The Aristotelian Mechanics: Text and Diagrams

Springer Verlag (2016)
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Abstract

This book examines the transmission processes of the Aristotelian Mechanics. It does so to enable readers to appreciate the value of the treatise based on solid knowledge of the principles of the text. In addition, the book’s critical examination helps clear up many of the current misunderstandings about the transmission of the text and the diagrams. The first part of the book sets out the Greek manuscript tradition of the Mechanics, resulting in a newly established stemma codicum that illustrates the affiliations of the manuscripts. This research has led to new insights into the transmission of the treatise, most importantly, it also demonstrates an urgent need for a new text. A first critical edition of the diagrams contained in the Greek manuscripts of the treatise is also presented. These diagrams are not only significant for a reconstruction of the text but can also be considered as a commentary on the text. Diagrams are thus revealed to be a powerful tool in studying processes of the transfer and transformation of knowledge. This becomes especially relevant when the manuscript diagrams are compared with those in the printed editions and in commentaries from the early modern period. The final part of the book shows that these early modern diagrams and images reflect the altered scope of the mechanical discipline in the sixteenth century.

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Chapters

Editing Diagrams

The diagrams to the Mechanics were envisioned in the argument of the text and are crucial to our understanding of the mechanical principles. Without these diagrams it is often difficult to understand the text. Therefore, it is remarkable that none of the editors of the Mechanics examined the diagram... see more

The Textual Transmission

This chapter presents my complete analysis of all 31 extant manuscripts of the Mechanics, its division into three manuscript families, and my newly established stemma codicum, illustrating the affiliations among the manuscripts. This research led to new insights concerning the transmission of the Me... see more

Introduction

Today the Mechanics is generally not considered to have been written by Aristotle himself, but to be a later product of the Peripatetic School. As for many treatises in the Aristotelian corpus, serious doubts concerning Aristotle’s authorship did not surface until the nineteenth century. This chapte... see more

Diagrammatic Reasoning

The oldest diagrams contained in the Greek manuscripts of the Mechanics derive from the Byzantine period and should be understood in this context. These diagrams are the result of a creative tradition; they are extremely valuable to our knowledge of the Byzantine reception of the treatise, in that t... see more

General Characteristics of the Transmission

This chapter offers a short overview of the Byzantine manuscript tradition of the Mechanics and a list of all extant manuscripts of the treatise, including the most important codicological details and a selection of the available literature.

Conclusion

This chapter contains concluding remarks on this comprehensive study of the text and diagrams of the Mechanics. The transmission of the treatise is characterized by both tradition and innovation. Whereas the Byzantine manuscript tradition is primarily concerned with the conservation of the treatise,... see more

Early Modern Transformations of Mechanics

In the early modern period, the text of the Mechanics was intensively studied in a number of translations and paraphrases of the text, as well as in extended commentaries on the treatise. We notice that the contents of the work were adapted to the context of sixteenth-century mechanics. This chapter... see more

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