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Between the Science and the Legend: The Chôra According to Albert Rivaud, an Almost Forgotten Reader of Plato's Timaeus

Publikace na Filozofická fakulta |
2022

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

In his 1906 book The problem of becoming and the notion of matter in Greek philosophy from its origins till Theophrastus, Albert Rivaud puts forward an entirely original (and nowadays largely forgotten) interpretation of the receptacle or chôra in Plato's Timaeus. On his reading, Timaeus' introduction of chôra signals the limits of the possibility to explain the formation of the cosmos by means of the opposition between the intelligible and the sensible.

Opposing Aristotle and others in his wake, Rivaud firmly rejects the understanding of chôra as matter, without however identifying it as space in the sense of a system of intra-cosmic coordinates. Instead, he sees the receptacle as a notion borrowed from a philosophical system otherwise alien to Plato's thought, namely the atomism of Leucippus and Democritus.

Neither the atomistic void nor chôra are like the modern space; rather, in virtue of evoking "the unchanging theater of all changes", they are "like the chaos, immense, gaping, populated by the infinite crowd of forms". Rivaud concludes that, by introducing chôra as a notion irreducible to the concept of becoming, Plato recognizes that the cosmogonic processes cannot be fully explained either on the basis of the relation of the cosmos to its intelligible model or through the logic of opposites that governs all change in the sensible realm.

At the same time, the introduction of chôra (described through a variety of mostly biological metaphors) marks the limits of the artisanal model preeminent in the Timaeus, a model that endows the cosmogonic story with a new transparency and ensures the teleological dimension of the fully formed universe. The aim of the article is to re-evaluate Rivaud's audacious reading of the Timaeus with an eye to larger issues pertinent to a variety of ancient cosmogonies.