Casius Longinus’ Ars Rhetorica and the commentary to the Timaeus. Testimonies of Plato’s reception in Late Antiquity
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14195/1984-249X_19_7Keywords:
Ars Rhetorica, Cassius Longinus, Late Antiquity, Rhetoric, Plato, Timaeus, Rhetoric periodAbstract
The Ars Rhetorica of Cassius Longinus is not a work that has enjoyed particular popularity in studies of ancient rhetoricor on the philosophical activity in Late Antiquity. This is due, in part, to the shadow casted over this work by the anonymous treatise On Sublimity which was attributed to Cassius Longi-nus for a long time; in part, to the fact that this treatise and the rest of Cassius Longinus’ work is preserved in fragments; in part, because his most famous disciple, Porphyry, left his tute-lage to follow the teachings of the most reputed Plotinus, who considered Cassius Longinus a philologist, but not a philoso-pher. Regardless of the reasons that contributed to eclipse the work of Cassius Longinus, namely, the unphilosophical spirit Plotinus saw in him or the poor quality of the sources we have for his study; the work of this author carries valuable informa-tion for the reconstruction of intellectual activity of the time. My aim is to examine one of the cases where Cassius Longi-nus can be an exceptional witness of the scholarly and philo-sophical activity which constitutes the Platonic tradition in Late Antiquity. At the end of the Ars Rhetorica’s chapter devoted to utterance (περὶλέξεως) Cassius Longinus exposes his theory of rhetoric period. The fragments of the commentary that Cassius Longinus made on Plato’s Timaeus preserved in the commen-tary of Proclus sheds light on how Cassius Longinus received Plato’s dialogue and applied his exegetical work from a stylistic point of view (in accordance with his work in rhetoric), but also from a philological one. I want to explore, to the extent that the fragmentary material allows me, the link between logic and aesthetics emphasized in the Ars Rhetorica in the light of Cas-sius Longinus’ own exegetical work on Plato. Thus, it may be possible to reconcile the philological and philosophical work of our author while shedding light on one of the chapters of the Platonic tradition in Late Antiquity.
Downloads
References
BALDWIN, C. (1959). Ancient Rhetoric and Po-etry. Glouchester (Mss.), Peter Smith.
BERNABÉ, A (2014) [trad.]. Aristóteles: Retórica. Madrid, Alianza.
BOERI, M.; SALLES, R. (2014). Los filósofos es-toicos: ontología, lógica, física y ética (eds., trads. and coms). Sankt-Agustin, Academia Verlag.
BURNET, J. (1968) (ed.). Platonis opera, vol. 4. Oxford, Clarendon Press.
_____ (1967). Platonis opera, vol. 2. Oxford, Clarendon Press.
DIEHL, E. (1965) (ed.). Procli Diadochi in Platonis Timaeum commentaria. Leipzig, Teubner.DOREEN, I. (1994). “Period and Colon: Theory eds. and Example in Demetrius and Longinus”. In: FORTENBAUGH, W.W.; MIRHADY, D.C. (eds.). Peripatetic Rhetoric after Aristotle, New Brunswick, London: Transaction Publishers, p. 36-53.
DUFOUR, M.; WARTELLE, A. (2011) [eds. and trads.]. Aristote: Rhétorique III. Paris, Les Belles Lettres. DURÁN, Á.; LISI, F. (1992) [trads.]. Platón: Diálo-gos VI (Filebo, Timeo, Critias). Madrid, Gredos.
FORTENBAUGH, W.; MIRHADY, D. (1994) (eds.). Peripatetic Rhetoric after Aristotle. New Brusnschwick, Rutgers University in Classical Hu-manities, vol. 6.
FOWLER, R.L. (1982). Aristotle on the Period (Rhet. 3.9). The Classical Quarterly, vol. 32, no. 1, p. 89-99. FREDE, M. (1990). “La teoría de las Ideas de Long-ino”. Methexis, vol. III, pp. 85-95.
GARCÍA YEBRA, V. (1988) [trad.]. Aristóteles: Poética (versión bilingüe). Madrid, Gredos.GIANGRANDE, J. (1956) (ed.). Eunapii vitae so-phistarum”. Rome, Polygraphica.
GARCÍA GUAL, C.; MARTÍNEZ, M.; LLEDÓ, E. (1986) [trads.]. Platón Diálogos iii : Fedón, Banquete, Fedro. Madrid, Gredos.
HENRY, P.; SCHWYZER, H.–R. (1951) (ed.). Ploti-ni opera, vol. 1. Leiden, Brill.
KENNEDY, G. (1994). A New History of Classical Rhetoric. Princeton, The University Press.
PAGE, T.; CAPS, E.; ROUSE, W., POST, L.; WARM-INGTON, E. (1980) (eds.). Aristotle, The Poetics; «Longinus», On the Sublime; Demetrius, On Style – Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge – London, Harvard University Press, Heinemann.
PATILLON, M.; BRISSON, L. (2002) (eds.). Longin: Fragments – Art Rhétorique / Rufus: Art Rhétorique. Paris, Les Belles Lettres.RACIONERO, Q. (1990) [trad.]. Aristóteles: Retóri-ca. Madrid, Gredos.ROSS, D. (1964) (ed.). Aristotelis ars rhetorica. Ox-ford, Clarendon Press.
SPENGEL, L. (1966) (ed.). Rhetores Graeci, vol. 1. Leipzig, Teubner.
TARRANT, H. (2006) [trad. and comm.]. Proclus Com-mentary on Plato’s Timaeus I: Proclus on the Socratic State and Atlantis. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
VAUCHER, L. (1854). Études critiques sur le Traité du sublime et sur les écrits de Longin. Genève-Paris, Joël Cherbuliez.
WACHSMUTH, C.; HENSE, O. (1958) (eds.). Ioannis Stobaei anthologium. Berlin, Weidmann.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Liliana Carolina Sánchez Castro

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Given the public access policy of the journal, the use of the published texts is free, with the obligation of recognizing the original authorship and the first publication in this journal. The authors of the published contributions are entirely and exclusively responsible for their contents.
1. The authors authorize the publication of the article in this journal.
2. The authors guarantee that the contribution is original, and take full responsibility for its content in case of impugnation by third parties.
3. The authors guarantee that the contribution is not under evaluation in another journal.
4. The authors keep the copyright and convey to the journal the right of first publication, the work being licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License-BY.
5. The authors are allowed and stimulated to publicize and distribute their work on-line after the publication in the journal.
6. The authors of the approved works authorize the journal to distribute their content, after publication, for reproduction in content indexes, virtual libraries and similars.
7. The editors reserve the right to make adjustments to the text and to adequate the article to the editorial rules of the journal.








