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Aeneas of Gaza: Theophrastus with Zacharias of Mytilene: Ammonius - (Ancient Commentators on Aristotle) (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- 50 years before Philoponus, two Christians from Gaza, seeking to influence Alexandrian Christians, defended the Christian belief in resurrection and the finite duration of the world, and attacked rival Neoplatonist views.
- About the Author: Sebastian Gertz is Supernumerary Teaching Fellow in Philosophy at St John's College, Oxford, UK.
- 216 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Ancient & Classical
- Series Name: Ancient Commentators on Aristotle
Description
About the Book
Translated for the first time into English, this volume in the Ancient Commentators on Aristotle series contains works of two Christian philosophers from Gaza, Aeneas of Gaza and Zacharias of Mytilene.
Book Synopsis
50 years before Philoponus, two Christians from Gaza, seeking to influence Alexandrian Christians, defended the Christian belief in resurrection and the finite duration of the world, and attacked rival Neoplatonist views. Aeneas addresses an unusual version of the food chain argument against resurrection, that our bodies will get eaten by other creatures. Zacharias attacks the Platonist examples of synchronous creation, which were the production of light, of shadow, and of a footprint in the sand. A fragment survives of a third Gazan contribution by Procopius. Zacharias lampoons the Neoplatonist professor in Alexandria, Ammonius, and claims a leading role in the riot which led to the cleverest Neoplatonist, Damascius, fleeing to Athens. It was only Philoponus, however, who was able to embarrass the Neoplatonists by arguing against them on their own terms.
This volume contains an English translation of the works by Aeneas of Gaza and Zacharias of Mytilene, accompanied by a detailed introduction, explanatory notes and a bibliography.About the Author
Sebastian Gertz is Supernumerary Teaching Fellow in Philosophy at St John's College, Oxford, UK.
John Dillon is Regius Professor Emeritus of Greek, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.
Donald Russell is Emeritus Professor of Classical Literature at Oxford University, UK.