The presence of Egypt in Aristotle’s corpus is twofold. On one side, notices about the land and its inhabitants – be them humans or beasts – are vastly exploited in scientific works such as the History of Animals. On the other hand, ancient Egypt is less often but more significatively mentioned as a unified cultural and historical horizon, opposed, contrasted or simply compared with the Greek world. The paper examinates some examples of this tendency, especially focusing on Aristotle’s "Politics", "Metaphysics" and "Meteorologica". Insisting on the association with time, tradition and memory, Aristotle treats Egypt as a paradigmatic and semi-legendary background used to evoke and discuss the central issues of acquisition, persistence and renewal of knowledge over time. Doing this, whilst reemploying other elements from ethnographical and historical sources, the Stagirite stays faithful to Plato’s literary use of Egypt and more specifically to the Egyptian settings evoked in the "Phaedrus" and in the "Timaeus", but feels free to correct his model and to introduce novel elements in a similar theoretical framework.

Aristotle's 'Platonic' Egypt

DONATO M
2024-01-01

Abstract

The presence of Egypt in Aristotle’s corpus is twofold. On one side, notices about the land and its inhabitants – be them humans or beasts – are vastly exploited in scientific works such as the History of Animals. On the other hand, ancient Egypt is less often but more significatively mentioned as a unified cultural and historical horizon, opposed, contrasted or simply compared with the Greek world. The paper examinates some examples of this tendency, especially focusing on Aristotle’s "Politics", "Metaphysics" and "Meteorologica". Insisting on the association with time, tradition and memory, Aristotle treats Egypt as a paradigmatic and semi-legendary background used to evoke and discuss the central issues of acquisition, persistence and renewal of knowledge over time. Doing this, whilst reemploying other elements from ethnographical and historical sources, the Stagirite stays faithful to Plato’s literary use of Egypt and more specifically to the Egyptian settings evoked in the "Phaedrus" and in the "Timaeus", but feels free to correct his model and to introduce novel elements in a similar theoretical framework.
2024
Donato, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/1322873
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