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Boethius

Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius,[6][note 1] commonly known as Boethius (/bˈθiəs/; Latin: Boetius; c. 480–524 AD), was a Roman senator, consul, magister officiorum, historian, and philosopher of the Early Middle Ages. He was a central figure in the translation of the Greek classics into Latin, a precursor to the Scholastic movement, and, along with Cassiodorus, one of the two leading Christian scholars of the 6th century. The local cult of Boethius in the Diocese of Pavia was sanctioned by the Sacred Congregation of Rites in 1883, confirming the diocese's custom of honouring him on the 23 October.[9]


Boethius
Martyr
Bornc. 480
Rome, Kingdom of Odoacer
Died524 (aged 44)
Pavia, Ostrogothic Kingdom
Venerated inDiocese of Pavia
Major shrineSan Pietro in Ciel d'Oro
Feast23 October

Philosophy career
Notable workThe Consolation of Philosophy
EraMedieval philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolNeoplatonism
Main interests
Notable ideas

Boethius was born in Rome a few years after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. A member of the Anicii family, he was orphaned following the family's sudden decline and was raised by Quintus Aurelius Memmius Symmachus, a later consul. After mastering both Latin and Greek in his youth, Boethius rose to prominence as a statesman during the Ostrogothic Kingdom, becoming a senator by age 25, a consul by age 33, and later chosen as a personal advisor to Theodoric the Great.

In seeking to reconcile the teachings of Plato and Aristotle with Christian theology, Boethius sought to translate the entirety of the Greek classics for Western scholars. He published numerous transcriptions and commentaries of the works of Nicomachus, Porphyry, and Cicero, among others, and wrote extensively on matters concerning music, mathematics, and theology. Though his translations were unfinished following an untimely death, it is largely due to them that the works of Aristotle survived into the Renaissance.

Despite his successes as a senior official, Boethius became deeply unpopular among other members of the Ostrogothic court for denouncing the extensive corruption prevalent among other members of government. After publicly defending fellow consul Caecina Albinus from charges of conspiracy, he was imprisoned by Theodoric around the year 523. While jailed and suffering from depression, Boethius wrote The Consolation of Philosophy—a philosophical treatise on fortune, death, and other issues—which became one of the most influential and widely reproduced works of the Early Middle Ages. He was tortured and executed in 524, becoming a martyr in the Christian faith by tradition.[note 2][note 3]

Early life

 
Consular diptych depicting Narius Manlius Boethius, Boethius' birth father

Boethius was born in Rome to a patrician family around 480,[16] but the exact date of his birth is unknown.[8] His birth family, the Anicii, was a notably wealthy and influential gens that included emperors Petronius Maximus and Olybrius, in addition to many consuls.[17] However, in the years prior to Boethius' birth, the family had lost much of its influence. The grandfather of Boethius, a senator by the same name, was appointed as praetorian prefect of Italy but died in 454 during the palace plot against Flavius Aetius.[18][19] Boethius' father, Manlius Boethius, who was appointed consul in 487, died while Boethius was still young.[20] Quintus Aurelius Memmius Symmachus, another patrician, adopted and raised him instead, introducing to him philosophy and literature.[21] As a sign of their good relationship, Boethius would later marry his foster-father's daughter, Rusticiana, with whom he would have two children also named Symmachus and Boethius.[22]

Having been adopted into the wealthy Symmachi family, Boethius had access to tutors that would have educated him during his youth.[23] Though Symmachus had some fluency in Greek, Boethius achieved a mastery of the language—an increasingly rare skill in the Western regions of the Empire—and dedicated his early career to translating the entire works of Plato and Aristotle,[24][25] with some of the translations that he produced being the only surviving transcriptions of Greek texts into the Middle Ages.[26][27] The unusual fluency of Boethius in the Greek language has led some scholars to believe that he was educated in the East; a traditional view, first proposed by Edward Gibbon, is that Boethius studied in Athens for eighteen years based on the letters of Cassiodorus, though this was likely to have been a misreading by past historians.[23][note 4]

Historian Pierre Courcelle has argued that Boethius studied at Alexandria with the Neoplatonist philosopher Ammonius Hermiae. However, Historian John Moorhead observes that the evidence supporting Boethius having studied in Alexandria is "not as strong as it may appear," adding that he may have been able to acquire his formidable learning without travelling.[29] Whatever the case, Boethius' fluency in Greek proved useful throughout his life in translating the classic works of Greek thinkers, though his interests spanned across a variety of fields including music, mathematics, astrology, and theology.[30]

Rise to power

 
Boethius (right) and his adoptive father, Symmachus (left); both had been appointed consuls in their own right

Taking inspiration from Plato's Republic, Boethius left his scholarly pursuits to enter the service of Theodoric the Great.[31] The two had first met in the year 500 when Theodoric traveled to Rome to stay for six months.[32] Though no record survives detailing the early relationship between Theodoric and Boethius, it is clear that the Ostrogothic king viewed him favorably: in the next few years, Boethius rapidly ascended through the ranks of government, becoming a senator by age 25 and a consul by the year 510.[16][33] His earliest documented acts on behalf of the Ostrogothic ruler were to investigate allegations that the paymaster of Theodoric's bodyguards had debased the coins of their pay; to produce a waterclock for Theodoric to gift to king Gundobad of the Burgundians; and to recruit a lyre-player to perform for Clovis, King of the Franks.[34]

Boethius writes in the Consolation that, despite his own successes, he believed that his greatest achievement came when both his sons were selected by Theodoric to be consuls in 522, with each representing the whole of the Roman Empire.[35] The appointment of his sons was an exceptional honor, not only since it made conspicuous Theodoric's favor for Boethius, but also because the Byzantine emperor Justin I had forfeited his own nomination as a sign of goodwill, thus also endorsing Boethius' sons.[36] In the same year as the appointment of his sons, Boethius was elevated to the position of magister officiorum, becoming the head of all government and palace affairs.[36] Recalling the event, he wrote that he was sitting "between the two consuls as if it were a military triumph, [letting my] largesse fulfill the wildest expectations of the people packed in their seats around [me]."[37]

Boethius' struggles came within a year of his appointment as magister officiorum: in seeking to mend the rampant corruption present in the Roman Court, he writes of having to thwart the conspiracies of Triguilla, the steward of the royal house; of confronting the Gothic minister, Cunigast, who went to "devour the substance of the poor"; and of having to use the authority of the king to stop a shipment of food from Campania which, if carried, would have exacerbated an ongoing famine in the region.[38] These actions made Boethius an increasingly unpopular figure among court officials, though he remained in Theodoric's favor.[39]

Downfall and death

The young philosopher Boethius, a man whose varied accomplishments adorned the middle period of the reign of Theodoric, and whose tragic death was to bring sadness over its close.

Thomas Hodgkin, Theodoric the Goth[40]

In 520, Boethius was working to revitalize the relationship between the Roman See and the Constantinopolitan See—though the two were then still a part of the same Church, disagreements had begun to emerge between them. This may have set in place a course of events that would lead to loss of royal favour.[41] Five hundred years later, this continuing disagreement led to the East–West Schism in 1054, in which communion between the Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Church was broken. In 523, Boethius fell from power. After a period of imprisonment in Pavia for what was deemed a treasonable offence, he was executed in 524.[16][42] The primary sources are in general agreement over the facts of what happened. At a meeting of the Royal Council in Verona, the referendarius Cyprianus accused the ex-consul Caecina Decius Faustus Albinus of treasonous correspondence with Justin I. Boethius leapt to his defense, crying, "The charge of Cyprianus is false, but if Albinus did that, so also have I and the whole senate with one accord done it; it is false, my Lord King."[43]

 
Manuscript depicting Boethius teaching students (initial) and while imprisoned

Cyprianus then also accused Boethius of the same crime and produced three men who claimed they had witnessed the crime. Boethius and Basilius were arrested. First the pair were detained in the baptistery of a church, then Boethius was exiled to the Ager Calventianus, a distant country estate, where he was put to death. Not long afterwards Theodoric had Boethius' father-in-law Symmachus put to death, according to Procopius, on the grounds that he and Boethius together were planning a revolution, and confiscated their property.[44] "The basic facts in the case are not in dispute," writes Jeffrey Richards. "What is disputed about this sequence of events is the interpretation that should be put on them."[45] Boethius claims his crime was seeking "the safety of the Senate". He describes the three witnesses against him as dishonorable: Basilius had been dismissed from Royal service for his debts, while Venantius Opilio and Gaudentius had been exiled for fraud.[46] However, other sources depict these men in a far more positive light. For example, Cassiodorus describes Cyprianus and Opilio as "utterly scrupulous, just and loyal" and mentions they are brothers and grandsons of the consul Opilio.[47]

Theodoric was feeling threatened by international events. The Acacian schism had been resolved, and the Nicene Christian aristocrats of his kingdom were seeking to renew their ties with Constantinople. The Catholic Hilderic had become king of the Vandals and had put Theodoric's sister Amalafrida to death,[48] and Arians in the East were being persecuted.[49] Then there was the matter that with his previous ties to Theodahad, Boethius apparently found himself on the wrong side in the succession dispute following the untimely death of Eutharic, Theodoric's announced heir.

Boethius, the most learned man of his time, met his death in the hangman's noose...and yet the life of Boethius was a triumph! The West owes this individual, Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius, nothing less than its progression toward a culture of reason.

Johannes Fried, The Middle Ages[50]

The method of Boethius' execution varies in the sources. He may have been beheaded, clubbed to death, or hanged.[50] It is likely that he was tortured with a rope that was constricted around his head, bludgeoned until his eyes bulged out; then his skull was cracked.[51][52] Following an agonizing death, his remains were entombed in the church of San Pietro in Ciel d'Oro in Pavia, also the resting place of Augustine of Hippo. His wealth was also confiscated, and his wife, Rusticiana, reduced to poverty.[26]

Past historians have had a hard time accepting a sincere Christian who was also a serious Hellenist.[26][53] These worries have largely stemmed by the lack of any mention of Jesus in Boethius' Consolation, nor of any other Christian figure.[54] Arnaldo Momigliano argues that "Boethius turned to paganism. His Christianity collapsed—it collapsed so thoroughly that perhaps he did not even notice its disappearance." However, the majority of scholarship has taken a different view,[55] with Arthur Herman writing that Boethius was "unshakably Orthodox Catholic," and Thomas Hodgkin having asserted that uncovered manuscripts "prove beyond a doubt that Boethius was a Christian."[56][54] Furthermore, the community that he was a part of valued equally both classical and Christian culture.[57]

Major works

 
The beginning of Aristotle's De interpretatione in Boethius' Latin translation

De consolatione philosophiae

Boethius's best known work is the Consolation of Philosophy (De consolatione philosophiae), which he wrote at the very end of his career, awaiting his execution in prison. This work represented an imaginary dialogue between himself and philosophy, with philosophy personified as a woman, arguing that despite the apparent inequality of the world, there is, in Platonic fashion, a higher power and everything else is secondary to that divine Providence.[58]

Several manuscripts survived and these were widely edited, translated and printed throughout the late 15th century and later in Europe.[59] Beyond Consolation of Philosophy, his lifelong project was a deliberate attempt to preserve ancient classical knowledge, particularly philosophy. Boethius intended to translate all the works of Aristotle and Plato from the original Greek into Latin.[60][61][62]

De topicis differentiis

His completed translations of Aristotle's works on logic were the only significant portions of Aristotle available in Latin Christendom from the sixth century until the rediscovery of Aristotle in the 12th century. However, some of his translations (such as his treatment of the topoi in The Topics) were mixed with his own commentary, which reflected both Aristotelian and Platonic concepts.[63]

The commentaries themselves have been lost.[64] In addition to his commentary on the Topics, Boethius composed two treatises on Topical argumentation, In Ciceronis Topica and De topicis differentiis. The first work has six books, and is largely a response to Cicero's Topica.[65] The first book of In Ciceronis Topica begins with a dedication to Patricius. It includes distinctions and assertions important to Boethius's overall philosophy, such as his view of the role of philosophy as "establish[ing] our judgment concerning the governing of life",[66] and definitions of logic from Plato, Aristotle and Cicero. He breaks logic into three parts: that which defines, that which divides, and that which deduces.[66]

He asserts that there are three types of arguments: those of necessity, of ready believability, and sophistry.[67] He follows Aristotle in defining one sort of Topic as the maximal proposition, a proposition which is somehow shown to be universal or readily believable.[68] The other sort of Topic, the differentiae, are "Topics that contain and include the maximal propositions"; means of categorizing the Topics which Boethius credits to Cicero.[69]

Book II covers two kinds of topics: those from related things and those from extrinsic topics. Book III discusses the relationship among things studied through Topics, Topics themselves, and the nature of definition. Book IV analyzes partition, designation and relationships between things (such as pairing, numbering, genus, and species, etc.). After a review of his terms, Boethius spends Book V discussing Stoic logic and Aristotelian causation. Book VI relates the nature of the Topic to causes.

In Topicis Differentiis has four books; Book I discusses the nature of rhetorical and dialectical Topics together, Boethius's overall purpose being "to show what the Topics are, what their differentiae are, and which are suited for what syllogisms."[70] He distinguishes between argument (that which constitutes belief) and argumentation (that which demonstrates belief). Propositions are divided into three parts: those that are universal, those that are particular, and those that are somewhere in between.[71] These distinctions, and others, are applicable to both types of Topical argument, rhetorical and dialectical. Books II and III are primarily focused on Topics of dialectic (syllogisms), while Book IV concentrates on the unit of the rhetorical Topic, the enthymeme. Topical argumentation is at the core of Boethius's conception of dialectic, which "have categorical rather than conditional conclusions, and he conceives of the discovery of an argument as the discovery of a middle term capable of linking the two terms of the desired conclusion."[72]

Not only are these texts of paramount importance to the study of Boethius, they are also crucial to the history of topical lore. It is largely due to Boethius that the Topics of Aristotle and Cicero were revived, and the Boethian tradition of topical argumentation spans its influence throughout the Middle Ages and into the early Renaissance: "In the works of Ockham, Buridan, Albert of Saxony, and the Pseudo-Scotus, for instance, many of the rules of consequence bear a strong resemblance to or are simply identical with certain Boethian Topics ... Boethius's influence, direct and indirect, on this tradition is enormous."[73]

It was also in De Topicis Differentiis that Boethius made a unique contribution to the discourse on dialectic and rhetoric. Topical argumentation for Boethius is dependent upon a new category for the topics discussed by Aristotle and Cicero, and "[u]nlike Aristotle, Boethius recognizes two different types of Topics. First, he says, a Topic is a maximal proposition (maxima propositio), or principle; but there is a second kind of Topic, which he calls the differentia of a maximal proposition.[74] Maximal propositions are "propositions [that are] known per se, and no proof can be found for these."[75]

This is the basis for the idea that demonstration (or the construction of arguments) is dependent ultimately upon ideas or proofs that are known so well and are so fundamental to human understanding of logic that no other proofs come before it. They must hold true in and of themselves. According to Stump, "the role of maximal propositions in argumentation is to ensure the truth of a conclusion by ensuring the truth of its premises either directly or indirectly."[76]These propositions would be used in constructing arguments through the Differentia, which is the second part of Boethius' theory. This is "the genus of the intermediate in the argument."[77] So maximal propositions allow room for an argument to be founded in some sense of logic while differentia are critical for the demonstration and construction of arguments.

Boethius' definition of "differentiae" is that they are "the Topics of arguments ... The Topics which are the Differentiae of [maximal] propositions are more universal than those propositions, just as rationality is more universal than man."[78] This is the second part of Boethius' unique contribution to the field of rhetoric. Differentia operate under maximal propositions to "be of use in finding maximal propositions as well as intermediate terms," or the premises that follow maximal propositions.[79]

Though Boethius is drawing from Aristotle's Topics, Differentiae are not the same as Topics in some ways. Boethius arranges differentiae through statements, instead of generalized groups as Aristotle does. Stump articulates the difference. They are "expressed as words or phrases whose expansion into appropriate propositions is neither intended nor readily conceivable", unlike Aristotle's clearly defined four groups of Topics. Aristotle had hundreds of topics organized into those four groups, whereas Boethius has twenty-eight "Topics" that are "highly ordered among themselves."[80] This distinction is necessary to understand Boethius as separate from past rhetorical theories.

Maximal propositions and Differentiae belong not only to rhetoric, but also to dialectic. Boethius defines dialectic through an analysis of "thesis" and hypothetical propositions. He claims that "[t]here are two kinds of questions. One is that called, 'thesis' by the [Greek] dialecticians. This is the kind of question which asks about and discusses things stripped of relation to other circumstances; it is the sort of question dialecticians most frequently dispute about—for example, 'Is pleasure the greatest good?' [or] 'Should one marry?'.[81]" Dialectic has "dialectical topics" as well as "dialectical-rhetorical topics", all of which are still discussed in De Topicis Differentiis.[74] Dialectic, especially in Book I, comprises a major component of Boethius' discussion on Topics.

Boethius planned to completely translate Plato's Dialogues, but there is no known surviving translation, if it was actually ever begun.[82]

De arithmetica

 
Boethius' De arithmetica in a manuscript written for Charles the Bald

Boethius chose to pass on the great Greco-Roman culture to future generations by writing manuals on music, astronomy, geometry and arithmetic.[83]

Several of Boethius' writings, which were hugely influential during the Middle Ages, drew on the thinking of Porphyry and Iamblichus.[84] Boethius wrote a commentary on the Isagoge by Porphyry,[85] which highlighted the existence of the problem of universals: whether these concepts are subsistent entities which would exist whether anyone thought of them, or whether they only exist as ideas. This topic concerning the ontological nature of universal ideas was one of the most vocal controversies in medieval philosophy.

Besides these advanced philosophical works, Boethius is also reported to have translated important Greek texts on the topics of the quadrivium[82] His loose translation of Nicomachus's treatise on arithmetic (De institutione arithmetica libri duo) and his textbook on music (De institutione musica libri quinque, unfinished) contributed to medieval education.[85] De arithmetica begins with modular arithmetic, such as even and odd, evenly even, evenly odd, and oddly even. He then turns to unpredicted complexity by categorizing numbers and parts of numbers.[86] His translations of Euclid on geometry and Ptolemy on astronomy,[87] if they were completed, no longer survive. Boethius made Latin translations of Aristotle's De interpretatione and Categories with commentaries.[41] In his article The Ancient Classics in the Mediaeval Libraries, James Stuart Beddie cites Boethius as the reason Aristotle's works were popular in the Middle Ages, as Boethius preserved many of the philosopher's works.[88]

De institutione musica

Boethius' De institutione musica was one of the first musical texts to be printed in Venice between the years of 1491 and 1492. It was written toward the beginning of the sixth century and helped medieval theorists during the ninth century and onwards understand ancient Greek music.[89] Like his Greek predecessors, Boethius believed that arithmetic and music were intertwined, and helped to mutually reinforce the understanding of each, and together exemplified the fundamental principles of order and harmony in the understanding of the universe as it was known during his time.[90]

In De Musica, Boethius introduced the threefold classification of music:[91]

  • Musica mundanamusic of the spheres/world; this "music" was not actually audible and was to be understood rather than heard
  • Musica humana – harmony of human body and spiritual harmony
  • Musica instrumentalis – instrumental music
 
Boethius, Arithmetica Geometrica Musica (1492 first printed edition, from Hans Adler Collection)

In De musica I.2, Boethius describes 'musica instrumentis' as music produced by something under tension (e.g., strings), by wind (e.g., aulos), by water, or by percussion (e.g., cymbals). Boethius himself doesn't use the term 'instrumentalis', which was used by Adalbold II of Utrecht (975–1026) in his Epistola cum tractatu.[full citation needed] The term is much more common in the 13th century and later.[citation needed] It is also in these later texts that musica instrumentalis is firmly associated with audible music in general, including vocal music. Scholars have traditionally assumed that Boethius also made this connection, possibly under the header of wind instruments ("administratur ... aut spiritu ut tibiis"[note 5][92]), but Boethius himself never writes about "instrumentalis" as separate from "instrumentis" explicitly in his very brief description.

In one of his works within De institutione musica, Boethius said that "music is so naturally united with us that we cannot be free from it even if we so desired."[93] During the Middle Ages, Boethius was connected to several texts that were used to teach liberal arts. Although he did not address the subject of trivium, he did write many treatises explaining the principles of rhetoric, grammar, and logic. During the Middle Ages, his works of these disciplines were commonly used when studying the three elementary arts.[87] The historian R. W. Southern called Boethius "the schoolmaster of medieval Europe."[94]

An 1872 German translation of "De Musica" was the magnum opus of Oscar Paul.[95][non-primary source needed]

Opuscula sacra

Boethius also wrote Christian theological treatises, which supported Catholicism and condemned Arianism and other heterodox forms of Christianity.[96]

Five theological works are known:[97]

  • De Trinitate – "The Trinity", where he defends the Council of Chalcedon Trinitarian position, that God is in three persons who have no differences in nature. He argues against the Arian view of the nature of God, which put him at odds with the faith of the Arian King of Italy.
  • Utrum Pater et filius et Spiritus Sanctus de divinitate substantialiter praedicentur – "Whether Father, Son and Holy Spirit are Substantially Predicated of the Divinity", a short work where he uses reason and Aristotelian epistemology to argue that the Catholic views of the nature of God are correct.[98]
  • Quomodo substantiae, Boethius' claim that all substances are good.[99]
  • De fide catholica – "On the Catholic Faith"
  • Contra Eutychen et Nestorium – "Against Eutyches and Nestorius," from around 513, which dates it as the earliest of his theological works. Eutyches and Nestorius were contemporaries in the early to mid-5th century who held divergent Christological theologies. Boethius argues for a middle ground in conformity with Roman Catholic faith.

His theological works played an important part during the Middle Ages in philosophical thought, including the fields of logic, ontology, and metaphysics.[100]

Dates of works

 
Gravestone of Boethius in the Pavia Civic Museum

Dates of composition:[101]

Mathematical works
  • De arithmetica (On Arithmetic, c. 500) adapted translation of the Introductio Arithmeticae by Nicomachus of Gerasa (c. 160 – c. 220).
  • De musica (On Music, c. 510), based on a lost work by Nicomachus of Gerasa and on Ptolemy's Harmonica.
  • Possibly a treatise on geometry, extant only in fragments.[102]
Logical Works
A) Translations
B) Commentaries
  • In Isagogen Porphyrii commenta (two commentaries, the first based on a translation by Marius Victorinus, (c. 504–05); the second based on Boethius' own translation (507–509) ).
  • In Categorias Aristotelis (c. 509–11)
  • In librum Aristotelis de interpretatione Commentaria minora (not before 513)
  • In librum Aristotelis de interpretatione Commentaria majora (c. 515–16)
  • In Aristotelis Analytica Priora (c. 520–523)
  • Commentaria in Topica Ciceronis (incomplete: the end the sixth book and the seventh are missing)
Original Treatises
  • De divisione (515–520?)
  • De syllogismo cathegorico (505–506)
  • Introductio ad syllogismos cathegoricos (c. 523)
  • De hypotheticis syllogismis (516–522)
  • De topicis differentiis (c. 522–23)
  • Opuscula Sacra (Theological Treatises)
    • De Trinitate (c. 520–21)
    • Utrum Pater et Filius et Spiritus Sanctus de divinitate substantialiter praedicentur (Whether Father and Son and Holy Spirit are Substantially Predicated of the Divinity)
    • Quomodo substantiae in eo quod sint bonae sint cum non sint substantialia bona [also known as De hebdomadibus] (How Substances are Good in that they Exist, when They are not Substantially Good)
    • De fide Catholica
    • Contra Eutychen et Nestorium (Against Eutyches and Nestorius)
  • De consolatione Philosophiae (524–525).

Legacy

 
Depiction of Boethius in the Nuremberg Chronicle

Edward Kennard Rand dubbed Boethius the "last of the Roman philosophers and the first of the scholastic theologians".[103] Despite the use of his mathematical texts in the early universities, it is his final work, the Consolation of Philosophy, that assured his legacy in the Middle Ages and beyond. This work is cast as a dialogue between Boethius himself, at first bitter and despairing over his imprisonment, and the spirit of philosophy, depicted as a woman of wisdom and compassion. "Alternately composed in prose and verse,[84] the Consolation teaches acceptance of hardship in a spirit of philosophical detachment from misfortune".[104]

Parts of the work are reminiscent of the Socratic method of Plato's dialogues, as the spirit of philosophy questions Boethius and challenges his emotional reactions to adversity. The work was translated into Old English by King Alfred and later into English by Chaucer and Queen Elizabeth.[96] Many manuscripts survive and it was extensively edited, translated and printed throughout Europe from the 14th century onwards.[105]

"The Boethian Wheel" is a model for Boethius' belief that history is a wheel,[106] a metaphor that Boethius uses frequently in the Consolation; it remained very popular throughout the Middle Ages, and is still often seen today. As the wheel turns, those who have power and wealth will turn to dust; men may rise from poverty and hunger to greatness, while those who are great may fall with the turn of the wheel. It was represented in the Middle Ages in many relics of art depicting the rise and fall of man. Descriptions of "The Boethian Wheel" can be found in the literature of the Middle Ages from the Romance of the Rose to Chaucer.[107]

De topicis differentiis was the basis for one of the first works of logic in a western European vernacular, a selection of excerpts translated into Old French by John of Antioch in 1282.[108]

Veneration

 
The Tomb of Boethius in San Pietro in Ciel d'Oro

Boethius was regarded as a Christian martyr by those who lived in succeeding centuries after his death.[15] Currently, he is recognized as a saint and martyr for the Catholic faith.[51] He is included within the Roman Martyrology, though to Watkins "his status as martyr is dubious".[109] His cult is held in Pavia, where Boethius' status as a saint was confirmed in 1883, and in the Church of Santa Maria in Portico in Rome. His feast day is 23 October.[110][109][111] In the current Martyrologium Romanum, his feast is still restricted to that diocese.[112] Pope Benedict XVI explained the relevance of Boethius to modern day Christians by linking his teachings to an understanding of Providence.[83] He is also venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church.[113]

In popular culture

 
Boethius' Farewell To His Family by Jean-Victor Schnetz

In Dante's Divine Comedy, the spirit of Boethius is pointed out by Saint Thomas Aquinas and is mentioned further in the poem.

In the novel A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole, Boethius is the favorite philosopher of the main character, Ignatius J. Reilly. The "Boethian Wheel" is a theme throughout the book, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981.[114]

C.S. Lewis references Boethius in chapter 27 of the Screwtape Letters.[115]

Boethius also appears in the 2002 film 24 Hour Party People where he is played by Christopher Eccleston.

In 1976, a lunar crater was named in honor of Boethius.

The title of Alain de Botton's book, The Consolations of Philosophy, is derived from Boethius' Consolation.

A codex of Boethius' The Consolation of Philosophy is the focus of The Late Scholar, a Lord Peter Wimsey novel by Jill Paton Walsh.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The name Anicius demonstrated his connection with a noble family of the Lower Empire, while Manlius claims lineage from the Manlii Torquati of the Republic.[7] The name Severinus was given to him in honour of Severinus of Noricum.[7] In some parts of Italy, he is revered as Saint Severinus rather than as Boethius.[8]
  2. ^ Historian Johannes Fried points out that no proof ever emerged that Boethius had committed a crime despite being sentenced to death by Theodoric and the Ostrogothic Senate. Theodoric, who Fried states was guilty of misjudgment, likely regretted his actions.[10] Procopius and later historians take a similar view, believing that he had been unjustly condemned.[11][12][13]
  3. ^ Two years later, in 526, Boethius' adoptive father, Symmachus, was also put to death.[14][15]
  4. ^ Historian Helen M. Barrett writes that the notion of Boethius having studied in Athens "must be rejected as without foundation," as it likely came from a misunderstanding of Cassiodorus' letters.[28]
  5. ^ "Haec vero administratur aut intentione ut nervis, aut spiritu ut tibiis, vel his, quae ad aquam moventur, aut percussione quadam, ut in his, quae in concava quaedam aerea feriuntur, atque inde diversi efficiuntur soni." Translated: "This, however, is operated by the motion of a string, or the wind of a pipe, or to those, which are moved by the water, or the beat of time, as in the following, which is striking a kind of brass hollow, and in the other are made of a corresponding sound."

References

  1. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 37.
  2. ^ Fried 2015, p. 102.
  3. ^ Smith 2014, p. 66.
  4. ^ Marenbon 2003, p. 168.
  5. ^ Hodgkin 1896, p. 688.
  6. ^ Marenbon 2003, p. 7.
  7. ^ a b Hodgkin 1885, p. 523.
  8. ^ a b Barrett 1940, p. 33.
  9. ^ Turner, W. "Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 19 December 2022 – via New Advent.
  10. ^ Fried 2015, p. 28.
  11. ^ Barrett 1940, p. vii.
  12. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 59.
  13. ^ Boethius 2001, p. xxii.
  14. ^ Boethius 2000, p. xiv.
  15. ^ a b Marenbon 2003, p. 10.
  16. ^ a b c Kaylor & Philips 2012, p. 1.
  17. ^ Hodgkin 1880, p. 617.
  18. ^ Heather 2005, p. 244–245.
  19. ^ Hodgkin 1880, p. 196.
  20. ^ Kaylor & Philips 2012, p. 8.
  21. ^ Boethius 1969, p. 59.
  22. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 34.
  23. ^ a b Kaylor & Philips 2012, p. 4.
  24. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 35, 38.
  25. ^ Marenbon 2003, p. 3, 17–18.
  26. ^ a b c Smith & Wace 1877, p. 322.
  27. ^ Marenbon 2003, p. 165.
  28. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 35–36.
  29. ^ Moorhead 2009, p. 29.
  30. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 36.
  31. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 38.
  32. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 44–45.
  33. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 45.
  34. ^ Cassiodorus 1992, I.10, pp. 12–14; I.45, 20–23; II.40, 38–43.
  35. ^ Herman 2013, p. 187.
  36. ^ a b Barrett 1940, p. 46.
  37. ^ Boethius 1969, p. 60.
  38. ^ Barrett 1940, p. 48.
  39. ^ Hodgkin 1894, p. 265.
  40. ^ Hodgkin 1894, p. 195.
  41. ^ a b O'Connor & Robertson 2000.
  42. ^ Boethius 2007, p. 5.
  43. ^ Marcellinus 1972, p. 562ff.
  44. ^ Dewing 1968, p. 12f.
  45. ^ Richards 1979, p. 114.
  46. ^ Boethius 1969, p. 42.
  47. ^ Richards 1979, p. 117.
  48. ^ Bury 1923, p. 158.
  49. ^ Richards 1979, p. 119.
  50. ^ a b Fried 2015, p. 1.
  51. ^ a b Smith & Wace 1877, p. 321.
  52. ^ Herman 2013, p. 190.
  53. ^ Lindberg 1978, p. 10.
  54. ^ a b Herman 2013, p. 189.
  55. ^ Boethius 2000, p. xxvii, Introduction.
  56. ^ Hodgkin 1894, p. 277.
  57. ^ Kaylor & Philips 2012, p. 14.
  58. ^ OLL.
  59. ^ Boethius 2001, p. [page needed].
  60. ^ Spade 2016, 4.2.
  61. ^ Aquinas & Frederick 2005, p. 14–.
  62. ^ Rubenstein 2004, p. 62.
  63. ^ Boethius 2001, p. xvi—xvii.
  64. ^ Stump 1988, p. 3.
  65. ^ Stump 1988, p. 22.
  66. ^ a b Stump 1988, p. 25.
  67. ^ Stump 1988, p. 26.
  68. ^ Stump 1988, p. 34.
  69. ^ Stump 1988, p. 35.
  70. ^ Stump 1978, p. 29.
  71. ^ Stump 1978, p. 31.
  72. ^ Stump 1978, p. 6.
  73. ^ Stump 1978, p. 7, 9–8.
  74. ^ a b Stump 1978, p. 180.
  75. ^ Stump 1978, p. 33.
  76. ^ Stump 1978, p. 181.
  77. ^ Stump 1978, p. 198.
  78. ^ Stump 1978, p. 48.
  79. ^ Stump 1978, p. 204.
  80. ^ Stump 1978, p. 205.
  81. ^ Stump 1978, p. 35.
  82. ^ a b Cassiodorus 1992, I.45.4.
  83. ^ a b Pope Benedict XVI 2008.
  84. ^ a b Marenbon 2016.
  85. ^ a b Herbermann 1913.
  86. ^ Schrader 1968, p. 615–628.
  87. ^ a b Masi 1979, p. 24.
  88. ^ Beddie 1930, p. 3.
  89. ^ Boethius 1989, p. xiii—xv.
  90. ^ Grout 1980, p. 24.
  91. ^ Bower 2006, p. 146.
  92. ^ Boethius 1867b, p. 189.
  93. ^ Boethius 1989, p. 8.
  94. ^ Herman 2013, p. 196.
  95. ^ Paul 1872.
  96. ^ a b Cooper 1902, Editorial Note.
  97. ^ Kaylor & Philips 2012, p. 15.
  98. ^ Speer 2011, p. 95.
  99. ^ MacDonald, Scott (1988). "Boethius's Claim that all Substances are Good". Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie. 70 (3). doi:10.1515/agph.1988.70.3.245. S2CID 144565831.
  100. ^ Bradshaw 2009, p. 105–128.
  101. ^ Kaylor & Philips 2012, p. 551–589.
  102. ^ Folkerts 1970, p. [page needed].
  103. ^ Boethius 2004, p. x.
  104. ^ Boethius 2007, Preface by H.R. James.
  105. ^ Dwyer 1976, p. 5–13.
  106. ^ Boethius 1999, p. 24, n. 1.
  107. ^ Carroll-Clark 1994.
  108. ^ Rubin 2018, p. 93.
  109. ^ a b Watkins 2016, p. 108.
  110. ^ Farmer 2011, p. 53.
  111. ^ Calvi, S. Severino Boezio.
  112. ^ Martyrologium Romanum 2004, p. 586.
  113. ^ St John's, Severinus Boethius Oct 23.
  114. ^ Miller 1999.
  115. ^ Lewis 1944, p. 57.

Sources

Books
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  • Beddie, James Stuart (1930), "The Ancient Classics in the Mediaeval Libraries", Speculum, 5 (1): 3–20, doi:10.2307/2846353, JSTOR 2846353, S2CID 163314872
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Weblinks
  • Pope Benedict XVI (12 March 2008), Boethius and Cassiodorus, from the original on 28 December 2008, retrieved 4 November 2009
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  • Marenbon, John (2016), "Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, retrieved 23 October 2017
  • Miller, Karl (1999-03-05). . www.newstatesman.com. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  • O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. (May 2000), "Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius", MacTutor History of Mathematicas archive, University of St Andrews, retrieved 4 November 2009
  • "Boethius", The Online Library of Liberty, retrieved 23 October 2017
  • Spade, Paul Vincent (15 March 2016), "Medieval Philosophy", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, retrieved 23 October 2017
  • Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome, St John's Orthodox Church, Colchester

Further reading

External links

Works

  • Works by Boethius at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Boethius at Internet Archive
  • Works by Boethius at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • {en} De Trinitate (On the Holy Trinity) – Boethius, Erik Kenyon (trans.)
  • {en} Theological Tractates; Christian Classics Ethereal Library
  • The Geoffrey Freudlin 1885 edition of the Arithmetica, from the Cornell Library Historical Mathematics Monographs
  • Online Galleries, History of Science Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries 2020-11-13 at the Wayback Machine
  • Works by Boethius at Perseus Digital Library
  • MS 1083/30 Regiment of princes; Consolation of philosophy at OPenn
  • MS 484/15 Commentum super libro Porphyrii Isagoge; De decim predicamentis at OPenn

On Boethius' life and works

On Boethius' logic and philosophy

Preceded by Consul of the Roman Empire
510
Succeeded by
Arcadius Placidus Magnus Felix,
Flavius Secundinus

boethius, other, people, named, disambiguation, anicius, manlius, severinus, note, commonly, known, latin, boetius, roman, senator, consul, magister, officiorum, historian, philosopher, early, middle, ages, central, figure, translation, greek, classics, into, . For other people named Boethius see Boethius disambiguation Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius 6 note 1 commonly known as Boethius b oʊ ˈ iː 8 i e s Latin Boetius c 480 524 AD was a Roman senator consul magister officiorum historian and philosopher of the Early Middle Ages He was a central figure in the translation of the Greek classics into Latin a precursor to the Scholastic movement and along with Cassiodorus one of the two leading Christian scholars of the 6th century The local cult of Boethius in the Diocese of Pavia was sanctioned by the Sacred Congregation of Rites in 1883 confirming the diocese s custom of honouring him on the 23 October 9 SaintBoethiusMartyrBornc 480Rome Kingdom of OdoacerDied524 aged 44 Pavia Ostrogothic KingdomVenerated inDiocese of PaviaMajor shrineSan Pietro in Ciel d OroFeast23 OctoberPhilosophy careerNotable workThe Consolation of PhilosophyEraMedieval philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolNeoplatonismMain interestsFate Epistemology Theology Music MathematicsNotable ideasWheel of FortuneQuadriviumRecovery of AristotleClassical revivalProblem of universalsPrinciple of individuationMedieval music theorySquare of oppositionMedieval syllogismMode music Porphyrian treeMedieval dialecticInfluences Plato Aristotle Cicero Seneca Plotinus Porphyry Ptolemy Capella Augustine ProclusInfluenced Virtually all medieval philosophy particularly Ennodius 1 Cassiodorus Eriugena Alfred the Great 2 Abelard Anselm of Canterbury 3 Magnus Aquinas de Meun Ockham 4 Dante Chaucer and later More 5 Elizabeth I Burke Maistre MacDonald Tolkien C S Lewis Benedict XVIBoethius was born in Rome a few years after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire A member of the Anicii family he was orphaned following the family s sudden decline and was raised by Quintus Aurelius Memmius Symmachus a later consul After mastering both Latin and Greek in his youth Boethius rose to prominence as a statesman during the Ostrogothic Kingdom becoming a senator by age 25 a consul by age 33 and later chosen as a personal advisor to Theodoric the Great In seeking to reconcile the teachings of Plato and Aristotle with Christian theology Boethius sought to translate the entirety of the Greek classics for Western scholars He published numerous transcriptions and commentaries of the works of Nicomachus Porphyry and Cicero among others and wrote extensively on matters concerning music mathematics and theology Though his translations were unfinished following an untimely death it is largely due to them that the works of Aristotle survived into the Renaissance Despite his successes as a senior official Boethius became deeply unpopular among other members of the Ostrogothic court for denouncing the extensive corruption prevalent among other members of government After publicly defending fellow consul Caecina Albinus from charges of conspiracy he was imprisoned by Theodoric around the year 523 While jailed and suffering from depression Boethius wrote The Consolation of Philosophy a philosophical treatise on fortune death and other issues which became one of the most influential and widely reproduced works of the Early Middle Ages He was tortured and executed in 524 becoming a martyr in the Christian faith by tradition note 2 note 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Rise to power 3 Downfall and death 4 Major works 4 1 De consolatione philosophiae 4 2 De topicis differentiis 4 3 De arithmetica 4 4 De institutione musica 4 5 Opuscula sacra 5 Dates of works 6 Legacy 7 Veneration 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External links 13 1 Works 13 2 On Boethius life and works 13 3 On Boethius logic and philosophyEarly life Edit Consular diptych depicting Narius Manlius Boethius Boethius birth father Boethius was born in Rome to a patrician family around 480 16 but the exact date of his birth is unknown 8 His birth family the Anicii was a notably wealthy and influential gens that included emperors Petronius Maximus and Olybrius in addition to many consuls 17 However in the years prior to Boethius birth the family had lost much of its influence The grandfather of Boethius a senator by the same name was appointed as praetorian prefect of Italy but died in 454 during the palace plot against Flavius Aetius 18 19 Boethius father Manlius Boethius who was appointed consul in 487 died while Boethius was still young 20 Quintus Aurelius Memmius Symmachus another patrician adopted and raised him instead introducing to him philosophy and literature 21 As a sign of their good relationship Boethius would later marry his foster father s daughter Rusticiana with whom he would have two children also named Symmachus and Boethius 22 Having been adopted into the wealthy Symmachi family Boethius had access to tutors that would have educated him during his youth 23 Though Symmachus had some fluency in Greek Boethius achieved a mastery of the language an increasingly rare skill in the Western regions of the Empire and dedicated his early career to translating the entire works of Plato and Aristotle 24 25 with some of the translations that he produced being the only surviving transcriptions of Greek texts into the Middle Ages 26 27 The unusual fluency of Boethius in the Greek language has led some scholars to believe that he was educated in the East a traditional view first proposed by Edward Gibbon is that Boethius studied in Athens for eighteen years based on the letters of Cassiodorus though this was likely to have been a misreading by past historians 23 note 4 Historian Pierre Courcelle has argued that Boethius studied at Alexandria with the Neoplatonist philosopher Ammonius Hermiae However Historian John Moorhead observes that the evidence supporting Boethius having studied in Alexandria is not as strong as it may appear adding that he may have been able to acquire his formidable learning without travelling 29 Whatever the case Boethius fluency in Greek proved useful throughout his life in translating the classic works of Greek thinkers though his interests spanned across a variety of fields including music mathematics astrology and theology 30 Rise to power Edit Boethius right and his adoptive father Symmachus left both had been appointed consuls in their own right Taking inspiration from Plato s Republic Boethius left his scholarly pursuits to enter the service of Theodoric the Great 31 The two had first met in the year 500 when Theodoric traveled to Rome to stay for six months 32 Though no record survives detailing the early relationship between Theodoric and Boethius it is clear that the Ostrogothic king viewed him favorably in the next few years Boethius rapidly ascended through the ranks of government becoming a senator by age 25 and a consul by the year 510 16 33 His earliest documented acts on behalf of the Ostrogothic ruler were to investigate allegations that the paymaster of Theodoric s bodyguards had debased the coins of their pay to produce a waterclock for Theodoric to gift to king Gundobad of the Burgundians and to recruit a lyre player to perform for Clovis King of the Franks 34 Boethius writes in the Consolation that despite his own successes he believed that his greatest achievement came when both his sons were selected by Theodoric to be consuls in 522 with each representing the whole of the Roman Empire 35 The appointment of his sons was an exceptional honor not only since it made conspicuous Theodoric s favor for Boethius but also because the Byzantine emperor Justin I had forfeited his own nomination as a sign of goodwill thus also endorsing Boethius sons 36 In the same year as the appointment of his sons Boethius was elevated to the position of magister officiorum becoming the head of all government and palace affairs 36 Recalling the event he wrote that he was sitting between the two consuls as if it were a military triumph letting my largesse fulfill the wildest expectations of the people packed in their seats around me 37 Boethius struggles came within a year of his appointment as magister officiorum in seeking to mend the rampant corruption present in the Roman Court he writes of having to thwart the conspiracies of Triguilla the steward of the royal house of confronting the Gothic minister Cunigast who went to devour the substance of the poor and of having to use the authority of the king to stop a shipment of food from Campania which if carried would have exacerbated an ongoing famine in the region 38 These actions made Boethius an increasingly unpopular figure among court officials though he remained in Theodoric s favor 39 Downfall and death EditThe young philosopher Boethius a man whose varied accomplishments adorned the middle period of the reign of Theodoric and whose tragic death was to bring sadness over its close Thomas Hodgkin Theodoric the Goth 40 In 520 Boethius was working to revitalize the relationship between the Roman See and the Constantinopolitan See though the two were then still a part of the same Church disagreements had begun to emerge between them This may have set in place a course of events that would lead to loss of royal favour 41 Five hundred years later this continuing disagreement led to the East West Schism in 1054 in which communion between the Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Church was broken In 523 Boethius fell from power After a period of imprisonment in Pavia for what was deemed a treasonable offence he was executed in 524 16 42 The primary sources are in general agreement over the facts of what happened At a meeting of the Royal Council in Verona the referendarius Cyprianus accused the ex consul Caecina Decius Faustus Albinus of treasonous correspondence with Justin I Boethius leapt to his defense crying The charge of Cyprianus is false but if Albinus did that so also have I and the whole senate with one accord done it it is false my Lord King 43 Manuscript depicting Boethius teaching students initial and while imprisoned Cyprianus then also accused Boethius of the same crime and produced three men who claimed they had witnessed the crime Boethius and Basilius were arrested First the pair were detained in the baptistery of a church then Boethius was exiled to the Ager Calventianus a distant country estate where he was put to death Not long afterwards Theodoric had Boethius father in law Symmachus put to death according to Procopius on the grounds that he and Boethius together were planning a revolution and confiscated their property 44 The basic facts in the case are not in dispute writes Jeffrey Richards What is disputed about this sequence of events is the interpretation that should be put on them 45 Boethius claims his crime was seeking the safety of the Senate He describes the three witnesses against him as dishonorable Basilius had been dismissed from Royal service for his debts while Venantius Opilio and Gaudentius had been exiled for fraud 46 However other sources depict these men in a far more positive light For example Cassiodorus describes Cyprianus and Opilio as utterly scrupulous just and loyal and mentions they are brothers and grandsons of the consul Opilio 47 Theodoric was feeling threatened by international events The Acacian schism had been resolved and the Nicene Christian aristocrats of his kingdom were seeking to renew their ties with Constantinople The Catholic Hilderic had become king of the Vandals and had put Theodoric s sister Amalafrida to death 48 and Arians in the East were being persecuted 49 Then there was the matter that with his previous ties to Theodahad Boethius apparently found himself on the wrong side in the succession dispute following the untimely death of Eutharic Theodoric s announced heir Boethius the most learned man of his time met his death in the hangman s noose and yet the life of Boethius was a triumph The West owes this individual Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius nothing less than its progression toward a culture of reason Johannes Fried The Middle Ages 50 The method of Boethius execution varies in the sources He may have been beheaded clubbed to death or hanged 50 It is likely that he was tortured with a rope that was constricted around his head bludgeoned until his eyes bulged out then his skull was cracked 51 52 Following an agonizing death his remains were entombed in the church of San Pietro in Ciel d Oro in Pavia also the resting place of Augustine of Hippo His wealth was also confiscated and his wife Rusticiana reduced to poverty 26 Past historians have had a hard time accepting a sincere Christian who was also a serious Hellenist 26 53 These worries have largely stemmed by the lack of any mention of Jesus in Boethius Consolation nor of any other Christian figure 54 Arnaldo Momigliano argues that Boethius turned to paganism His Christianity collapsed it collapsed so thoroughly that perhaps he did not even notice its disappearance However the majority of scholarship has taken a different view 55 with Arthur Herman writing that Boethius was unshakably Orthodox Catholic and Thomas Hodgkin having asserted that uncovered manuscripts prove beyond a doubt that Boethius was a Christian 56 54 Furthermore the community that he was a part of valued equally both classical and Christian culture 57 Major works Edit The beginning of Aristotle s De interpretatione in Boethius Latin translation De consolatione philosophiae Edit Main article The Consolation of Philosophy Boethius s best known work is the Consolation of Philosophy De consolatione philosophiae which he wrote at the very end of his career awaiting his execution in prison This work represented an imaginary dialogue between himself and philosophy with philosophy personified as a woman arguing that despite the apparent inequality of the world there is in Platonic fashion a higher power and everything else is secondary to that divine Providence 58 Several manuscripts survived and these were widely edited translated and printed throughout the late 15th century and later in Europe 59 Beyond Consolation of Philosophy his lifelong project was a deliberate attempt to preserve ancient classical knowledge particularly philosophy Boethius intended to translate all the works of Aristotle and Plato from the original Greek into Latin 60 61 62 De topicis differentiis Edit His completed translations of Aristotle s works on logic were the only significant portions of Aristotle available in Latin Christendom from the sixth century until the rediscovery of Aristotle in the 12th century However some of his translations such as his treatment of the topoi in The Topics were mixed with his own commentary which reflected both Aristotelian and Platonic concepts 63 The commentaries themselves have been lost 64 In addition to his commentary on the Topics Boethius composed two treatises on Topical argumentation In Ciceronis Topica and De topicis differentiis The first work has six books and is largely a response to Cicero s Topica 65 The first book of In Ciceronis Topica begins with a dedication to Patricius It includes distinctions and assertions important to Boethius s overall philosophy such as his view of the role of philosophy as establish ing our judgment concerning the governing of life 66 and definitions of logic from Plato Aristotle and Cicero He breaks logic into three parts that which defines that which divides and that which deduces 66 He asserts that there are three types of arguments those of necessity of ready believability and sophistry 67 He follows Aristotle in defining one sort of Topic as the maximal proposition a proposition which is somehow shown to be universal or readily believable 68 The other sort of Topic the differentiae are Topics that contain and include the maximal propositions means of categorizing the Topics which Boethius credits to Cicero 69 Book II covers two kinds of topics those from related things and those from extrinsic topics Book III discusses the relationship among things studied through Topics Topics themselves and the nature of definition Book IV analyzes partition designation and relationships between things such as pairing numbering genus and species etc After a review of his terms Boethius spends Book V discussing Stoic logic and Aristotelian causation Book VI relates the nature of the Topic to causes In Topicis Differentiis has four books Book I discusses the nature of rhetorical and dialectical Topics together Boethius s overall purpose being to show what the Topics are what their differentiae are and which are suited for what syllogisms 70 He distinguishes between argument that which constitutes belief and argumentation that which demonstrates belief Propositions are divided into three parts those that are universal those that are particular and those that are somewhere in between 71 These distinctions and others are applicable to both types of Topical argument rhetorical and dialectical Books II and III are primarily focused on Topics of dialectic syllogisms while Book IV concentrates on the unit of the rhetorical Topic the enthymeme Topical argumentation is at the core of Boethius s conception of dialectic which have categorical rather than conditional conclusions and he conceives of the discovery of an argument as the discovery of a middle term capable of linking the two terms of the desired conclusion 72 Not only are these texts of paramount importance to the study of Boethius they are also crucial to the history of topical lore It is largely due to Boethius that the Topics of Aristotle and Cicero were revived and the Boethian tradition of topical argumentation spans its influence throughout the Middle Ages and into the early Renaissance In the works of Ockham Buridan Albert of Saxony and the Pseudo Scotus for instance many of the rules of consequence bear a strong resemblance to or are simply identical with certain Boethian Topics Boethius s influence direct and indirect on this tradition is enormous 73 It was also in De Topicis Differentiis that Boethius made a unique contribution to the discourse on dialectic and rhetoric Topical argumentation for Boethius is dependent upon a new category for the topics discussed by Aristotle and Cicero and u nlike Aristotle Boethius recognizes two different types of Topics First he says a Topic is a maximal proposition maxima propositio or principle but there is a second kind of Topic which he calls the differentia of a maximal proposition 74 Maximal propositions are propositions that are known per se and no proof can be found for these 75 This is the basis for the idea that demonstration or the construction of arguments is dependent ultimately upon ideas or proofs that are known so well and are so fundamental to human understanding of logic that no other proofs come before it They must hold true in and of themselves According to Stump the role of maximal propositions in argumentation is to ensure the truth of a conclusion by ensuring the truth of its premises either directly or indirectly 76 These propositions would be used in constructing arguments through the Differentia which is the second part of Boethius theory This is the genus of the intermediate in the argument 77 So maximal propositions allow room for an argument to be founded in some sense of logic while differentia are critical for the demonstration and construction of arguments Boethius definition of differentiae is that they are the Topics of arguments The Topics which are the Differentiae of maximal propositions are more universal than those propositions just as rationality is more universal than man 78 This is the second part of Boethius unique contribution to the field of rhetoric Differentia operate under maximal propositions to be of use in finding maximal propositions as well as intermediate terms or the premises that follow maximal propositions 79 Though Boethius is drawing from Aristotle s Topics Differentiae are not the same as Topics in some ways Boethius arranges differentiae through statements instead of generalized groups as Aristotle does Stump articulates the difference They are expressed as words or phrases whose expansion into appropriate propositions is neither intended nor readily conceivable unlike Aristotle s clearly defined four groups of Topics Aristotle had hundreds of topics organized into those four groups whereas Boethius has twenty eight Topics that are highly ordered among themselves 80 This distinction is necessary to understand Boethius as separate from past rhetorical theories Maximal propositions and Differentiae belong not only to rhetoric but also to dialectic Boethius defines dialectic through an analysis of thesis and hypothetical propositions He claims that t here are two kinds of questions One is that called thesis by the Greek dialecticians This is the kind of question which asks about and discusses things stripped of relation to other circumstances it is the sort of question dialecticians most frequently dispute about for example Is pleasure the greatest good or Should one marry 81 Dialectic has dialectical topics as well as dialectical rhetorical topics all of which are still discussed in De Topicis Differentiis 74 Dialectic especially in Book I comprises a major component of Boethius discussion on Topics Boethius planned to completely translate Plato s Dialogues but there is no known surviving translation if it was actually ever begun 82 De arithmetica Edit Boethius De arithmetica in a manuscript written for Charles the Bald Boethius chose to pass on the great Greco Roman culture to future generations by writing manuals on music astronomy geometry and arithmetic 83 Several of Boethius writings which were hugely influential during the Middle Ages drew on the thinking of Porphyry and Iamblichus 84 Boethius wrote a commentary on the Isagoge by Porphyry 85 which highlighted the existence of the problem of universals whether these concepts are subsistent entities which would exist whether anyone thought of them or whether they only exist as ideas This topic concerning the ontological nature of universal ideas was one of the most vocal controversies in medieval philosophy Besides these advanced philosophical works Boethius is also reported to have translated important Greek texts on the topics of the quadrivium 82 His loose translation of Nicomachus s treatise on arithmetic De institutione arithmetica libri duo and his textbook on music De institutione musica libri quinque unfinished contributed to medieval education 85 De arithmetica begins with modular arithmetic such as even and odd evenly even evenly odd and oddly even He then turns to unpredicted complexity by categorizing numbers and parts of numbers 86 His translations of Euclid on geometry and Ptolemy on astronomy 87 if they were completed no longer survive Boethius made Latin translations of Aristotle s De interpretatione and Categories with commentaries 41 In his article The Ancient Classics in the Mediaeval Libraries James Stuart Beddie cites Boethius as the reason Aristotle s works were popular in the Middle Ages as Boethius preserved many of the philosopher s works 88 De institutione musica Edit Boethius De institutione musica was one of the first musical texts to be printed in Venice between the years of 1491 and 1492 It was written toward the beginning of the sixth century and helped medieval theorists during the ninth century and onwards understand ancient Greek music 89 Like his Greek predecessors Boethius believed that arithmetic and music were intertwined and helped to mutually reinforce the understanding of each and together exemplified the fundamental principles of order and harmony in the understanding of the universe as it was known during his time 90 In De Musica Boethius introduced the threefold classification of music 91 Musica mundana music of the spheres world this music was not actually audible and was to be understood rather than heard Musica humana harmony of human body and spiritual harmony Musica instrumentalis instrumental music Boethius Arithmetica Geometrica Musica 1492 first printed edition from Hans Adler Collection In De musica I 2 Boethius describes musica instrumentis as music produced by something under tension e g strings by wind e g aulos by water or by percussion e g cymbals Boethius himself doesn t use the term instrumentalis which was used by Adalbold II of Utrecht 975 1026 in his Epistola cum tractatu full citation needed The term is much more common in the 13th century and later citation needed It is also in these later texts that musica instrumentalis is firmly associated with audible music in general including vocal music Scholars have traditionally assumed that Boethius also made this connection possibly under the header of wind instruments administratur aut spiritu ut tibiis note 5 92 but Boethius himself never writes about instrumentalis as separate from instrumentis explicitly in his very brief description In one of his works within De institutione musica Boethius said that music is so naturally united with us that we cannot be free from it even if we so desired 93 During the Middle Ages Boethius was connected to several texts that were used to teach liberal arts Although he did not address the subject of trivium he did write many treatises explaining the principles of rhetoric grammar and logic During the Middle Ages his works of these disciplines were commonly used when studying the three elementary arts 87 The historian R W Southern called Boethius the schoolmaster of medieval Europe 94 An 1872 German translation of De Musica was the magnum opus of Oscar Paul 95 non primary source needed Opuscula sacra Edit Boethius also wrote Christian theological treatises which supported Catholicism and condemned Arianism and other heterodox forms of Christianity 96 Five theological works are known 97 De Trinitate The Trinity where he defends the Council of Chalcedon Trinitarian position that God is in three persons who have no differences in nature He argues against the Arian view of the nature of God which put him at odds with the faith of the Arian King of Italy Utrum Pater et filius et Spiritus Sanctus de divinitate substantialiter praedicentur Whether Father Son and Holy Spirit are Substantially Predicated of the Divinity a short work where he uses reason and Aristotelian epistemology to argue that the Catholic views of the nature of God are correct 98 Quomodo substantiae Boethius claim that all substances are good 99 De fide catholica On the Catholic Faith Contra Eutychen et Nestorium Against Eutyches and Nestorius from around 513 which dates it as the earliest of his theological works Eutyches and Nestorius were contemporaries in the early to mid 5th century who held divergent Christological theologies Boethius argues for a middle ground in conformity with Roman Catholic faith His theological works played an important part during the Middle Ages in philosophical thought including the fields of logic ontology and metaphysics 100 Dates of works Edit Gravestone of Boethius in the Pavia Civic Museum Dates of composition 101 Mathematical worksDe arithmetica On Arithmetic c 500 adapted translation of the Introductio Arithmeticae by Nicomachus of Gerasa c 160 c 220 De musica On Music c 510 based on a lost work by Nicomachus of Gerasa and on Ptolemy s Harmonica Possibly a treatise on geometry extant only in fragments 102 Logical WorksA TranslationsPorphyry sIsagoge In Categorias Aristotelis Aristotle s Categories De interpretatione vel periermenias Aristotle s De Interpretatione Interpretatio priorum Analyticorum two versions Aristotle s Prior Analytics Interpretatio Topicorum Aristotelis Aristotle s Topics Interpretatio Elenchorum Sophisticorum Aristotelis Aristotle s Sophistical RefutationsB CommentariesIn Isagogen Porphyrii commenta two commentaries the first based on a translation by Marius Victorinus c 504 05 the second based on Boethius own translation 507 509 In Categorias Aristotelis c 509 11 In librum Aristotelis de interpretatione Commentaria minora not before 513 In librum Aristotelis de interpretatione Commentaria majora c 515 16 In Aristotelis Analytica Priora c 520 523 Commentaria in Topica Ciceronis incomplete the end the sixth book and the seventh are missing Original TreatisesDe divisione 515 520 De syllogismo cathegorico 505 506 Introductio ad syllogismos cathegoricos c 523 De hypotheticis syllogismis 516 522 De topicis differentiis c 522 23 Opuscula Sacra Theological Treatises De Trinitate c 520 21 Utrum Pater et Filius et Spiritus Sanctus de divinitate substantialiter praedicentur Whether Father and Son and Holy Spirit are Substantially Predicated of the Divinity Quomodo substantiae in eo quod sint bonae sint cum non sint substantialia bona also known as De hebdomadibus How Substances are Good in that they Exist when They are not Substantially Good De fide Catholica Contra Eutychen et Nestorium Against Eutyches and Nestorius De consolatione Philosophiae 524 525 Legacy Edit Depiction of Boethius in the Nuremberg Chronicle Edward Kennard Rand dubbed Boethius the last of the Roman philosophers and the first of the scholastic theologians 103 Despite the use of his mathematical texts in the early universities it is his final work the Consolation of Philosophy that assured his legacy in the Middle Ages and beyond This work is cast as a dialogue between Boethius himself at first bitter and despairing over his imprisonment and the spirit of philosophy depicted as a woman of wisdom and compassion Alternately composed in prose and verse 84 the Consolation teaches acceptance of hardship in a spirit of philosophical detachment from misfortune 104 Parts of the work are reminiscent of the Socratic method of Plato s dialogues as the spirit of philosophy questions Boethius and challenges his emotional reactions to adversity The work was translated into Old English by King Alfred and later into English by Chaucer and Queen Elizabeth 96 Many manuscripts survive and it was extensively edited translated and printed throughout Europe from the 14th century onwards 105 The Boethian Wheel is a model for Boethius belief that history is a wheel 106 a metaphor that Boethius uses frequently in the Consolation it remained very popular throughout the Middle Ages and is still often seen today As the wheel turns those who have power and wealth will turn to dust men may rise from poverty and hunger to greatness while those who are great may fall with the turn of the wheel It was represented in the Middle Ages in many relics of art depicting the rise and fall of man Descriptions of The Boethian Wheel can be found in the literature of the Middle Ages from the Romance of the Rose to Chaucer 107 De topicis differentiis was the basis for one of the first works of logic in a western European vernacular a selection of excerpts translated into Old French by John of Antioch in 1282 108 Veneration Edit The Tomb of Boethius in San Pietro in Ciel d Oro Boethius was regarded as a Christian martyr by those who lived in succeeding centuries after his death 15 Currently he is recognized as a saint and martyr for the Catholic faith 51 He is included within the Roman Martyrology though to Watkins his status as martyr is dubious 109 His cult is held in Pavia where Boethius status as a saint was confirmed in 1883 and in the Church of Santa Maria in Portico in Rome His feast day is 23 October 110 109 111 In the current Martyrologium Romanum his feast is still restricted to that diocese 112 Pope Benedict XVI explained the relevance of Boethius to modern day Christians by linking his teachings to an understanding of Providence 83 He is also venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church 113 In popular culture Edit Boethius Farewell To His Family by Jean Victor SchnetzIn Dante s Divine Comedy the spirit of Boethius is pointed out by Saint Thomas Aquinas and is mentioned further in the poem In the novel A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole Boethius is the favorite philosopher of the main character Ignatius J Reilly The Boethian Wheel is a theme throughout the book which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1981 114 C S Lewis references Boethius in chapter 27 of the Screwtape Letters 115 Boethius also appears in the 2002 film 24 Hour Party People where he is played by Christopher Eccleston In 1976 a lunar crater was named in honor of Boethius The title of Alain de Botton s book The Consolations of Philosophy is derived from Boethius Consolation A codex of Boethius The Consolation of Philosophy is the focus of The Late Scholar a Lord Peter Wimsey novel by Jill Paton Walsh See also EditDe Fide Catolica The Consolations of Philosophy by Alain de Botton Prison literatureNotes Edit The name Anicius demonstrated his connection with a noble family of the Lower Empire while Manlius claims lineage from the Manlii Torquati of the Republic 7 The name Severinus was given to him in honour of Severinus of Noricum 7 In some parts of Italy he is revered as Saint Severinus rather than as Boethius 8 Historian Johannes Fried points out that no proof ever emerged that Boethius had committed a crime despite being sentenced to death by Theodoric and the Ostrogothic Senate Theodoric who Fried states was guilty of misjudgment likely regretted his actions 10 Procopius and later historians take a similar view believing that he had been unjustly condemned 11 12 13 Two years later in 526 Boethius adoptive father Symmachus was also put to death 14 15 Historian Helen M Barrett writes that the notion of Boethius having studied in Athens must be rejected as without foundation as it likely came from a misunderstanding of Cassiodorus letters 28 Haec vero administratur aut intentione ut nervis aut spiritu ut tibiis vel his quae ad aquam moventur aut percussione quadam ut in his quae in concava quaedam aerea feriuntur atque inde diversi efficiuntur soni Translated This however is operated by the motion of a string or the wind of a pipe or to those which are moved by the water or the beat of time as in the following which is striking a kind of brass hollow and in the other are made of a corresponding sound References Edit Barrett 1940 p 37 Fried 2015 p 102 Smith 2014 p 66 Marenbon 2003 p 168 Hodgkin 1896 p 688 Marenbon 2003 p 7 a b Hodgkin 1885 p 523 a b Barrett 1940 p 33 Turner W Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius The Catholic Encyclopedia Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 19 December 2022 via New Advent Fried 2015 p 28 Barrett 1940 p vii Barrett 1940 p 59 Boethius 2001 p xxii Boethius 2000 p xiv a b Marenbon 2003 p 10 a b c Kaylor amp Philips 2012 p 1 Hodgkin 1880 p 617 Heather 2005 p 244 245 Hodgkin 1880 p 196 Kaylor amp Philips 2012 p 8 Boethius 1969 p 59 Barrett 1940 p 34 a b Kaylor amp Philips 2012 p 4 Barrett 1940 p 35 38 Marenbon 2003 p 3 17 18 a b c Smith amp Wace 1877 p 322 Marenbon 2003 p 165 Barrett 1940 p 35 36 Moorhead 2009 p 29 Barrett 1940 p 36 Barrett 1940 p 38 Barrett 1940 p 44 45 Barrett 1940 p 45 Cassiodorus 1992 I 10 pp 12 14 I 45 20 23 II 40 38 43 Herman 2013 p 187 a b Barrett 1940 p 46 Boethius 1969 p 60 Barrett 1940 p 48 Hodgkin 1894 p 265 Hodgkin 1894 p 195 a b O Connor amp Robertson 2000 Boethius 2007 p 5 Marcellinus 1972 p 562ff Dewing 1968 p 12f Richards 1979 p 114 Boethius 1969 p 42 Richards 1979 p 117 Bury 1923 p 158 Richards 1979 p 119 a b Fried 2015 p 1 a b Smith amp Wace 1877 p 321 Herman 2013 p 190 Lindberg 1978 p 10 a b Herman 2013 p 189 Boethius 2000 p xxvii Introduction Hodgkin 1894 p 277 Kaylor amp Philips 2012 p 14 OLL Boethius 2001 p page needed Spade 2016 4 2 Aquinas amp Frederick 2005 p 14 Rubenstein 2004 p 62 Boethius 2001 p xvi xvii Stump 1988 p 3 Stump 1988 p 22 a b Stump 1988 p 25 Stump 1988 p 26 Stump 1988 p 34 Stump 1988 p 35 Stump 1978 p 29 Stump 1978 p 31 Stump 1978 p 6 Stump 1978 p 7 9 8 a b Stump 1978 p 180 Stump 1978 p 33 Stump 1978 p 181 Stump 1978 p 198 Stump 1978 p 48 Stump 1978 p 204 Stump 1978 p 205 Stump 1978 p 35 a b Cassiodorus 1992 I 45 4 a b Pope Benedict XVI 2008 a b Marenbon 2016 a b Herbermann 1913 Schrader 1968 p 615 628 a b Masi 1979 p 24 Beddie 1930 p 3 Boethius 1989 p xiii xv Grout 1980 p 24 Bower 2006 p 146 Boethius 1867b p 189 Boethius 1989 p 8 Herman 2013 p 196 Paul 1872 a b Cooper 1902 Editorial Note Kaylor amp Philips 2012 p 15 Speer 2011 p 95 MacDonald Scott 1988 Boethius s Claim that all Substances are Good Archiv fur Geschichte der Philosophie 70 3 doi 10 1515 agph 1988 70 3 245 S2CID 144565831 Bradshaw 2009 p 105 128 Kaylor amp Philips 2012 p 551 589 Folkerts 1970 p page needed Boethius 2004 p x Boethius 2007 Preface by H R James Dwyer 1976 p 5 13 Boethius 1999 p 24 n 1 Carroll Clark 1994 Rubin 2018 p 93 a b Watkins 2016 p 108 Farmer 2011 p 53 Calvi S Severino Boezio Martyrologium Romanum 2004 p 586 St John s Severinus Boethius Oct 23 Miller 1999 Lewis 1944 p 57 Sources Edit BooksAquinas Thomas Frederick Christian Bauerschmidt 2005 Holy Teaching Introducing the Summa Theologiae of St Thomas Aquinas Brazos Press ISBN 978 1 58743 035 0 Barrett Helen 1940 Boethius Some Aspects of His Times and Work Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1107415768 Boethius 1969 De Consolatione Philosophiae Translated by Watts V E Random House ISBN 9780140442083 Boethius 2007 1897 The Consolation of Philosophy of Boethius translated by James H R The University of Adelaide eBooks Adelaide archived from the original on 2007 04 27 Boethius Anicius Manlius Severinus 1867b De institutione musica libri quinque In Gottfried Friedlein ed Anicii Manlii Torquati Severini Boetii De institutione arithmetica libri duo De institutione musica libri quinque Accedit geometria quae fertur Boetii in Latin B G Teubner Leipzig pp 177 371 ISBN 9781429700719 Retrieved 2015 10 08 Boethius 1999 Consolation of Philosophy translated by Watts Victor Rev ed Penguin Random House Boethius 2000 The Consolation of Philosophy Translated by P G Walsh Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283883 0 Boethius Anicius Manlius Severinus 2001 Consolation of Philosophy Translated by Joel Relihan Norton Hackett Publishing Company Boethius Anicius Manlius Severinus 2004 The Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy Translated by H F Steward E K Rand Cambridge Project Gutenberg Boethius Anicius Manlius Severinus 1989 Palisca Claude V ed Fundamentals of Music translated by Bower Calvin M New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300039436 Bower Calvin M 2006 The transmission of ancient music theory into the Middle Ages in Christensen Thomas ed The Cambridge History of Western Music Theory Cambridge University Press pp 136 167 ISBN 978 0521686983 Bradshaw David 2009 The Opuscula sacra Boethius and theology in Marenbon John ed The Cambridge Companion to Boethius pp 105 128 doi 10 1017 CCOL9780521872669 006 ISBN 978 1139002493 Bury John Bagnel 1923 18 The reconquest of Italy I History of the Later Roman Empire Vol 2 Macmillan amp Co Cassiodorus 1992 Variae translated by Barnish S J B Liverpool Liverpool University Press Cooper W V 1902 Editorial Note Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius Anicius Manlius Severinus translated by W V Cooper London J M Dent and Company Procopius Vol 3 Translated by Dewing Henry Bronson London W Heinemann 1968 ISBN 978 0 674 99119 4 Dwyer Richard A 1976 Boethian Fictions Narratives in the Medieval French Versions of the Consolatio Philosophiae Cambridge MA Medieval Academy of America ISBN 978 0915651238 Farmer David Hugh 2011 The Oxford Dictionary of Saints 5th ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199596607 OCLC 726871260 Folkerts Menso ed 1970 Boethius Geometrie II Ein mathematisches Lehrbuch des Mittelalters Wiesbaden Franz Steiner Fried Johannes 2015 The Middle Ages 3rd ed Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 67405 562 9 Grout Donald 1980 A History of Western Music 3rd ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393951363 Heather Peter 2005 The Fall of the Roman Empire A New History of Rome and the Barbarians 1st ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195159547 Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Herman Arthur 2013 The Cave and the Light Random House ISBN 978 0553807301 Hodgkin Thomas 1880 Italy and Her Invaders Vol 1 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9780598984203 Hodgkin Thomas 1894 Theodoric the Goth G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 9780598453068 Hodgkin Thomas 1885 Italy and Her Invaders vol 3 Oxford University Press ISBN 9781344623001 Hodgkin Thomas 1896 Italy and Her Invaders Vol 4 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 9781296969004 Kaylor Noel Philips Philip 2012 A Companion to Boethius in the Middle Ages 1st ed Brill Publishers ISBN 978 9004183544 Lewis C S 1944 The Screwtape Letters Woking Unwin Brothers Retrieved 28 April 2019 Lindberg David ed 1978 Science in the Middle Ages University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226482330 Marcellinus Ammianus 1972 Ammianus Marcellinus The history Books XX XXVI Vol 3 Translated by J C Rolfe Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99348 8 Marenbon John 2003 Boethius Great Medieval Thinkers Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195134070 OCLC 186379876 Martyrologium Romanum 2nd ed Rome Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2004 p 586 ISBN 978 8820972103 Moorhead 2009 Boethius life and the world of late antique philosophy in Marenbon John ed The Cambridge Companion to Boethius Cambridge Cambridge University Press Paul Oscar 1872 Boetius und die griechische Harmonik in German Leipzig F E C Leuckart Richards Jeffrey 1 January 1979 The Popes and the Papacy in the Early Middle Ages 476 752 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 7100 0098 9 Rubenstein Richard E 2004 Aristotle s Children Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0 547 35097 4 Rubin Jonathan 2018 John of Antioch and the Perceptions of Language and Translation in Thirteenth Century Acre in John France ed Acre and Its Falls Studies in the History of a Crusader City Brill Smith William Wace Henry eds 1877 Dictionary of Christian Biography Literature Sects and Doctrines Vol 1 London John Murray ISBN 978 1295053339 Smith A D 2014 Anselm s Other Argument Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674725041 Speer Andreas 2011 The Division of Metaphysical Discourses Boethius Thomas Aquinas and Meister Eckhart in Emery Kent Friedman Russell Speer Andreas eds Philosophy and Theology in the Long Middle Ages A Tribute to Stephen F Brown Leiden Brill pp 91 116 ISBN 978 90 04 16942 5 Stump Eleonore 1978 Boethius s De topicis differentiis Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801489334 Stump Eleonore 1988 Boethius s In Ciceronis Topica Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801420177 Watkins Basil 2016 The Book of Saints St Augustine s Abbey of Ramsgate England 8th ed London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0567664150 OCLC 908373623 Journal articlesBeddie James Stuart 1930 The Ancient Classics in the Mediaeval Libraries Speculum 5 1 3 20 doi 10 2307 2846353 JSTOR 2846353 S2CID 163314872 Masi Michael 1979 The Liberal Arts and Gerardus Ruffus Commentary on the Boethian De Arithmetica The Sixteenth Century Journal 10 2 23 41 doi 10 2307 2539405 JSTOR 2539405 Schrader Dorothy V 1968 De Arithmetica Book I of Boethius Mathematics Teacher 61 615 28 doi 10 5951 MT 61 6 0615 WeblinksPope Benedict XVI 12 March 2008 Boethius and Cassiodorus archived from the original on 28 December 2008 retrieved 4 November 2009 Martirologio in Italian translated by Calvi Stefano archived from the original on 7 December 2010 Carroll Clark Susan 1994 The Wheel of Fortune The Middle Ages net Marenbon John 2016 Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy retrieved 23 October 2017 Miller Karl 1999 03 05 An American tragedy A lifetime of rejection broke John Kennedy Toole But his aged mother believed in his talent found a publisher for his novel and rescued his memory from oblivion www newstatesman com Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2018 06 09 O Connor J J Robertson E F May 2000 Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius MacTutor History of Mathematicas archive University of St Andrews retrieved 4 November 2009 Boethius The Online Library of Liberty retrieved 23 October 2017 Spade Paul Vincent 15 March 2016 Medieval Philosophy Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy retrieved 23 October 2017 Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome St John s Orthodox Church ColchesterFurther reading EditAttwater Donald Catherine Rachel John 1995 The Penguin Dictionary of Saints London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 051312 7 OCLC 34361179 Baird Forrest E Walter Kaufmann 2008 From Plato to Derrida Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 158591 1 Boethius 1973 1918 The Theological Tractates and The Consolation of Philosophy Translated by Stewart H F Rand E K Tester S J Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Chadwick Henry 1981 Boethius the Consolations of Music Logic Theology and Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 826549 8 OCLC 8533668 Colish Marcia L 2002 Medieval Foundations of the Western Intellectual Tradition 400 1400 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07852 7 OCLC 185694056 Magee John 1989 Boethius on Signification and Mind Leiden Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 09096 5 Marenbon John 2009 The Cambridge Companion to Boethius Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87266 9 Papahagi Adrian 2010 Boethiana medievalia a collection of studies on the early medieval fortune of Boethius consolation of philosophy Bucharest Zeta Books ISBN 978 973 1997 79 7 Suto Taki 2011 Boethius on Mind Grammar and Logic A Study of Boethius Commentaries on Peri Hermeneias Cambridge Brill ISBN 978 90 04 21418 7 Westfall Joseph 2008 Boethius Kierkegaard and The Consolation in Stewart Jon ed Kierkegaard and the Patristic and Medieval Traditions Ashgate Publishing pp 207 222 ISBN 978 0 7546 6391 1External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Boethius Works Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Boethius Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus Boethius Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article Anicius Manlius Torquatus Severinus Boethius Works by Boethius at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Boethius at Internet Archive Works by Boethius at LibriVox public domain audiobooks en De Trinitate On the Holy Trinity Boethius Erik Kenyon trans en Theological Tractates Christian Classics Ethereal Library A 10th century manuscript of Institutio Arithmetica is available online from Lund University Sweden The Geoffrey Freudlin 1885 edition of the Arithmetica from the Cornell Library Historical Mathematics Monographs Online Galleries History of Science Collections University of Oklahoma Libraries Archived 2020 11 13 at the Wayback Machine Codices Boethiani A Conspectus of Manuscripts of the Work of Boethius Works by Boethius at Perseus Digital Library MS 1083 30 Regiment of princes Consolation of philosophy at OPenn MS 484 15 Commentum super libro Porphyrii Isagoge De decim predicamentis at OPennOn Boethius life and works Edit Blessed Severinus Boethius at Patron Saints Index Blackwood Stephen The Meters of Boethius Rhythmic Therapy in the Consolation of Philosophy Blackwood Stephen 2015 TheConsolationof Boethius as Poetic Liturgy Oxford Early Christian Studies Oxford University Press p 398 ISBN 978 0 19 871831 4 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Boethius MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Phillips Philip Edward Boethius A Selected Bibliography for Students Boethius at The Online Library of Liberty On Boethius and Cassiodorus Pope Benedict XVIOn Boethius logic and philosophy Edit Marenbon John Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Philosophical Works of Boethius Editions and Translations Boethius Logic and Metaphysics An Annotated BibliographyPreceded byFlavius Inportunus alone Consul of the Roman Empire510 Succeeded byArcadius Placidus Magnus Felix Flavius Secundinus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boethius amp oldid 1152878174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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