The Chronology of Democritus and the Fall of Troy

Authors

  • M.A. Solopova Institute of Philosophy, Russian Academy of Sciences. 12/1 Goncharnaya str., Moscow, 109240, Russian Federation

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21146/2074-5869-2018-23-2-18-31

Keywords:

Ancient Greek philosophy, Democritus, Anaxagoras, Greek chronography, doxographers, Thrasyllus, capture of Troy, ancient genealogies, the length of a generation

Abstract

The article considers the chronology of Democritus of Abdera. In the times of Classical Antiquity, three different birth dates for Democritus were known: c. 495 BC (according to Diodorus of Sicily), c. 470 BC (according to Thrasyllus), and c. 460 BC (according to Apollodorus of Athens). These dates must be coordinated with the most valuable doxographic evidence, according to which Democritus 1) "was a young man during Anaxagoras’s old age" and that 2) the Lesser World-System (Diakosmos) was compiled 730 years after the Fall of Troy. The article considers the argument in favor of the most authoritative datings belonging to Apollodorus and Thrasyllus, and draws special attention to the meaning of the dating of Democritus’ work by himself from the year of the Fall of Troy. The question arises, what prompted Democritus to talk about the date of the Fall of Troy and how he could calculate it. The article expresses the opinion that Democritus indicated the date of the Fall of Troy not with the aim of proposing its own date, different from others, but in order to date the Lesser World-System in the spirit of intellectual achievements of his time, in which, perhaps, the history of the development of mankind from the primitive state to the emergence of civilization was discussed. The article discusses how to explain the number 730 and argues that it can be the result of combinations of numbers 20 (the number of generations that lived from the Fall of Troy to Democritus), 35 – one of the constants used for calculations of generations in genealogical research, and 30. The last figure perhaps indicates the age of Democritus himself, when he wrote the Lesser Diakosmos: 30 years old.

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Published

2019-06-03

Issue

Section

WORLD PHILOSOPHY: ITS PAST AND PRESENT

How to Cite

Solopova, M. (2019). The Chronology of Democritus and the Fall of Troy. History of Philosophy, 23(2), 18-31. https://doi.org/10.21146/2074-5869-2018-23-2-18-31