Chapter XII
-
Whoever this (unidentified) Glaucus is, he has nothing to do with it. the Glaucus of Anthedon mentioned in the epigraph, a fisherman who on eating a certain plant was overtaken by a transmutation and threw himself into the sea where he became a marine god.
-
Thus far, this is Anaximander and his Principle of Sufficient Reason. But we cannot draw further conclusions: Socrates is, here, deep in his own myth already, and far beyond Ionian physics which, in his opinion, ought not to be taken seriously.
-
R. S. Bluck trans. (1955), pp. 128-39.
-
Quaestiones Platonicae 5.1, 1003C (R. Brown trans.), in Plutarch’s Morals, ed. W. W. Goodwin (1870), vol. 5, p. 433.
-
See F. Buffiere, Les Mythes d’Homère et la Pensée Grecque (1956), p. 444.
-
J. E. Harrison, Themis (1960), pp. 456f.
-
P. B. Onians: The Origins of European Thought about the Body, the Mind, the Soul, the World, Time, and Fate (2d ed. 1953), pp. 249ff.
-
E. H. Berger, Mythische Kosmographie der Griechen (1904), pp. 1ff.
-
83.7 (ed. Quandt, p. 55): terma philion gaiēs, archē polou.