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HJ. Blumenthal. Aristotle and Neoplatonism in Late Antiquity: Interpretations of the De Anima." Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1996. Pp. x + 244. Cloth, $57.50.
The label 'Neoplatonism', coined in the eighteenth century to indicate a putative and rather ill-defined development within the Platonic tradition, is to this day applied in sundry ways. Presumably, 'Neoplatonic' is supposed to be distinguished from `Platonic', but the problem with this is that most of those ancient philosophers called 'Neoplatonic' thought of themselves simply as Platonists, that is, as authentic interpreters and continuators of Plato. Nevertheless, there are several important and relatively clear differentiations to be made among those within this tradition. One such refers to those Platonists who attempted to appropriate Aristotle's philosophy. This was done principally in two ways. For Plotinus, Aristotelian concepts and distinctions were employed to defend Plato against Peripatetic attacks. For Porphyry and the later Platonic commentators on the works of the Aristotelian corpus, Aristotle was co-opted as an authority on the philosophy of the sensible world, leaving the higher, intelligible world to Plato. The commentaries on Aristotle's De Anima are particularly revealing in this regard. For one would assume that in matters regarding the soul it would be extremely difficult to see Aristotle and Plato as anything other than irreconcilable. Aristotle's hylomorphism and explicit...