Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T19:34:43.903Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A NOTE ON THE TEXT AND INTERPRETATION OF CICERO, DE FATO 35

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2022

Andrew R. Dyck*
Affiliation:
Los Angeles

Abstract

De fato 35 is part of Cicero's argument against the Stoic theory of causation. He claims in general that the Stoic chain of causes consists of antecedent but not efficient causes. To the examples cited in the previous chapter he adds verses from the opening of Ennius’ Medea exul (lines 208–11 Jocelyn = FRL 2 and TRF 89.1–4) containing the Nurse's lamentation over the origins of the Argonautic expedition that led, ultimately, to Medea's current mental distress. Then follows the question quorsum haec praeterita? and the answer quia sequitur illud, ‘nam numquam era errans mea domo ecferret pedem | Medea, animo aegro, amore saeuo saucia’, non ut eae res causam adferrent amoris, citing Ennius, Medea exul 215–16 Jocelyn = FRL 2 and TRF 89.8–9. Editors and commentators have struggled to explain the relation of the answer to the question. Here it is argued that the relation becomes clear if one adopts non<ne> for non and punctuates with a query after amoris. The sense will be: ‘Why have these past events been cited? In view of the sequel … was it not so that they bring on the cause of love?’ In other words, the Nurse, like the Stoics in Cicero's view, cites antecedent events as if they were efficient causes.

Type
Shorter Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Ax, W. (ed.), M. Tullius Cicero: De divinatione, De fato, Timaeus (Leipzig, 1938)Google Scholar, with only trivial modifications in punctuation.

2 Lambinus, D. (ed.), M. Tullii Ciceronis opera omnia (Paris, 1565–6)Google Scholar.

3 Stüve, G., Ad Ciceronis De fato librum observationes variae (Kiel, 1895), 44Google Scholar.

4 Cf. Har. resp. 56 sequitur illud, ‘ne deterioribus repulsisque honos augeatur’; De or. 2.302 sermo ille sequitur: ‘occidit’; Leg. 3.42 sequitur illud: ‘intercessor rei malae salutaris ciuis esto’.

5 The same objections apply to the interpretation of Sharples, R.W. (ed.), Cicero: On Fate (De fato) and Boethius: The Consolation of Philosophy IV.5–7, V (Warminster, 1991), 184Google Scholar, who takes sequitur as ‘follows’ in the logical sense, with the ut-clause as consecutive depending on it.

6 Weidemann, H. (ed.), Cicero: Über das Schicksal (Berlin and Boston, 2019), 133Google Scholar with comment at 283.

7 C. Schäublin, ‘Cicero, De fato 35–36’, in D. Knoepfler (ed.), Nomen Latinum. Mélanges de langue, de littérature et de civilisation latines offerts au professeur André Schneider à l'occasion de son départ à la retraite (Neuchâtel and Geneva, 1997), 41–4.

8 Cf. also Weidemann (n. 6), 281–2 for another objection to Schäublin's thesis.

9 In this rendering, prolata sunt (or the like) is supplied; an alternative would be to understand quorsum haec praeterita pertinent, in which case adferrent would be attracted to the tense of the preceding ecferret; cf. Kühner, R. and Stegmann, C., Ausführliche Grammatik der lateinischen Sprache (Hannover, 1966 4), 2.195Google Scholar.

10 Cf. Dyck, A.R., Commentary on Cicero De Divinatione II (Ann Arbor, 2020), 29Google Scholar.

11 Here earum evidently refers back to eae res at §35. Cicero makes this point using the same Ennian passage as illustration at Top. 61: hoc igitur sine quo non fit ab eo in quo certe fit diligenter est separandum. illud enim est tamquam ‘utinam ne in nemore Pelio’. nisi enim ‘accidissent abiegnae ad terram trabes’, Argo illa facta non esset, nec tamen fuit in his trabibius efficiendi uis necessaria.