Christina Hoenig
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摘要

卢修斯·阿普雷乌斯(公元125年-公元170年后),北非城市马多拉人,公元2世纪罗马哲学作家。阿普列夫斯的身份通过他对他的喜剧小说《变形记》(也许是他最著名的作品)的叙述者的臭名昭著的描述而变得有趣起来,他把叙述者描述为Chaeronea的塞克斯图斯的亲戚,而塞克斯图斯又是中柏拉图主义者普鲁塔克的亲戚。这是可能的,这一参考表明仅仅是一种知识从属与塞克斯图斯和柏拉图学派。从阿普列乌斯的《佛罗里达》(一篇流行演说集)中,我们了解到,他在雅典逗留了几年,大概是在中柏拉图派金牛座的思想附近度过的,他进行了哲学研究。因此,阿普莱乌斯通常被归为中柏拉图主义者(参见牛津参考书目中单独的文章“中柏拉图主义”,以获得一般性讨论和各种希腊和罗马代表),这个标签已经变得相当有问题,因为它似乎简化了柏拉图主义的知识潮流,已经显示出显著的变化。替代术语,如“后希腊化”哲学,已经被提出,但术语“中柏拉图主义”仍然被广泛使用,然而,警告,它应该指的是一个按时间顺序排列的时间框架,大约从公元前1世纪到普罗提诺,而不是一个同质的哲学观。在阿普留斯自己的哲学产出中,最引人注目的元素是相当复杂的鬼神学,旨在确保神的天意关怀渗透整个宇宙。他的作品的其他特征可以被认为是他那个时代的商标属性:倾向于将柏拉图的思想融入一个易于理解的、手册式的系统,而不是实践批判性的探究或注释;哲学教义的宗教解释,毫无疑问,他与各种神秘邪教与他同时代的密切联系;强调修辞是传达哲学智慧的合适手段,这一特点符合《第二诡辩》的文学和文化品味。不愿接受阿普留斯作为哲学家的地位是一种现代现象。他在世时就因其柏拉图主义哲学家的角色而受到高度尊重,圣奥古斯丁后来在他的《上帝之城》第八卷中反对异教徒时,将他列为柏拉图最高尚的门徒之一——当然,这一描述之后,他对阿普留斯关于恶魔的学说进行了毁灭性的批评。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Apuleius's Platonism
Lucius Apuleius (c. 125–after 170 ce), of the North African city Madaura, was a Roman philosophical writer of the 2nd century ce. Apuleius’s identity is thrown into an interesting light by his notorious description of the narrator of his comic novel Metamorphoses, perhaps his most famous work, as a relative of Sextus of Chaeronea, who, in turn, was a relation of the Middle Platonist Plutarch. It is possible that this reference indicates merely an intellectual affiliation with Sextus and the Platonic school. From Apuleius’s Florida, a collection of epideictic orations, we learn that he undertook philosophical studies, broadly construed, during a sojourn in Athens that lasted several years and that may have been spent in the intellectual vicinity of the Middle Platonist Calvenus Taurus. Apuleius is thus commonly grouped with the Middle Platonists (see also the separate Oxford Bibliographies article “Middle Platonism” for a general discussion and various Greek and Roman representatives), a label that has become rather problematic, since it appears to streamline intellectual currents of Platonism that have been shown to vary significantly. Alternative terms, such as “post-Hellenistic” philosophy, have been suggested, but the term “Middle Platonism” is still widely used, with the caveat, however, that it ought to refer to a chronological timeframe, roughly the 1st century bce until Plotinus, rather than a homogenous philosophical outlook. The most conspicuous element in Apuleius’s own philosophical output is a rather complex demonology, designed to ensure that divine providential care permeates the entire cosmos. Other features of his writings are what may be regarded as trademark attributes of his time: a tendency to fit Plato’s thought into a digestible, handbook-style system, instead of practicing critical inquiry or exegesis; a religious interpretation of philosophical doctrine, no doubt informed by his close affiliation with various mystery cults contemporary with him; and an emphasis on rhetoric as a suitable means of conveying philosophical wisdom, a feature in line with the literary and cultural taste of the Second Sophistic. Reluctance to accept Apuleius’s standing as a philosopher is a modern phenomenon. He was held in high esteem for his role as a Platonic philosopher already during his lifetime, and St. Augustine would later single him out, in Book 8 of his City of God against the Pagans, as one of the noblest disciples of Plato—a description that is then followed, it is true, by a devastating critique of Apuleius’s doctrine on demons.
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