This article is a preliminary edition — introduction, text, translation, commentary — of a previously unknown commentary on Aristotle’s Categories, recently discovered in the Archimedes Palimpsest. The two lemmas covered (both incompletely) in the fourteen surviving pages are 1a20-b15, concerning the distinction between ‘said of a subject’ and ‘in a subject’, and 1b16-24, where Aristotle maintains that different genera are divided by different differentiae. By extrapolating from this sample, the commentary can be inferred to have been considerably longer than the longest Categories commentary to survive intact, that of Simplicius. On this and other grounds, we argue that it is probably a fragment of Porphyry’s monumental lost commentary, th...
The hermeneutic tradition concerning Aristotle’s Categories goes back to Eudorus and his contemporar...
Alexander of Aphrodisias’s commentary (about AD 200) is the earliest extant commentary on Aristotle’...
This work aims to a critical edition of an Aristotle’s Categories commentary, transmitted by M2 code...
This paper lists and examines the explicit references to Aristotle’s Topics in the Greek Neoplatonic...
Griffin\u2019s book provides a compelling narrative to tell the intricate story of the rediscovery o...
This thesis focuses on the ancient reception of the Categories of Aristotle, a work which served con...
Aristotle‘s categories are presented as a system relying on logic and syntax instead of on meanings....
Hansen, Heine, John Pagus on Aristotle's Categories. A Study and Edition of the Rationes super Praed...
Some emendations to the text of the recently published anonymous commentary to the Categories of Ari...
Aristotle’s Categoriae, or the Categories, is a comprehensive classification system for every object...
Hansen, Heine, John Pagus on Aristotle's Categories. A Study and Edition of the Rationes super Praed...
A re-examination of the question why, in the revival of interest, in the first century BC in Aristot...
The article focuses on the debates on universals in the Aristotelian tradition from about 50 BC to A...
This article focuses on the harmony of Plato and Aristotle in Alexandrian Neoplatonism and, more spe...
It is fundamental to our understanding of commentary as a genre that they respond to another text, o...
The hermeneutic tradition concerning Aristotle’s Categories goes back to Eudorus and his contemporar...
Alexander of Aphrodisias’s commentary (about AD 200) is the earliest extant commentary on Aristotle’...
This work aims to a critical edition of an Aristotle’s Categories commentary, transmitted by M2 code...
This paper lists and examines the explicit references to Aristotle’s Topics in the Greek Neoplatonic...
Griffin\u2019s book provides a compelling narrative to tell the intricate story of the rediscovery o...
This thesis focuses on the ancient reception of the Categories of Aristotle, a work which served con...
Aristotle‘s categories are presented as a system relying on logic and syntax instead of on meanings....
Hansen, Heine, John Pagus on Aristotle's Categories. A Study and Edition of the Rationes super Praed...
Some emendations to the text of the recently published anonymous commentary to the Categories of Ari...
Aristotle’s Categoriae, or the Categories, is a comprehensive classification system for every object...
Hansen, Heine, John Pagus on Aristotle's Categories. A Study and Edition of the Rationes super Praed...
A re-examination of the question why, in the revival of interest, in the first century BC in Aristot...
The article focuses on the debates on universals in the Aristotelian tradition from about 50 BC to A...
This article focuses on the harmony of Plato and Aristotle in Alexandrian Neoplatonism and, more spe...
It is fundamental to our understanding of commentary as a genre that they respond to another text, o...
The hermeneutic tradition concerning Aristotle’s Categories goes back to Eudorus and his contemporar...
Alexander of Aphrodisias’s commentary (about AD 200) is the earliest extant commentary on Aristotle’...
This work aims to a critical edition of an Aristotle’s Categories commentary, transmitted by M2 code...