Bollack, Jean. 2016. The Art of Reading: From Homer to Paul Celan. Trans. C. Porter and S. Tarrow with B. King. Edited by C. Koenig, L. Muellner, G. Nagy, and S. Pollock. Hellenic Studies Series 73. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebook:CHS_BollackJ.The_Art_of_Reading.2016.
15. The Parmenidean Cosmology of Parmenides*
The doxa of the unintelligible
The impasse of composite constructions
The problem of the igneous zone surrounding the earth
Non-mixing (frag. 9)
καὶ τὰ κατὰ σφετέρας δυνάμεις ἐπὶ τοῖσι καὶ τοῖς,
πᾶν πλέον ἐστὶν ὁμοῦ φάεος καὶ νυκτὸς ἀφάντου
ἴσων ἀμφοτέρων, ἐπεὶ οὐδετέρῳ μέτα μῃδέν
Aetius (A 37) I: before the cosmogonic movement
a. The Initial distribution (A 37 1 a)
Figure 1. Diagram of the distribution of the spheres at the pre-cosmogonic stage.
Fragment 12, lines 1–2
αἱ δ’ ἐπὶ ταῖς νυκτός, μετὰ δὲ φλογὸς ἴεται αἶσα. {194|195}
b / The extreme limits set by darkness (A 37 1 b)
c / The middle (A 37 I c; frag. 12, 3-6)
πάντῃ γὰρ [62] στυγεροῖο τόκου καὶ μίξιος ἄρχει
πέμπουσ’ ἄρσενι θῆλυ μιγῆν [63] τό τ’ ἐναντίον αὖτις ἄρσεν θηλυτέρῳ.
- 1. Of ubiquity. —If blending had already taken place (at the moment established by the line) and if it were therefore everywhere, one could judge that it was arbitrary to install the goddess of blending here rather than there. Thus Reinhardt and Fränkel—arbitrarily, it is true, for the meaning of the expression—analyzed ἐν μέσῳ as a “between,” μεταξύ (not “inside” but in the intervals between the rings). Since the rings were only partially blended, the universal principle [68] was limited to the places where blending prevailed, in the world (see Reinhardt 1916:12; Fränkel 1968:185: “Eine feste Lokalisierung ist mit diesem inmitten überhaupt nicht gegeben” [“No fixed location is given with this ‘in the middle’”]). [69]
- 2. Of the center. —Simplicius’ testimony (Konstan 2014, p. 34, 14–15)—“He represents the goddess installed at the center of everything, the cause of every form of becoming, as the efficient cause, one and common”—has been linked to the core, which for Diels is the central fire, [70] {199|200} the Pythagoreans’ hearth (Ἑστία; D-K p. 242, ad frag. 12), whereas the reference is manifestly to line 3 of the fragment. [71] Guthrie, who like Gigon and others was looking for representations external to the system, assimilates the daimon to the Pythagoreans’ central fire, [72] here immersed in the chthonic depths, so that the eclecticism (or the “syncretism”) of the historian, projected onto the doxa, makes of the daimon Mother Earth and the dispenser of Justice, all at the same time. The tradition is an ancient one; Parmenides’ Pythagoreanism was common in the nineteenth century: “At the center of the universe the demiurgic divinity, generatrix of the gods and of all things, had her seat; one cannot but recognize the central fire, the creator mother god of the world of the Pythagoreans.” [73]
What was expected won out over all the testimonies. [74]
- 3. On the side of the periphery. —Berger (1895), in order to take the middle into account, chose the sun, among the celestial bodies, as the principle of life (in accordance with the solar cults). [75] For Gigon (1945:280–281), the divinity is transcendent; thus she dwells in the external igneous zone, beyond the rampart. The origin of the concept is situated in Xenophanes’ divine sphere, transferred by Parmenides into “the world of general opinion.” This would be the true god, repre- {200|201} sentative of Being; the goddess in fragment 12, comparable to Aphrodite (frag. 12.4–6; see the authors cited and combated in Zeller-Nestle 1920:171n1) in the lunar region of men, would be a secondary force, originating in the other, delegated “into the blend” (the middle is only one “region” for the true god). The indications pertaining to the union of the sexes at the end of the fragment are used in a restrictive way.
Aetius (A 37) II: The cosmogony, the dynamism of fire
Figure 2. Arrangement of the parts of the world.
The program of fragment 11
αἰθήρ τε ξυνὸς γάλα τ’ οὐράνιον καὶ ὄλυμπος
ἐσχατος ἠδ’ ἄστρων θερμὸν μένος ὡρμήθησαν
γίγνεσθαι. {204|205}
Aetius (A 37) III: Beyond cosmogony, the division of the world
σήματα καὶ καθαρᾶς εὐαγέος ἠελίοιο
λαμπάδος ἔργ’ ἀίδηλα καὶ ὁππόθεν ἐξέγενοντο
—the lower region of terrestrial air with the moon:
καὶ φύσιν,
finally, the intermediate region of the galactic blend called the sky:
ἔνθεν [μὲν γὰρ] ἔφυ γε καὶ ὥς μιν ἄγους’ ἐπέδησεν Ἀνάγκη
πείρατ’ ἔχειν ἄτρων.
Works Cited
Footnotes