M. Tuominen
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引用次数: 2

摘要

亚历山大的约翰或文法家约翰,又称约翰·菲洛波诺斯(约490 - 570年代),是6世纪亚历山大的一位哲学家和神学家。他首先写的是语言方面的文章,比如那些仅凭口音就能改变意思的单词。他跟着赫米亚斯的儿子、普罗克劳斯的学生阿蒙纽斯(411-485)学习哲学。“热爱辛劳”的绰号可能是指菲洛波诺斯的勤奋,但这个绰号也用于基督教行会或兄弟会的成员。虽然菲洛波诺斯对语言的早期研究在哲学上被认为是不重要的,但他的评论和批评论文显示出独立性和批判的敏锐,他的一些核心贡献甚至被认为是伽利略和笛卡尔观点的先驱者。菲洛波诺斯的哲学生涯始于对亚里士多德的评论,他经常根据他的老师阿蒙纽斯的演讲进行写作。然而,他变得越来越独立,与亚里士多德以及阿蒙纽斯和普罗克罗斯的新柏拉图主义渐行渐远。菲洛波诺斯在哲学上最著名的创新包括:论证宇宙从无开始的创造,将基本物质作为三维延伸的新分析,通过外加力解释抛射运动(后来被称为推动力),以及拒绝将第五元素作为天体的物质,这使他能够使用一个统一的模型来解释天体和地下的运动。作为一名基督教神学家,菲洛波诺斯理解三位一体论争论的核心概念与哲学传统是一致的。他将这种分析与他所谓的“特殊本体论”结合起来,根据他的“特殊本体论”,普遍的本性是抽象的,只存在于思想中,以及一性论的解释,即基督只有一个本性,是人性和神性的综合体。虽然菲洛波努斯设法对三位一体的问题提出了一致的解决方案,但他的观点被解释为三神论,即将三位神引入三位一体,并在君士坦丁堡(680-681)被谴责为异端。虽然在他死后的几个世纪里,这个诅咒可能降低了菲洛波诺斯在西方基督教世界的影响力,但他关于创造和永恒的观点对伊斯兰世界产生了影响,许多文艺复兴时期的思想家都认识到他对他们的影响。总的来说,也许有点讽刺的是,菲洛波诺斯被誉为现代自然科学的先驱,而他的核心创新与基督教教义是一致的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Philoponus
John of Alexandria or John the Grammarian, known as John Philoponus (c. 490s–570s), was a philosopher and theologian in 6th-century Alexandria. He first wrote on language, for example on words the meaning of which changes by accent alone, and studied philosophy with Ammonius, son of Hermias and a student of Proclus (411–485). The nickname “lover of toil” might refer to Philoponus’ industriousness, but the epithet was also used of the members of a Christian guild or brotherhood. While Philoponus’ early studies on language are considered as philosophically unimportant, his commentaries and critical treatises show independence and critical acumen, and some of his central contributions have even been taken to anticipate Galileo’s and Descartes’s views. Philoponus started his philosophical career as a commentator on Aristotle, often writing on the basis of the lectures of his teacher Ammonius. However, he grew increasingly independent and took distance from Aristotle and from the Neoplatonism of Ammonius and Proclus. Philoponus’ most famous innovations in philosophy include the arguments for the creation of the universe ex nihilo, the new analysis of prime matter as three-dimensional extension, the explanation of projectile motion by impressed force (later to be called impetus), and the rejection of the fifth element as the matter of celestial bodies that allowed him to use a unified model for explaining both celestial and sublunary motion. As a Christian theologian, Philoponus understood the central notions of the Trinitarian controversy in agreement with the philosophical tradition. He combined this analysis with what has been called his “particularist ontology” according to which universal natures are abstractions and exist only in thought and the Monophysite interpretation of Christ having one nature that is a composite of humanity and divinity. Although Philoponus managed to produce a consistent solution to the problem of the Trinity, his view was interpreted as tritheistic, i.e., as introducing three Godheads to the Trinity, and condemned as heretic in Constantinople (680–681). While the anathema probably decreased Philoponus’ impact in the Christian West in the centuries after his death, his arguments about creation and eternity were influential in the Islamic world, and many Renaissance thinkers recognized his effect on them. In general, it is perhaps somewhat ironic that Philoponus is celebrated as a forerunner of modern natural science while his central innovations are in agreement with Christian doctrine.
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