Book contents
- Reconstructing Empedocles’ Thought
- Reconstructing Empedocles’ Thought
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Reconstructing Empedocles’ On Nature
- Chapter 2 The Proem to On Nature
- Chapter 3 Daimones between Plato and Pythagoras
- Chapter 4 Divine Beings
- Chapter 5 Changes of Form, Personal Survival and Rebirth
- Chapter 6 Knowing Nature as a God
- Chapter 7 Cosmic Cycle, Moral Import and Rebirth
- Chapter 8 Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 1 - Reconstructing Empedocles’ On Nature
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2024
- Reconstructing Empedocles’ Thought
- Reconstructing Empedocles’ Thought
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Reconstructing Empedocles’ On Nature
- Chapter 2 The Proem to On Nature
- Chapter 3 Daimones between Plato and Pythagoras
- Chapter 4 Divine Beings
- Chapter 5 Changes of Form, Personal Survival and Rebirth
- Chapter 6 Knowing Nature as a God
- Chapter 7 Cosmic Cycle, Moral Import and Rebirth
- Chapter 8 Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
B 115 is generally regarded as the reference fragment of Empedocles’ doctrine of rebirth, being the place where he presents himself as a god banished from the divine community as a result of certain crimes, sent into exile on our earth and here condemned to be reborn as all kinds of mortal beings. In Chapter 1 I argue that, contrary to the vast majority of editions of Empedocles’ fragments, B 115 belongs to the incipit of his physical poem. The chapter mostly focuses on the Strasbourg papyrus and the evidence it uncovered that is relevant to the question of the character and content of the physical poem. After questioning the basis on which scholars have placed B 115 within the Purifications, I will show that the Strasbourg papyrus provides strong proof for its allocation within On Nature. The relocation of this central fragment thus sets the stage for a re-evaluation of Empedocles’ physical system in its entirety, by indicating that it consists of mythical and religious themes in synergy with more strictly physical principles.
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- Reconstructing Empedocles' Thought , pp. 24 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024