ON AFFECTION FOR
OFFSPRING
(DE AMORE PROLIS)
INTRODUCTION
This essay, or declamation, is clearly in an unfinished
state throughout and a good deal is doubtless lost at
the end, for the author has done little more with his
subject than to show that φιλοστοργία
1 is more
complete in man than in beasts.2 The efforts of
Döhner3 and Weissenberger4 to prove that the essay
is not genuine have not been successful. Dohner is,
further, quite wrong, as Patzig5 and Weissenberger
have shown, in assuming the work to be an epitome.
[p. 329]
It is best regarded as an unfinished fragment, containing, so far as it goes, the rough and unrevised
hand of Plutarch.
Dyroff's6 attempt to show that this work was composed before De Esu Carnium, De Sollertia Animalium, and Gryllus is not to be taken seriously : the grounds are too slight. The text is very corrupt. The work is not listed in the Lamprias catalogue.