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Platonic Academy

Coordinates: 37°59′33″N 23°42′29″E / 37.99250°N 23.70806°E / 37.99250; 23.70806

The Academy (Ancient Greek: Ἀκαδημία) was founded by Plato in c. 387 BC in Athens. Aristotle studied there for twenty years (367–347 BC) before founding his own school, the Lyceum. The Academy persisted throughout the Hellenistic period as a skeptical school, until coming to an end after the death of Philo of Larissa in 83 BC. The Platonic Academy was destroyed by the Roman dictator Sulla in 86 BC.[1]

Plato's Academy mosaic – from the Villa of T. Siminius Stephanus in Pompeii.

Site

 
Ancient road to the Academy.
 
Map of Ancient Athens. The Academy is north of Athens.

The Akademia was a school outside the city walls of ancient Athens. It was located in or beside a grove of olive trees dedicated to the goddess Athena,[2] which was on the site even before Cimon enclosed the precincts with a wall.[3] The archaic name for the site was Ἑκαδήμεια (Hekademia), which by classical times evolved into Ἀκαδημία (Akademia), which was explained, at least as early as the beginning of the 6th century BC, by linking it to "Akademos", a legendary Athenian hero.

The site of the Academy was sacred to Athena; it had sheltered her religious cult since the Bronze Age. The site was perhaps also associated with the twin hero-gods Castor and Polydeuces (the Dioscuri), since the hero Akademos associated with the site was credited with revealing to the brothers where the abductor Theseus had hidden their sister Helen. Out of respect for its long tradition and its association with the Dioscuri – who were patron gods of Sparta – the Spartan army would not ravage these original "groves of Academe" when they invaded Attica.[4] Their piety was not shared by the Roman Sulla, who had the sacred olive trees of Athena cut down in 86 BC to build siege engines.

Among the religious observances that took place at the Akademeia was a torchlit night race from altars within the city to Prometheus' altar in the Akademeia. The road to Akademeia was lined with the gravestones of Athenians, and funeral games also took place in the area as well as a Dionysiac procession from Athens to the Hekademeia and then back to the city.[5][6]

The site of the Academy[7] is located near Colonus, approximately 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) north of Athens' Dipylon gates.[8]

Modern times

The site was rediscovered in the 20th century, in the modern Akadimia Platonos neighbourhood; considerable excavation has been accomplished and visiting the site is free.[9][unreliable source?]

Visitors today can visit the archaeological site of the Academy located on either side of the Cratylus street in the area of Colonos and Plato's Academy (Postal Code GR 10442). On either side of the Cratylus street are important monuments, including the Sacred House Geometric Era, the Gymnasium (1st century BC – 1st century AD), the Proto-Helladic Vaulted House and the Peristyle Building (4th century BC), which is perhaps the only major building that belonged to the actual Academy of Plato.

History

The area to be Plato's Academy appears to be named after Academus, an Attic hero in Greek mythology. Academus was said to have saved Athens from attack by Sparta, revealing where Helen of Troy was hidden, when she had been kidnapped by King Theseus years before the incidents of the later Trojan War. Having thus spared Athens a war (or at least delayed it), Academus was seen as a savior of Athens. His land, six stadia (a total of about one kilometer, or a half mile, the exact length of a stadion varied) north of Athens, became revered even by neighboring city-states, escaping destruction during the many local wars.

This piece of land was in historic Greek times adorned with oriental plane and olive plantations[10] and was called Academia after its original owner.[11]

What was later to be known as Plato's school appears to have been part of Academia. Plato inherited the property at the age of thirty, with informal gatherings which included Theaetetus of Sunium, Archytas of Tarentum, Leodamas of Thasos, and Neoclides.[12] According to Debra Nails, Speusippus "joined the group in about 390 BC". She claims, "It is not until Eudoxus of Cnidos arrives in the mid-380s BC that Eudemus recognizes a formal Academy." There is no historical record of the exact time the school was officially founded, but modern scholars generally agree that the time was the mid-380s, probably sometime after 387 BC, when Plato is thought to have returned from his first visit to Italy and Sicily.[13] Originally, the meetings were held on Plato's property as often as they were at the nearby Academy gymnasium; this remained so throughout the fourth century.[14]

Though the academy was open to the public, the main participants were upper-class men.[15][16] It did not, at least during Plato's time, charge fees for membership.[17][15] Therefore, there was probably not at that time a "school" in the sense of a clear distinction between teachers and students, or even a formal curriculum.[18] There was, however, a distinction between senior and junior members.[19] Two women are known to have studied with Plato at the Academy, Axiothea of Phlius and Lasthenia of Mantinea.[20]

In at least Plato's time, the school did not have any particular doctrine to teach; rather, Plato (and probably other associates of his) posed problems to be studied and solved by the others.[21] There is evidence of lectures given, most notably Plato's lecture "On the Good"; but probably the use of dialectic was more common.[22] According to an unverifiable story, dated of some 700 years after the founding of the school, above the entrance to the Academy was inscribed the phrase "May no ignorant of Geometry enter here."[23]

Many have imagined that the Academic curriculum would have closely resembled the one canvassed in Plato's Republic.[24] Others, however, have argued that such a picture ignores the obvious peculiar arrangements of the ideal society envisioned in that dialogue.[25] The subjects of study almost certainly included mathematics as well as the philosophical topics with which the Platonic dialogues deal, but there is little reliable evidence.[26] There is some evidence for what today would be considered strictly scientific research: Simplicius reports that Plato had instructed the other members to discover the simplest explanation of the observable, irregular motion of heavenly bodies: "by hypothesizing what uniform and ordered motions is it possible to save the appearances relating to planetary motions."[27] (According to Simplicius, Plato's colleague Eudoxus was the first to have worked on this problem.)

Plato's Academy is often said to have been a school for would-be politicians in the ancient world, and to have had many illustrious alumni.[28] In a recent survey of the evidence, Malcolm Schofield, however, has argued that it is difficult to know to what extent the Academy was interested in practical (i.e., non-theoretical) politics since much of our evidence "reflects ancient polemic for or against Plato".[29]

The three Platonic eras

 
The School of Athens by Raphael (1509–1510), fresco at the Apostolic Palace, Vatican City.

Diogenes Laërtius divided the history of the Academy into three: the Old, the Middle, and the New. At the head of the Old he put Plato, at the head of the Middle Academy, Arcesilaus, and of the New, Lacydes. Sextus Empiricus enumerated five divisions of the followers of Plato. He made Plato founder of the first Academy; Arcesilaus of the second; Carneades of the third; Philo and Charmadas of the fourth; and Antiochus of the fifth. Cicero recognised only two Academies, the Old and New, and had the latter commence with Arcesilaus.[30]

Old Academy

Plato's immediate successors as "Scholarch" of the Academy were Speusippus (347–339 BC), Xenocrates (339–314 BC), Polemon (314–269 BC), and Crates (c. 269–266 BC). Other notable members of the Academy include Aristotle, Heraclides, Eudoxus, Philip of Opus, and Crantor.

Middle Academy

Around 266 BC Arcesilaus became Scholarch. Under Arcesilaus (c. 266–241 BC), the Academy strongly emphasized a version of Academic skepticism closely similar to Pyrrhonism.[31] Arcesilaus was followed by Lacydes of Cyrene (241–215 BC), Evander and Telecles (jointly) (205 – c. 165 BC), and Hegesinus (c. 160 BC).

New Academy

The New or Third Academy begins with Carneades, in 155 BC, the fourth Scholarch in succession from Arcesilaus. It was still largely skeptical, denying the possibility of knowing an absolute truth. Carneades was followed by Clitomachus (129 – c. 110 BC) and Philo of Larissa ("the last undisputed head of the Academy," c. 110–84 BC).[32][33] According to Jonathan Barnes, "It seems likely that Philo was the last Platonist geographically connected to the Academy."[34]

Around 90 BC, Philo's student Antiochus of Ascalon began teaching his own rival version of Platonism rejecting Skepticism and advocating Stoicism, which began a new phase known as Middle Platonism.

Destruction of the Academy

 
The archaeological site of Plato's academy.

When the First Mithridatic War began in 88 BC, Philo of Larissa left Athens and took refuge in Rome, where he seems to have remained until his death.[35] In 86 BC, Lucius Cornelius Sulla laid siege to Athens and conquered the city, causing much destruction. It was during the siege that he laid waste to the Academy, as Plutarch relates: "He laid hands upon the sacred groves and ravaged the Academy, which was the most wooded of the city's suburbs, as well as the Lyceum."[36]

The destruction of the Academy seems to have been so severe as to make the reconstruction and re-opening of the Academy impossible.[37] When Antiochus returned to Athens from Alexandria, c. 84 BC, he resumed his teaching but not in the Academy. Cicero, who studied under him in 79/8 BC, refers to Antiochus teaching in a gymnasium called Ptolemy. Cicero describes a visit to the site of the Academy one afternoon, which was "quiet and deserted at that hour of the day".[38]

Neoplatonic Academy

Despite the Platonic Academy being destroyed in the first century BC, the philosophers continued to teach Platonism in Athens during the Roman era, but it was not until the early 5th century (c. 410) that a revived academy (which had no connection with the original Academy) was established by some leading neoplatonists.[39] The origins of neoplatonist teaching in Athens are uncertain, but when Proclus arrived in Athens in the early 430s, he found Plutarch of Athens and his colleague Syrianus teaching in an Academy there. The neoplatonists in Athens called themselves "successors" (diadochoi, but of Plato) and presented themselves as an uninterrupted tradition reaching back to Plato, but there cannot have actually been any geographical, institutional, economic or personal continuity with the original academy.[40] The school seems to have been a private foundation, conducted in a large house which Proclus eventually inherited from Plutarch and Syrianus.[41] The heads of the Neoplatonic Academy were Plutarch of Athens, Syrianus, Proclus, Marinus, Isidore, and finally Damascius. The Neoplatonic Academy reached its apex under Proclus (died 485). Severianus studied under him.

The last Greek philosophers of the revived Neoplatonic Academy in the 6th century were drawn from various parts of the Hellenistic cultural world and suggest the broad syncretism of the common culture (see koine): Five of the seven Academy philosophers mentioned by Agathias were Syriac in their cultural origin: Hermias and Diogenes (both from Phoenicia), Isidorus of Gaza, Damascius of Syria, Iamblichus of Coele-Syria and perhaps even Simplicius of Cilicia.[40]

In 529 the emperor Justinian ended the funding of the revived Neoplatonic Academy. However, other philosophical schools continued in Constantinople, Antioch, and Alexandria, which were the centres of Justinian's empire.[1]

The last scholarch of the Neoplatonic Academy was Damascius (d. 540). According to Agathias, its remaining members looked for protection under the rule of Sassanid king Khosrau I in his capital at Ctesiphon, carrying with them precious scrolls of literature and philosophy, and to a lesser degree of science. After a peace treaty between the Persian and the Byzantine Empire in 532, their personal security (an early document in the history of freedom of religion) was guaranteed.

It has been speculated that the Neoplatonic Academy did not altogether disappear.[40][42] After his exile, Simplicius (and perhaps some others) may have travelled to Carrhae near Edessa. From there, the students of an Academy-in-exile could have survived into the 9th century, long enough to facilitate an Arabic revival of the neoplatonist commentary tradition in Baghdad,[42] beginning with the foundation of the House of Wisdom in 832. One of the major centers of learning in the intervening period (6th to 8th centuries) was the Academy of Gundishapur in Sassanid Persia.[clarification needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Lindberg, David C. (2007). The Beginnings of Western Science. University of Chicago Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0226482057.
  2. ^ Thucydides. ii:34.
  3. ^ Plutarch. Life of Cimon, xiii:7.
  4. ^ Plutarch. Life of Theseus, xxxii.
  5. ^ Pausanias. Description of Greece, i, 29.2, 30.2
  6. ^ Plutarch. Life of Solon, i, 7.
  7. ^ Herbert Ernest Cushma. (1910). A Beginner's History of Philosophy, Volume 1, p. 219. Houghton Mifflin.
  8. ^ Ainian, A.M. & Alexandridou, A. (2007). "The 'sacred house' of the Academy Revisited". Acts of an International Symposium in Memory of William D. E. Coulson. Volos, Greece: University of Thessaly.
  9. ^ greeceathensaegeaninfo.com Plato academy, at GreeceAthensAegeanInfo.com
  10. ^ Plutarch, Cimon 13
  11. ^ Schmitz, Leonhard (1867), "Academus", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston, p. 5
  12. ^ pp. 5–6, D. Nails, "The Life of Plato of Athens", in H. Benson (ed.), A Companion to Plato, Blackwell Publishing 2006.
  13. ^ pp. 19–20, W. K. C. Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 4, Cambridge University Press 1975; p. 1, R. Dancy, "Academy", in D. Zeyl (ed.), Encyclopedia of Classical Philosophy, Greenwood Press 1997. I. Mueller gives a much broader time frame – "...some time between the early 380s and the middle 360s..." – perhaps reflecting our real lack of evidence about the specific date (p. 170, "Mathematical Method & Philosophical Truth", in R. Kraut (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Plato, Cambridge University Press 1992).
  14. ^ D. Sedley, "Academy", in the Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed.; p. 4, J. Barnes, "Life and Work", in The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle, Cambridge University Press 1995; J. Barnes, "Academy", E. Craig (Ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Routledge 1998, accessed 13 Sept 2008, from http://www.rep.routledge.com/article/A001.
  15. ^ a b Plato's academy : its workings and its history. Kalligas, Paulos. Cambridge, UK. 2020. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-108-55466-4. OCLC 1120786946.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  16. ^ p. 31, J. Barnes, Aristotle: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press 2000.
  17. ^ p. 170, Mueller, "Mathematical Method & Philosophical Truth"; p. 249, D. Nails, The People of Plato, Hackett 2002.
  18. ^ pp. 170–171, Mueller, "Mathematical Method & Philosophical Truth"; p. 248, Nails, The People of Plato.
  19. ^ Barnes, "Academy".
  20. ^ "Women in the Academy".
  21. ^ p. 2, Dancy, "Academy".
  22. ^ p. 2, Dancy, "Academy"; p. 21, Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 4; p. 34–36, Barnes, Aristotle: A Very Short Introduction.
  23. ^ p. 67, V. Katz, History of Mathematics
  24. ^ p. 22, Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 4.
  25. ^ pp. 170–171, Mueller, "Mathematical Method & Philosophical Truth".
  26. ^ M. Schofield, "Plato", in E. Craig (Ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Routledge 1998/2002, retrieved 13 Sept 2008, from http://www.rep.routledge.com/article/A088 ; p. 32, Barnes, Aristotle: A Very Short Introduction.
  27. ^ Simplicius, Commentary on Aristotle's "On the Heavens" 488.7–24, quoted on p. 174, Mueller, "Mathematical Method & Philosophical Truth".
  28. ^ p. 23, Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 4; G. Field, "Academy", in the Oxford Classical Dictionary, 2nd ed.
  29. ^ p. 293, "Plato & Practical Politics", in Schofield & C. Rowe (eds.), Greek & Roman Political Thought, Cambridge University Press 2000.
  30. ^ Charles Anthon, (1855), A Classical Dictionary, p. 6
  31. ^ Sextus Empiricus, Outlines of Pyrrhonism, Book 1, Chapter 33, Section 232
  32. ^ Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd ed. (1996), s.v. "Philon of Larissa."
  33. ^ See the table in The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy (Cambridge University Press, 1999), pp. 53–54.
  34. ^ "Academy", E. Craig (Ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Routledge 1998, accessed 14 Sept 2008, from http://www.rep.routledge.com/article/A001.
  35. ^ Giovanni Reale, John R. Catan, 1990, A History of Ancient Philosophy: The Schools of the Imperial Age, p. 207. SUNY Press
  36. ^ Plutarch, Sulla 12; cf. Appian, Roman History xii, 5.30
  37. ^ Giovanni Reale, John R. Catan, 1990, A History of Ancient Philosophy: The Schools of the Imperial Age, p. 208. SUNY Press
  38. ^ Cicero, De Finibus, book 5
  39. ^ Alan Cameron, "The last days of the Academy at Athens," in Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society vol 195 (n.s. 15), 1969, pp. 7–29.
  40. ^ a b c Gerald Bechtle, Bryn Mawr Classical Review of Rainer Thiel, Simplikios und das Ende der neuplatonischen Schule in Athen. Stuttgart, 1999 (in English).
  41. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History, (1970), Volume XIV, p. 837. Cambridge University Press.
  42. ^ a b Richard Sorabji, (2005), The Philosophy of the Commentators, 200–600 AD: Psychology (with Ethics and Religion), p. 11. Cornell University Press

References

  • Baltes, M. 1993. "Plato's School, the Academy." Hermathena, (155): 5–26.
  • Brunt, P. A. 1993. "Plato's Academy and Politics." In Studies in Greek History and Thought. Oxford: Clarendon Press, Chapter 10, 282–342.
  • Cherniss, H. 1945. The Riddle of the Early Academy. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Dancy, R. M. 1991. Two Studies in the Early Academy. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
  • Dillon, J. M. 1979. "The Academy in the Middle Platonic Period." Dionysius, 3: 63–77.
  • Dillon, J. 2003. The Heirs of Plato. A Study of the Old Academy, 347–274 BC. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Dillon, John. 2009. “How Does the Soul Direct the Body, After All? Traces of a Dispute on Mind-Body Relations in the Old Academy.” In Body and Soul in Ancient Philosophy, edited by D. Frede and B. Reis, 349–356. Berlin: De Gruyter.
  • Dorandi, T. 1999. "Chronology: The Academy." In The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy. Edited by Keimpe Algra, Jonathan Barnes, Jaap Mansfeld, and Malcolm Schofield, 31–35. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Glucker, J. 1978. Antiochus and the Late Academy. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht.
  • Lynch, J. P. 1972. Aristotle's School: A Study of a Greek Educational Institution. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Murray, J. S. 2006. "Searching for Plato's Academy, 1929–1940." Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada, 6 (2): 219–256
  • Russell, J. H. 2012. "When Philosophers Rule: The Platonic Academy and Statesmanship." History of Political Thought, 33 (2): 209–230.
  • Wallach, J. R. 2002. "The Platonic Academy and Democracy." Polis (Exeter), 19 (1-2): 7–27
  • Watts, E. 2007. "Creating the Academy: Historical Discourse and the Shape of Community in the Old Academy". The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 127: 106–122.
  • Wycherley, R. 1961. "Peripatos: The Athenian Philosophical Scene – I". Greece & Rome, 8(2), 152–163.
  • Wycherley, R. 1962. "Peripatos: The Athenian Philosophical Scene – II". Greece & Rome, 9(1), 2–21.
  • Zhmud, Leonid. 2006. "Science in the Platonic Academy". In The Origin of the History of Science in Classical Antiquity. pp. 82–116. Berlin: De Gruyter.

External links

platonic, academy, this, article, about, academy, founded, plato, 15th, century, school, florence, florence, raphael, painting, school, athens, akademia, redirects, here, french, early, music, ensemble, akadêmia, coordinates, 99250, 70806, 99250, 70806, academ. This article is about the academy founded by Plato For the 15th century school in Florence see Platonic Academy Florence For the Raphael painting see The School of Athens Akademia redirects here For the French early music ensemble see Akademia Coordinates 37 59 33 N 23 42 29 E 37 99250 N 23 70806 E 37 99250 23 70806 The Academy Ancient Greek Ἀkadhmia was founded by Plato in c 387 BC in Athens Aristotle studied there for twenty years 367 347 BC before founding his own school the Lyceum The Academy persisted throughout the Hellenistic period as a skeptical school until coming to an end after the death of Philo of Larissa in 83 BC The Platonic Academy was destroyed by the Roman dictator Sulla in 86 BC 1 Plato s Academy mosaic from the Villa of T Siminius Stephanus in Pompeii Contents 1 Site 1 1 Modern times 2 History 2 1 The three Platonic eras 2 1 1 Old Academy 2 1 2 Middle Academy 2 1 3 New Academy 2 2 Destruction of the Academy 3 Neoplatonic Academy 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksSite Edit Ancient road to the Academy Map of Ancient Athens The Academy is north of Athens The Akademia was a school outside the city walls of ancient Athens It was located in or beside a grove of olive trees dedicated to the goddess Athena 2 which was on the site even before Cimon enclosed the precincts with a wall 3 The archaic name for the site was Ἑkadhmeia Hekademia which by classical times evolved into Ἀkadhmia Akademia which was explained at least as early as the beginning of the 6th century BC by linking it to Akademos a legendary Athenian hero The site of the Academy was sacred to Athena it had sheltered her religious cult since the Bronze Age The site was perhaps also associated with the twin hero gods Castor and Polydeuces the Dioscuri since the hero Akademos associated with the site was credited with revealing to the brothers where the abductor Theseus had hidden their sister Helen Out of respect for its long tradition and its association with the Dioscuri who were patron gods of Sparta the Spartan army would not ravage these original groves of Academe when they invaded Attica 4 Their piety was not shared by the Roman Sulla who had the sacred olive trees of Athena cut down in 86 BC to build siege engines Among the religious observances that took place at the Akademeia was a torchlit night race from altars within the city to Prometheus altar in the Akademeia The road to Akademeia was lined with the gravestones of Athenians and funeral games also took place in the area as well as a Dionysiac procession from Athens to the Hekademeia and then back to the city 5 6 The site of the Academy 7 is located near Colonus approximately 1 5 kilometres 0 93 mi north of Athens Dipylon gates 8 Modern times Edit The site was rediscovered in the 20th century in the modern Akadimia Platonos neighbourhood considerable excavation has been accomplished and visiting the site is free 9 unreliable source Visitors today can visit the archaeological site of the Academy located on either side of the Cratylus street in the area of Colonos and Plato s Academy Postal Code GR 10442 On either side of the Cratylus street are important monuments including the Sacred House Geometric Era the Gymnasium 1st century BC 1st century AD the Proto Helladic Vaulted House and the Peristyle Building 4th century BC which is perhaps the only major building that belonged to the actual Academy of Plato History EditThe area to be Plato s Academy appears to be named after Academus an Attic hero in Greek mythology Academus was said to have saved Athens from attack by Sparta revealing where Helen of Troy was hidden when she had been kidnapped by King Theseus years before the incidents of the later Trojan War Having thus spared Athens a war or at least delayed it Academus was seen as a savior of Athens His land six stadia a total of about one kilometer or a half mile the exact length of a stadion varied north of Athens became revered even by neighboring city states escaping destruction during the many local wars This piece of land was in historic Greek times adorned with oriental plane and olive plantations 10 and was called Academia after its original owner 11 What was later to be known as Plato s school appears to have been part of Academia Plato inherited the property at the age of thirty with informal gatherings which included Theaetetus of Sunium Archytas of Tarentum Leodamas of Thasos and Neoclides 12 According to Debra Nails Speusippus joined the group in about 390 BC She claims It is not until Eudoxus of Cnidos arrives in the mid 380s BC that Eudemus recognizes a formal Academy There is no historical record of the exact time the school was officially founded but modern scholars generally agree that the time was the mid 380s probably sometime after 387 BC when Plato is thought to have returned from his first visit to Italy and Sicily 13 Originally the meetings were held on Plato s property as often as they were at the nearby Academy gymnasium this remained so throughout the fourth century 14 Though the academy was open to the public the main participants were upper class men 15 16 It did not at least during Plato s time charge fees for membership 17 15 Therefore there was probably not at that time a school in the sense of a clear distinction between teachers and students or even a formal curriculum 18 There was however a distinction between senior and junior members 19 Two women are known to have studied with Plato at the Academy Axiothea of Phlius and Lasthenia of Mantinea 20 In at least Plato s time the school did not have any particular doctrine to teach rather Plato and probably other associates of his posed problems to be studied and solved by the others 21 There is evidence of lectures given most notably Plato s lecture On the Good but probably the use of dialectic was more common 22 According to an unverifiable story dated of some 700 years after the founding of the school above the entrance to the Academy was inscribed the phrase May no ignorant of Geometry enter here 23 Many have imagined that the Academic curriculum would have closely resembled the one canvassed in Plato s Republic 24 Others however have argued that such a picture ignores the obvious peculiar arrangements of the ideal society envisioned in that dialogue 25 The subjects of study almost certainly included mathematics as well as the philosophical topics with which the Platonic dialogues deal but there is little reliable evidence 26 There is some evidence for what today would be considered strictly scientific research Simplicius reports that Plato had instructed the other members to discover the simplest explanation of the observable irregular motion of heavenly bodies by hypothesizing what uniform and ordered motions is it possible to save the appearances relating to planetary motions 27 According to Simplicius Plato s colleague Eudoxus was the first to have worked on this problem Plato s Academy is often said to have been a school for would be politicians in the ancient world and to have had many illustrious alumni 28 In a recent survey of the evidence Malcolm Schofield however has argued that it is difficult to know to what extent the Academy was interested in practical i e non theoretical politics since much of our evidence reflects ancient polemic for or against Plato 29 The three Platonic eras Edit The School of Athens by Raphael 1509 1510 fresco at the Apostolic Palace Vatican City Diogenes Laertius divided the history of the Academy into three the Old the Middle and the New At the head of the Old he put Plato at the head of the Middle Academy Arcesilaus and of the New Lacydes Sextus Empiricus enumerated five divisions of the followers of Plato He made Plato founder of the first Academy Arcesilaus of the second Carneades of the third Philo and Charmadas of the fourth and Antiochus of the fifth Cicero recognised only two Academies the Old and New and had the latter commence with Arcesilaus 30 Old Academy Edit Old Academy redirects here For other uses see Old Academy disambiguation Plato s immediate successors as Scholarch of the Academy were Speusippus 347 339 BC Xenocrates 339 314 BC Polemon 314 269 BC and Crates c 269 266 BC Other notable members of the Academy include Aristotle Heraclides Eudoxus Philip of Opus and Crantor Middle Academy Edit Around 266 BC Arcesilaus became Scholarch Under Arcesilaus c 266 241 BC the Academy strongly emphasized a version of Academic skepticism closely similar to Pyrrhonism 31 Arcesilaus was followed by Lacydes of Cyrene 241 215 BC Evander and Telecles jointly 205 c 165 BC and Hegesinus c 160 BC New Academy Edit The New or Third Academy begins with Carneades in 155 BC the fourth Scholarch in succession from Arcesilaus It was still largely skeptical denying the possibility of knowing an absolute truth Carneades was followed by Clitomachus 129 c 110 BC and Philo of Larissa the last undisputed head of the Academy c 110 84 BC 32 33 According to Jonathan Barnes It seems likely that Philo was the last Platonist geographically connected to the Academy 34 Around 90 BC Philo s student Antiochus of Ascalon began teaching his own rival version of Platonism rejecting Skepticism and advocating Stoicism which began a new phase known as Middle Platonism Destruction of the Academy Edit The archaeological site of Plato s academy When the First Mithridatic War began in 88 BC Philo of Larissa left Athens and took refuge in Rome where he seems to have remained until his death 35 In 86 BC Lucius Cornelius Sulla laid siege to Athens and conquered the city causing much destruction It was during the siege that he laid waste to the Academy as Plutarch relates He laid hands upon the sacred groves and ravaged the Academy which was the most wooded of the city s suburbs as well as the Lyceum 36 The destruction of the Academy seems to have been so severe as to make the reconstruction and re opening of the Academy impossible 37 When Antiochus returned to Athens from Alexandria c 84 BC he resumed his teaching but not in the Academy Cicero who studied under him in 79 8 BC refers to Antiochus teaching in a gymnasium called Ptolemy Cicero describes a visit to the site of the Academy one afternoon which was quiet and deserted at that hour of the day 38 Neoplatonic Academy EditFurther information Decline of Greco Roman polytheism Despite the Platonic Academy being destroyed in the first century BC the philosophers continued to teach Platonism in Athens during the Roman era but it was not until the early 5th century c 410 that a revived academy which had no connection with the original Academy was established by some leading neoplatonists 39 The origins of neoplatonist teaching in Athens are uncertain but when Proclus arrived in Athens in the early 430s he found Plutarch of Athens and his colleague Syrianus teaching in an Academy there The neoplatonists in Athens called themselves successors diadochoi but of Plato and presented themselves as an uninterrupted tradition reaching back to Plato but there cannot have actually been any geographical institutional economic or personal continuity with the original academy 40 The school seems to have been a private foundation conducted in a large house which Proclus eventually inherited from Plutarch and Syrianus 41 The heads of the Neoplatonic Academy were Plutarch of Athens Syrianus Proclus Marinus Isidore and finally Damascius The Neoplatonic Academy reached its apex under Proclus died 485 Severianus studied under him The last Greek philosophers of the revived Neoplatonic Academy in the 6th century were drawn from various parts of the Hellenistic cultural world and suggest the broad syncretism of the common culture see koine Five of the seven Academy philosophers mentioned by Agathias were Syriac in their cultural origin Hermias and Diogenes both from Phoenicia Isidorus of Gaza Damascius of Syria Iamblichus of Coele Syria and perhaps even Simplicius of Cilicia 40 In 529 the emperor Justinian ended the funding of the revived Neoplatonic Academy However other philosophical schools continued in Constantinople Antioch and Alexandria which were the centres of Justinian s empire 1 The last scholarch of the Neoplatonic Academy was Damascius d 540 According to Agathias its remaining members looked for protection under the rule of Sassanid king Khosrau I in his capital at Ctesiphon carrying with them precious scrolls of literature and philosophy and to a lesser degree of science After a peace treaty between the Persian and the Byzantine Empire in 532 their personal security an early document in the history of freedom of religion was guaranteed It has been speculated that the Neoplatonic Academy did not altogether disappear 40 42 After his exile Simplicius and perhaps some others may have travelled to Carrhae near Edessa From there the students of an Academy in exile could have survived into the 9th century long enough to facilitate an Arabic revival of the neoplatonist commentary tradition in Baghdad 42 beginning with the foundation of the House of Wisdom in 832 One of the major centers of learning in the intervening period 6th to 8th centuries was the Academy of Gundishapur in Sassanid Persia clarification needed See also EditAcademy of Athens modern Agora Cyrenaics Epicureanism Hellenistic philosophy Lyceum classical Peripatetic school Plato s Academy mosaic Platonic Academy Florence Platonism StoicismNotes Edit a b Lindberg David C 2007 The Beginnings of Western Science University of Chicago Press p 70 ISBN 978 0226482057 Thucydides ii 34 Plutarch Life of Cimon xiii 7 Plutarch Life of Theseus xxxii Pausanias Description of Greece i 29 2 30 2 Plutarch Life of Solon i 7 Herbert Ernest Cushma 1910 A Beginner s History of Philosophy Volume 1 p 219 Houghton Mifflin Ainian A M amp Alexandridou A 2007 The sacred house of the Academy Revisited Acts of an International Symposium in Memory of William D E Coulson Volos Greece University of Thessaly greeceathensaegeaninfo com Plato academy at GreeceAthensAegeanInfo com Plutarch Cimon 13 Schmitz Leonhard 1867 Academus in Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology vol 1 Boston p 5 pp 5 6 D Nails The Life of Plato of Athens in H Benson ed A Companion to Plato Blackwell Publishing 2006 pp 19 20 W K C Guthrie A History of Greek Philosophy vol 4 Cambridge University Press 1975 p 1 R Dancy Academy in D Zeyl ed Encyclopedia of Classical Philosophy Greenwood Press 1997 I Mueller gives a much broader time frame some time between the early 380s and the middle 360s perhaps reflecting our real lack of evidence about the specific date p 170 Mathematical Method amp Philosophical Truth in R Kraut ed The Cambridge Companion to Plato Cambridge University Press 1992 D Sedley Academy in the Oxford Classical Dictionary 3rd ed p 4 J Barnes Life and Work in The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle Cambridge University Press 1995 J Barnes Academy E Craig Ed Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge 1998 accessed 13 Sept 2008 from http www rep routledge com article A001 a b Plato s academy its workings and its history Kalligas Paulos Cambridge UK 2020 p 76 ISBN 978 1 108 55466 4 OCLC 1120786946 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link p 31 J Barnes Aristotle A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press 2000 p 170 Mueller Mathematical Method amp Philosophical Truth p 249 D Nails The People of Plato Hackett 2002 pp 170 171 Mueller Mathematical Method amp Philosophical Truth p 248 Nails The People of Plato Barnes Academy Women in the Academy p 2 Dancy Academy p 2 Dancy Academy p 21 Guthrie A History of Greek Philosophy vol 4 p 34 36 Barnes Aristotle A Very Short Introduction p 67 V Katz History of Mathematics p 22 Guthrie A History of Greek Philosophy vol 4 pp 170 171 Mueller Mathematical Method amp Philosophical Truth M Schofield Plato in E Craig Ed Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge 1998 2002 retrieved 13 Sept 2008 from http www rep routledge com article A088 p 32 Barnes Aristotle A Very Short Introduction Simplicius Commentary on Aristotle s On the Heavens 488 7 24 quoted on p 174 Mueller Mathematical Method amp Philosophical Truth p 23 Guthrie A History of Greek Philosophy vol 4 G Field Academy in the Oxford Classical Dictionary 2nd ed p 293 Plato amp Practical Politics in Schofield amp C Rowe eds Greek amp Roman Political Thought Cambridge University Press 2000 Charles Anthon 1855 A Classical Dictionary p 6 Sextus Empiricus Outlines of Pyrrhonism Book 1 Chapter 33 Section 232 Oxford Classical Dictionary 3rd ed 1996 s v Philon of Larissa See the table in The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy Cambridge University Press 1999 pp 53 54 Academy E Craig Ed Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge 1998 accessed 14 Sept 2008 from http www rep routledge com article A001 Giovanni Reale John R Catan 1990 A History of Ancient Philosophy The Schools of the Imperial Age p 207 SUNY Press Plutarch Sulla 12 cf Appian Roman History xii 5 30 Giovanni Reale John R Catan 1990 A History of Ancient Philosophy The Schools of the Imperial Age p 208 SUNY Press Cicero De Finibus book 5 Alan Cameron The last days of the Academy at Athens in Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society vol 195 n s 15 1969 pp 7 29 a b c Gerald Bechtle Bryn Mawr Classical Review of Rainer Thiel Simplikios und das Ende der neuplatonischen Schule in Athen Stuttgart 1999 in English The Cambridge Ancient History 1970 Volume XIV p 837 Cambridge University Press a b Richard Sorabji 2005 The Philosophy of the Commentators 200 600 AD Psychology with Ethics and Religion p 11 Cornell University PressReferences EditBaltes M 1993 Plato s School the Academy Hermathena 155 5 26 Brunt P A 1993 Plato s Academy and Politics In Studies in Greek History and Thought Oxford Clarendon Press Chapter 10 282 342 Cherniss H 1945 The Riddle of the Early Academy Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press Dancy R M 1991 Two Studies in the Early Academy Albany NY State University of New York Press Dillon J M 1979 The Academy in the Middle Platonic Period Dionysius 3 63 77 Dillon J 2003 The Heirs of Plato A Study of the Old Academy 347 274 BC Oxford Clarendon Press Dillon John 2009 How Does the Soul Direct the Body After All Traces of a Dispute on Mind Body Relations in the Old Academy In Body and Soul in Ancient Philosophy edited by D Frede and B Reis 349 356 Berlin De Gruyter Dorandi T 1999 Chronology The Academy In The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy Edited by Keimpe Algra Jonathan Barnes Jaap Mansfeld and Malcolm Schofield 31 35 Cambridge UK Cambridge Univ Press Glucker J 1978 Antiochus and the Late Academy Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Lynch J P 1972 Aristotle s School A Study of a Greek Educational Institution Berkeley University of California Press Murray J S 2006 Searching for Plato s Academy 1929 1940 Mouseion Journal of the Classical Association of Canada 6 2 219 256 Russell J H 2012 When Philosophers Rule The Platonic Academy and Statesmanship History of Political Thought 33 2 209 230 Wallach J R 2002 The Platonic Academy and Democracy Polis Exeter 19 1 2 7 27 Watts E 2007 Creating the Academy Historical Discourse and the Shape of Community in the Old Academy The Journal of Hellenic Studies 127 106 122 Wycherley R 1961 Peripatos The Athenian Philosophical Scene I Greece amp Rome 8 2 152 163 Wycherley R 1962 Peripatos The Athenian Philosophical Scene II Greece amp Rome 9 1 2 21 Zhmud Leonid 2006 Science in the Platonic Academy In The Origin of the History of Science in Classical Antiquity pp 82 116 Berlin De Gruyter External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Platonic Academy Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Platonic Academy Academy Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 The Academy entry in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Directions to the archaeological site of Plato s Academy other useful information and some photos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Platonic Academy amp oldid 1130827395, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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