ORPHIC CRITICAL TESTIMONY 13
OTTO KERN
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For links to many more fragments: The Orphic Fragments of Otto Kern.
SUMMARY: This testimony says that Aristotle did not believe there was a poet named Orpheus.
ORPHIC CRITICAL TESTIMONY 13.
Cicero De Natura Deorum I 107 p. 251 Plasb.:
Orpheum poetam docet Aristoteles (perhaps in the dialogue περὶ φιλοσοφίας ? fr. 7 Rose) numquam fuisse, et hoc Orphicum carmen Pythagorei ferunt cuiusdam fuisse Cerconis; at Orpheus, id est imago eius ut vos vultis, in animum meum (Cottae) saepe incurrit, v. even before s. Ὀνομάκριτος.
“Aristotle tells us that there never existed a poet Orpheus, and it is a tradition of the Pythagoreans that the Orphic poem which we know was the work of one Cercops, yet Orpheus, that is, according to you, his image, presents himself to my mind frequently.”
(trans. Francis Brooks, 1896)
Lobeck I 348; Zeller I6 64; Schuster 51. 55; Weber 3. 42; Susemihl Ind. VIII.
The story of the birth of the Gods: Orphic Theogony.
We know the various qualities and characteristics of the Gods based on metaphorical stories: Mythology.
Dictionary of terms related to ancient Greek mythology: Glossary of Hellenic Mythology.
Introduction to the Thæí (the Gods): The Nature of the Gods.
How do we know there are Gods? Experiencing Gods.