By Speculative arithmetic I refer to the research I carried out during my stay as a Mellon Fellow at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies in Toronto (2019-2020).
Speculative arithmetic is also the expression used by modern scholars to describe a kind of (medieval) arithmetic that does not focus on practical reckoning, but dwells instead on the status of integer natural numbers and their mutual relations, namely, on the ‘number theory’. Based on the Neopythagorean Nicomachus of Gerasa’s Introduction to Arithmetic, Boethius’ De arithmetica became the most authoritative textbook for the teaching of arithmetic throughout the Middle Ages and beyond. The great success of this work and, consequently, its influence on the medieval Latin thought were determined not only by Boethius’s systematic exposition of the number theory, but also by the Platonic and Neopythagorean doctrines that frame and introduce to the technicalities of this mathematical discipline – prominently, the one concerning the metaphysical role played by numbers in shaping reality.