Bekker numbers
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Bekker numbers are the page numbers used in the Prussian Academy of Sciences edition of the complete works of Aristotle. They take their name from the editor of that edition, the classical philologist August Immanuel Bekker (1785-1871).
Bekker numbers take the format of up to four digits, a letter for column 'a' or 'b', then the line number. For example, the beginning of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics is 1094a1, which corresponds to page 1094 of Bekker's edition of the Greek text of Aristotle's works, first column, line 1.
All modern editions or translations of Aristotle intended for scholarly readers use Bekker numbers, in addition to or instead of page numbers. Contemporary scholars writing on Aristotle use the Bekker number so that the author's citations can be checked by readers without having to use the same edition or translation that the author used.
While Bekker numbers are the dominant method used to refer to the works of Aristotle, Catholic or Thomist scholars often use the medieval method of reference by book, chapter, and sentence, albeit generally in addition to Bekker numbers.
Stephanus pagination is the comparable system for referring to the works of Plato.
[edit] Specific numbers
The following list is complete. The titles are given in accordance with the standard set by the Revised Oxford Translation (The Complete Works of Aristotle, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 vols., Princeton University Press, 1984). Disputed works are marked by *, and ** marks a work generally agreed to be spurious.
- (1a) Categories
- (16a) De Interpretatione
- (24a) Prior Analytics
- (71a) Posterior Analytics
- (100a) Topics
- (164a) Sophistical Refutations
- (184a) Physics
- (268a) On the Heavens
- (314a) On Generation and Corruption
- (338a) Meteorology
- (391a) On the Universe**
- (402a) On the Soul
- The Parva Naturalia:
- (436a) Sense and Sensibilia
- (449b) On Memory
- (453b) On Sleep
- (458a) On Dreams
- (462b) On Divination in Sleep
- (464b) On Length and Shortness of Life
- (467b) On Youth, Old Age, Life and Death, and Respiration
- (481a) On Breath**
- (486a) History of Animals
- (639a) Parts of Animals
- (698a) Movement of Animals
- (704a) Progression of Animals
- (715a) Generation of Animals
- (791a) On Colors**
- (800a) On Things Heard**
- (805a) Physiognomics**
- (815a) On Plants**
- (830a) On Marvellous Things Heard**
- (859a) Problems*
- (968a) On Indivisible Lines**
- (973a) The Situations and Names of Winds**
- (974a) On Melissus, Xenophanes, and Gorgias**
- (980a) Metaphysics
- (1094a) Nicomachean Ethics
- (1181a) Magna Moralia*
- (1214a) Eudemian Ethics
- (1249a) On Virtues and Vices**
- (1252a) Politics
- (1299a) Mechanics**
- (1343a) Economics*
- (1354a) Rhetoric
- (1420a) Rhetoric to Alexander**
- (1447a) Poetics
[edit] Aristotelian works lacking Bekker numbers
- The Constitution of Athens, because it was first edited in 1891 from papyrus rolls acquired in 1890 by the British Museum, was not included in Bekker's edition. The standard reference to it is by section (and subsection) numbers.
- Surviving fragments of the many lost works of Aristotle were included in the third volume of Bekker's edition, edited by Valentin Rose. These are not cited by Bekker numbers, however, but according to fragment numbers. The numeration of the fragments in a revised edition by Rose, published in the Teubner series, Aristotelis qui ferebantur librorum fragmenta, Leipzig, 1886, was standard until superseded by the numeration of Olof Gigon's 1987 edition (printed as a new vol. 3 in Walter de Gruyter's reprint of the Bekker edition). For a selection of the fragments in English translation, see Jonathan Barnes (ed.), The Complete Works of Aristotle: The Revised Oxford Translation, vol. 2, Princeton 1984, pp. 2384-2465.