{"title":"Antiphon in the New Millennium","authors":"S. Takhtajan","doi":"10.21638/spbu20.2022.205","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper is an overview — in it I take a critical look at works that have come out in recent years about Antiphon. My primary focus is on four books: two scholarly works on Antiphon, one by Annie Hourcade and another by Michael Gagarin, an edition of the fragments of Antiphon’s treatises with a detailed commentary by Gerard Pendrick, and, finally, a new edition of Antiphon’s speeches prepared by Mervin Dilts and David Murphy. There is still a dispute among scholars about the authorship of the Corpus Antiphonteum. Some (the separatists) consider that there were separate authors for the speeches, on the one hand, and for the treatises, on the other — Antiphon the orator and Antiphon the sophist, respectively. Others (the unitarians) insist that there was a single author for both the speeches and the treatises. In the 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries, the separatists had the upper hand, but the situation slowly began to change, and now most scholars — rightly so in my opinion — argue for a single authorship. The separatists are compelled to divide the biographical testimonies of Antiphon between the orator and the sophist. But in the case of a single Antiphon, it turns out there is more than a little information about that person. In this paper, I present a review of scholarly opinion about evidence according to which Antiphon invented τέχνη ἀλυπίας and opened a psychotherapeutic clinic, where he tried to help his patients using verbal therapy. Some scholars call the tradition of the clinic into question. The separatists attribute any evidence about it to Antiphon the sophist. Like other scholars, I uphold the credibility of the clinic. I also take a look at the image of Antiphon presented by Xenophon (Mem. 1, 6.). Many scholars consider Xenophon’s story to be fictitious or reject it outright. The separatists believe that Xenophon calls Antiphon a sophist in the very first sentence of the sixth chapter in order to distinguish him from his namesake, Antiphon the orator. I think Xenophon’s goal is different. Socrates,in conversation with Antiphon during their second meeting, which Xenophon describes later on in the same chapter, likens sophists to πόρνοι (Mem. 1. 6. 13). Obviously, Xenophon calls Antiphon a sophist because he intends that the shameful implications of this comparison be applied first and foremost to him. Hourcade and Gagarin want to show that the author of the treatises and the speeches was one and the same person. Even though Pendrick is a separatist, the parallels he draws between the fragments of the treatises and individual passages in the speeches also, I think, favor the idea of a single Antiphon. I conclude that, thanks to the workof these scholars, Antiphon has, although not yet fully, been put back together again.","PeriodicalId":0,"journal":{"name":"","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2022-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu20.2022.205","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper is an overview — in it I take a critical look at works that have come out in recent years about Antiphon. My primary focus is on four books: two scholarly works on Antiphon, one by Annie Hourcade and another by Michael Gagarin, an edition of the fragments of Antiphon’s treatises with a detailed commentary by Gerard Pendrick, and, finally, a new edition of Antiphon’s speeches prepared by Mervin Dilts and David Murphy. There is still a dispute among scholars about the authorship of the Corpus Antiphonteum. Some (the separatists) consider that there were separate authors for the speeches, on the one hand, and for the treatises, on the other — Antiphon the orator and Antiphon the sophist, respectively. Others (the unitarians) insist that there was a single author for both the speeches and the treatises. In the 19th and the first half of the 20th centuries, the separatists had the upper hand, but the situation slowly began to change, and now most scholars — rightly so in my opinion — argue for a single authorship. The separatists are compelled to divide the biographical testimonies of Antiphon between the orator and the sophist. But in the case of a single Antiphon, it turns out there is more than a little information about that person. In this paper, I present a review of scholarly opinion about evidence according to which Antiphon invented τέχνη ἀλυπίας and opened a psychotherapeutic clinic, where he tried to help his patients using verbal therapy. Some scholars call the tradition of the clinic into question. The separatists attribute any evidence about it to Antiphon the sophist. Like other scholars, I uphold the credibility of the clinic. I also take a look at the image of Antiphon presented by Xenophon (Mem. 1, 6.). Many scholars consider Xenophon’s story to be fictitious or reject it outright. The separatists believe that Xenophon calls Antiphon a sophist in the very first sentence of the sixth chapter in order to distinguish him from his namesake, Antiphon the orator. I think Xenophon’s goal is different. Socrates,in conversation with Antiphon during their second meeting, which Xenophon describes later on in the same chapter, likens sophists to πόρνοι (Mem. 1. 6. 13). Obviously, Xenophon calls Antiphon a sophist because he intends that the shameful implications of this comparison be applied first and foremost to him. Hourcade and Gagarin want to show that the author of the treatises and the speeches was one and the same person. Even though Pendrick is a separatist, the parallels he draws between the fragments of the treatises and individual passages in the speeches also, I think, favor the idea of a single Antiphon. I conclude that, thanks to the workof these scholars, Antiphon has, although not yet fully, been put back together again.
这篇文章是一个概述——在这篇文章中,我对近年来出现的关于安提芬的作品进行了批判性的审视。我主要关注的是四本书:两本关于安提芬的学术著作,一本是安妮·霍凯德写的,另一本是迈克尔·加加林写的;一本是安提芬论文片段的版本,附有杰拉德·彭德里克的详细评论;最后一本是安提芬演讲的新版本,由默文·迪尔茨和大卫·墨菲准备。学者们对《反音语料库》的作者仍有争议。有些人(分离主义者)认为,一方面是演讲的作者,另一方面是论文的作者,分别是雄辩家安提丰和诡辩家安提丰。另一些人(一神论者)坚持认为,演讲和论文都是由一个作者写的。在19世纪和20世纪上半叶,分离主义者占了上风,但情况慢慢开始改变,现在大多数学者——我认为这是正确的——都主张只有一个作者。分离主义者被迫将安提丰的传记证词划分为演说家和诡辩家。但在一个Antiphon的例子中,结果是关于这个人的信息不止一点点。在本文中,我提出了一个关于证据的学术观点的回顾,根据这些证据,安提芬发明了τ η ν λ π ας并开设了一家心理治疗诊所,在那里他试图用语言治疗来帮助他的病人。一些学者对诊所的传统提出质疑。分离主义者把一切证据都归咎于诡辩家安提丰。和其他学者一样,我支持诊所的可信度。我也看了一下色诺芬(Mem. 1,6)所呈现的安提芬的形象。许多学者认为色诺芬的故事是虚构的,或者直接否认它。分离主义者认为色诺芬在第六章的第一句话中称安提芬为诡辩家,是为了将安提芬与同名的演说家安提芬区分开来。我认为色诺芬的目标是不同的。苏格拉底在与安提芬第二次会面时的谈话中,色诺芬稍后在同一章中描述,将诡辩家比作π ο ο (Mem. 1)。6. 13)。显然,色诺芬称安提phon为诡辩家,因为他想把这个比较的可耻含义首先应用到他身上。霍凯德和加加林想要证明论文和演讲的作者是同一个人。尽管潘德瑞克是一个分离主义者,他把论文的片段和演讲中的个别段落进行了对比,我认为,这也支持了一个Antiphon的观点。我的结论是,由于这些学者的努力,安提丰虽然还没有完全被重新组装起来。