eul_wid: hks-ab

Bion of Borysthenes Fragments on Archytas in Greek

The Fragments on Archytas by Bion of Borysthenes is a lost Hellenistic doxography preserved exclusively through two passages quoted in Diogenes Laertius’s Lives of the Eminent Philosophers. The work reports on the Pythagorean philosopher Archytas of Tarentum. The first fragment attributes to Archytas a foundational classification of the sciences into logistics, geometry, astronomy, and music. The second records his famous intervention to secure Plato’s safety from Dionysius II of Syracuse, detailing a letter of appeal and the dispatch of a trireme to rescue the philosopher. The treatise survives solely as embedded quotations within Diogenes Laertius’s third-century CE biographical compilation, with no independent manuscript tradition; its title suggests it was itself a collection of excerpts concerning Archytas. While Bion’s original work is lost, the content he preserved proved highly influential. The classification of sciences became a standard reference in histories of Pythagorean thought, and the anecdote of Archytas aiding Plato became a staple in biographies of both philosophers, consistently cited to illustrate ideals of philosophical solidarity against political tyranny.

227.(t) in Archytam ὦ πέπον Ἀρχύτα, ψαλληγενές, ὀλβιότυφε, τῆς ὑπάτης ἔριδος πάντων ἐμπειρότατ’ ἀνδρῶν.
228 ὦ ξέν’, ἐπεὶ οὔτε κακῷ οὔτ’ ἄφρονι φωτὶ ἔοικας, οὖλέ τε καὶ μέγα χαῖρε, θεοί νύ τοι ὄλβια δοῖεν.