Grice e Zopiro: arma virumque cano -- la ragione conversazionale a Roma – filosofia
italiana – l’arma del filosofo a Cumae -- Luigi Speranza (Taranto). Filosofo italiano. Pythagorean. Giamblico. He
appears to specialise in mechanical matters, and in particular the design and
construction of weapons. His skills are evidently in demand and there are
reports of him working in places as far apart as Miletus and Cumae. Grice:
“That he is of ‘Hellenic’ – so-called, and thus not properly Roman -- origin is
evident by the fact that his name starts with a ‘Z,’ a letter which Catone
managed to expel from the Latin alphabet. Catone would say: ‘z’ is the sound a
corpse makes just before it becomes one’ – rudely. He probably knew. Giamblico,
of Calcide, seems to have been very familiar with Italian geography, since he
lists all these ‘Pythagoreans,’ who managed to settle (while the sect was
banned in Crotone) all over the place. Taranto is close enough, but it seems
indeed that Zopiro’s skills led him as far as Cumae. Recall taxis or ubers were
unknown then!’. The concept of a weapon was well known to Aeneas and Hemingway
--. In Anglo-Saxon, a weaponed man meant a man, i. e. a man (gender-neutral)
with a penis. For Grice’s Play-Group. The Swimming-Pool
Library.
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