Book of the 24 Philosophers

The Book of the 24 Philosophers (in Latin Liber XXIV philosophorum) is an influential philosophical and theological medieval text of uncertain authorship.

It consists of twenty-four “sentences”, “aphorisms” or “definitions” of “God”, attributed to as many philosophers attending a fictional gathering, each an attempt to answer their only remaining question, “what is God?” (quid Deus?). The first textual witness is from a 12th-century French manuscript currently at Laon.[1] The definitions where often accompanied by a scholastic commentary in either of two redactions, the “shorter” and the “longer” commentary. Both definitions and commentary echo and weave numerous late ancient and medieval views on the First Cause and the nature of divinity.[2]

During the Middle Ages, the Liber was variously attributed to Hermes Trismegistos, Aristotle or simply quoted anonymously by theologians and philosophers. Contemporary scholarship is yet inconclusive about the origin and authorship of the text. French scholar Françoise Hudry has argued for the attribution to Marius Victorinus (fl. 4th century).[3] According to others, the text would belong to a lost work by Aristotle, the De philosophia, known to medieval Europe through the Arab translators of the Toledo School.

There are notably German, French and Italian studies of the text available,[4] with no English translation yet in print, although online editions exist.[5]

Influence

The influence of this work on medieval scholarship and literature has revealed traces of its ideas among the works of Jean de Meung, Dante, Meister Eckhart, Nicholas of Cusa, Giordano Bruno, Robert Fludd, Pascal, Leibniz.[1]

In particular, the second definition gained wide currency from early on in the Middle Ages: “God is an infinite sphere whose centre is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere” (Deus est sphaera infinita cuius centrum est ubique, circumferentia nusquam).[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Lucentini: 2001
  2. Hudry, Françoise (ed.), Le Livre des XXIV Philosophes (Latin text and French translation), Millon, Grenoble, 1989.
  3. Hudry: 2009. See also the review by Jeremy M. Schott.
  4. See Bibliography below.
  5. One by Prof. Markus Vinzent and one by The Matheson Trust.

Bibliography

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