Biography:Boethus of Sidon

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Boethus of Sidon (Greek: Βόηθος, translit. Bóēthos;

Short description: Latin loanword meaning "approximately, around"
CA|other uses of "Cca"|CCA (disambiguation)|CCA|other uses of "Circa"|Circa (disambiguation)}}Template:TWCleanup2Circa (from la 'around, about, roughly, approximately') – frequently abbreviated ca. or c. and less frequently circ., cca. or cc. – signifies "approximately" in several European languages and is used as a loanword in English, usually in reference to a date.[1] Circa is widely used in historical writing when the dates of events are not accurately known.

When used in date ranges, circa is applied before each approximate date, while dates without circa immediately preceding them are generally assumed to be known with certainty.

Examples

  • 1732–1799: Both years are known precisely.
  • c. 1732 – 1799: The beginning year is approximate; the end year is known precisely.
  • 1732 – c. 1799: The beginning year is known precisely; the end year is approximate.
  • c. 1732 – c. 1799: Both years are approximate.

See also

  • Floruit

References



Short description: Latin loanword meaning "approximately, around"
CA|other uses of "Cca"|CCA (disambiguation)|CCA|other uses of "Circa"|Circa (disambiguation)}}Template:TWCleanup2Circa (from la 'around, about, roughly, approximately') – frequently abbreviated ca. or c. and less frequently circ., cca. or cc. – signifies "approximately" in several European languages and is used as a loanword in English, usually in reference to a date.[1] Circa is widely used in historical writing when the dates of events are not accurately known.

When used in date ranges, circa is applied before each approximate date, while dates without circa immediately preceding them are generally assumed to be known with certainty.

Examples

  • 1732–1799: Both years are known precisely.
  • c. 1732 – 1799: The beginning year is approximate; the end year is known precisely.
  • 1732 – c. 1799: The beginning year is known precisely; the end year is approximate.
  • c. 1732 – c. 1799: Both years are approximate.

See also

  • Floruit

References



) was a Peripatetic philosopher from Sidon, who lived towards the end of the 1st century BC.[1] None of his work has been preserved and the complete collection of quotings and paraphrases appeared first in 2020.[2]

Biography

As Boethus was a disciple of Andronicus of Rhodes,[3] he must have travelled at an early age to Rome and Athens, in which cities Andronicus is known to have taught. Strabo, who mentions him and his brother Diodotus among the celebrated persons of Sidon, speaks of him at the same time as his own teacher (or fellow pupil) in Peripatetic philosophy.[4] Among his works, all of which are now lost, there was one on the nature of the soul, and also a commentary on Aristotle's Categories, which is mentioned by Ammonius in his commentary on the same work of Aristotle. Ammonius quotes also an opinion of Boethus concerning the study of the works of Aristotle, viz. that the student should begin with the Physics, whereas Andronicus had maintained that the beginning should be made with the Logic writings of Aristotle.

According to Giovanni Reale, in The Schools of the Imperial Age, Boethus believed that ‘substance’ was ‘matter’ – that it was the composite of being, and not the individual form of being. Thus “form falls outside of the category of substance and enters into the scope of other categories”.[5] The significance of this is that individuality is not only how we understand and interpret reality, but is actually the basic nature of that reality. That 'true reality' was not some universal substance, but consisted of individual forms.

Similarly, in ethics, Boethus declared that “the original goal (the proton oikeion) towards which we tend is ourselves in relation to ourselves. In agreement with that view, he says that we do not love anyone in preference to ourselves and finally that we only love others in reference to ourselves”.[6]

Notes

  1. Falcon, Andrea (2022), Zalta, Edward N., ed., "Commentators on Aristotle", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University), https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2022/entries/aristotle-commentators/, retrieved 2022-06-02 
  2. Boéthos de Sidon – Exégète d’Aristote et philosophe, Riccardo Chiaradonna and Marwan Rashed eds., Commentaria in Aristotelem Graeca et Byzantina, Series Academica, Berlin, De Gruyter, 2020, ISBN 978-3-11-069982-1 (includes topical studies by other scholars).
  3. Ammonius Hermiae, Comment, in Aristotle's Categories.
  4. Strabo, Geographica, 16.2.24
  5. The Schools of the Imperial Age, Giovanni Reale, pp. 18-19.
  6. The Schools of the Imperial Age, Giovanni Reale, p. 19.

References


Short description: 1st-century BC Greek philosopher