Proclus () or Proculeius, son of the physician Themison, was a hierophant at Laodiceia in Syria. He wrote, according to the Suda, the following works:
- On the gods (øõÿûÿóïñ)
- On the myth of Pandora in Hesiod (õἰàÃÂὴý ÃÂñÃÂ' ἩÃÂùÃÂôῳ ÃÂá¿ÂààñýôÃÂÃÂñàüῦøÿý)
- On golden words (õἰàÃÂá½° ÃÂÃÂÃÂ
ÃÂá¾¶ á¼ÂÃÂ÷)
- On Nicomachus' introduction to number theory (õἰàÃÂὴý ÃÂùúÿüìÃÂÿÃÂ
õἰÃÂñóÃÂóὴý ÃÂá¿Âàá¼ÂÃÂùøü÷ÃÂùúá¿ÂÃÂ)
- some geometrical treatises
He is also mentioned by Damascius in a commentary on Plato.
Although a commentary on the Pythagorean Golden Verses, known through a translation into Arabic (in the El Escorial library as manuscript 888) has sometimes been attributed to this Proclus (following a theory promoted by ), this is disputed, and a more widely accepted theory is that the commentary is instead by Proclus Diadochus.
See also
References