

In antiquity, Timaeus's historical existence was beyond dispute. Cicero reports that Plato traveled to Italy to study with Timaeus and other Pythagoreans.[3] The report of this meeting led the late antique writer Macrobius to conclude that Timaeus could not have been in a face-to-face dialogue with Socrates, who was by Timaeus's time long dead.[4] Iamblichus lists Timaeus among the notable members of the Pythagorean school. Further references to Timaeus are found with Proclus, Commentary on Plato's Timaeus (II, 38, I); and with Simplicius and Diogenes Laërtius, in their descriptions of and commentaries on Aristotle's work.

Modern scholarship, by and large, dismisses Timaeus as a historical figure.[5] It is assumed that Plato constructed Timaeus as a literary figure from features of the Pythagoreans known to him, such as Archytas.[6][7] The main reason for treating Timaeus as a literary fiction is the lack of any information that does not stem ultimately from Plato's dialogues.[8]:83 ff. As a counterargument, it has been pointed out that most characters appearing in Plato's dialogues are in fact historical persons.[9][10]

On the Nature of the World and the Soul

A work in Doric Greek entitled On the Nature of the World and the Soul (Ancient Greek: Περὶ φύσιος κόσμω καὶ ψυχᾶς Peri phýsios kósmō kai psychās), also called the Timaeus Locrus after its purported author, starts out by declaring that "Timaeus of Locri said the following". The work has been preserved fully, in over fifty manuscripts.[8]:{{{3}}}:76 ff. The book summarizes the theories that Timaeus defends in Plato's Timaeus and is mostly consistent with Plato;[11]:1205–1220 it notably omits the Theory of Forms.[12]

On the World and the Soul was first mentioned in sources of the second century AD (Nicomachus and the commentary on Timaeus by Calvisius Taurus) and its authenticity was not doubted in antiquity. The work was believed in antiquity to have been a main source for Plato's dialogue; a rumor dating back to the third century BC held that Plato's Timaeus was plagiarized from a Pythagorean book, and this became connected to the Timaeus Locrus.[13]

Modern philology has shown that On the World and the Soul is a pseudepigraphon from somewhere between the early first century BC[14] to the early first century AD, and is based on Plato's Timaeus, rather than the other way around.[15]:1–3, 20–26[16]:3–7 The Pseudo-Timaeus employs a simplified mode of reasoning and presentation, presenting conclusions rather than arguments and omitting any dialogue, meaning that it was perhaps intended as a summary of the notoriously difficult original for use in a classroom setting. While it may have originated in part as a set of lecture notes to the Platonic original, it tends to omit difficult sections of the Timaeus rather than provide explanations.[17] Some of Pseudo-Timaeus's theses are very hard to understand without knowledge of Plato's work.[11]:{{{3}}}:1219–1221

On the World and the Soul shows traces of middle Platonist ideas and terminology; in particular, it resembles works by Eudorus of Alexandria and Philo, making it plausible that the author lived in Alexandria and was familiar with Eudorus's philosophy.[15]:{{{3}}}:20–26 He modernized the natural philosophy of Plato's Timaeus by incorporating insights from Hellenistic astronomy and medicine.

The book also appears to incorporate material from one or more now-lost commentaries on Timaeus. R. Harder hypothesized that the composition of On the World and the Soul was a two-step process, whereby Pseudo-Timaeus, the author of the preserved version of the book, would have edited an earlier, Hellenistic variant of Timaeus.[11]:{{{3}}}:1220–1226[18] Th. Tobin, by contrast, believes the work to have been composed at once, then translated into Doric.[16]:{{{3}}}:17–19

Reception

On the Nature of the World and the Soul was known to the Neoplatonists Iamblichus, Syrianus, Proclus and Simplicius.[8]:{{{3}}}:88–110 The work of Pseudo-Timaeus supported the widely held Neoplatonist conviction that Pythagoreanism and Platonism constituted a singular theory, reflecting the pseudonymous author's intention of placing Plato in the Pythagorean tradition.

Giorgio Valla, in the fifteenth century, translated On the Nature of the World and the Soul into Latin. His translation was printed in Venice in 1498. The Greek text appeared as part of Aldo Manuzio's collected works of Plato, first published in 1513 and reprinted many times. In the sixteenth century, it was considered a Vorlage of the Timaeus (so in Henri Estienne's edition) and often printed along with the works of Plato.

Attributions of other works

The Suda and various scholia on Plato's Timaeus ascribe to Timaeus of Locri a work entitled Mathēmatiká, of which nothing else is known. This is possibly a false attribution, based on confusion of Timaeus with an astronomer bearing the same name. He is also reported to have authored a biography of Pythagoras, but this may be a confusion with the historian Timaeus of Tauromenium, who devoted part of his history to Pythagoras's life and work.

See also

References

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  2. Plato, Timaeus 20a, 27a.
  3. Cicero, De re publica 1,16 and De finibus bonorum et malorum 5,87; Valerius Maximus 8,7 ext. 3 is based on the latter account.
  4. Macrobius, Saturnalia 1,1,5.
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Further reading