(Jim Cook’s review). Ancient Philosophy is the first volume in a four-volume history of philosophy. The set was published in 2010 by Oxford University Press. All four volumes are high-quality paperbacks each of which has many illustrations. The cover illustration on volume I shows Alexander the Great speaking with the Cynic philosopher Diogenes of Sinope. Alexander has asked Diogenes whether there is anything he can do for him. Diogenes’ famous reply was “You can move out of my light!”
Volume I (like each of the others) has a pretty good index, a table of the book’s illustrations, a separate bibliography for each of the chapters, a chronology, and an index of abbreviations and conventions. In other words the trappings of a scholarly apparatus.The books in the series are, however, aimed at the educated layperson and the undergraduate student in philosophy. The philosophers covered in volume I lived during the period 585 BC to approximately 400 AD.
The book is structured in an interesting manner. It’s first two chapters (up to page 115) describe the philosophers and their respective schools of thought in chronological order. We hear about the pre-socratics, Plato, Aristotle, the Epicureans, Stoics, and Cynics, ending with Augustine. This chronological approach is fairly typical of texts written about the history of philosophy. What is different in Kenny’s work is that these first chapters are following by a thematic approach which explores, in some detail, a number of key philosophical ideas that are found in the writings of these ancient philosophers. All of these philosophical themes are still relevant today.
The themes explored by Kenny include the following: logic, epistemology, physics, metaphysics, soul and mind, and ethics and theology. Each of Kenny’s thematic chapters is lucid and well-organized, as well as reasonably comprehensive. Some offer valuable insights into the ideas raised by particular philosophers. The only thematic chapter that was somewhat difficult, if not tedious to read, was the one on logic - not an easy topic to write or read about in any case.
I also found a statement made by Kenny early on in volume I quite interesting. Write a list of “a dozen really great philosophers’ he says and you are “likely to discover that the list consists almost entirely of bachelors.” Kenny then presents the reader his own list (of 11) philosophers from Plato to Wittgenstein “none of whom were married” (p. 5).
But the attentive reader will notice there is something wrong with Kenny’s list. At least two of those named on his list may not have ever been married but it’s a bit of a stretch to call them bachelors - each of them kept a mistress with whom they had a child. A third name on the list of “bachelors” is Hegel. Now Hegel had a child with a mistress (his landlady) but he also subsequently married Marie von Tucher in 1811 and remained married to her until his death in 1831. This marriage produced two sons. How could someone like Kenny (a famous philosopher in his own right) miss something like that?
Perhaps Freud was right when he wrote about slips of the pen in his Psychopathology of Everyday Life and Kenny’s slip expresses an unconscious wish? For you see, while Hegel’s marriage was unproblematic, Kenny’s own was not, as it resulted in his excommunication from the Catholic Church!
Regardless of the rationale for Kenny’s interesting statement, it’s unlikely to be generally true. It may have been relatively true for a certain period of time in Europe when the Catholic Church held a virtual monopoly over higher education and when most scholars, of necessity, were also ordained as priests. This was, for instance, the case with Kenny. As he was nominally a priest his marriage violated his oath of celibacy - hence his excommunication.
I enjoyed reading volume I and have now embarked on volume II, Medieval Philosophy, which I will review after I have finished it. I hope you found my review helpful.