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SOCEATES
8POTTI.SVVOODK
SQCAi.
Er
SOCRATES
AND
BE SOCEATIC SCHOOLS
NEWLY TRANSLATED
FROM THE THIRD GERMAN EDITION OF
DB
E.
ZELLER
BY
OSWALD
J.
REICHEL,
B.C.L.
&
M.A.
NEW
EDITION
LONDON
CO.
All
rights
reserved
PREFACE.
IN offering to the English reader a new edition of that part of Dr ZELLER S Philosophie der Griechen
which treats of Socrates and the imperfect Socratic Schools, the translator is not unaware of the diffi
culties of the task
For
if,
on the one hand, such a translation be too literal, the reader may find it more difficult to understand than
the original, and expend a labour in disentangling
the thread of a sentence which were better spent in
grasping
its
meaning.
If,
much freedom be
may
be justly
The present
translator has en
two extremes, aiming at reproducing the meaning of Dr ZELLER S work, whilst reducing the sentences,
where
it
In
care-
more
vi
PREFACE.
gone over the whole, o that what
is
fully
now offered
new
translation from
the third
German
is
edition.
The
writer
well aware
how
imperfectly he has
excellence
;
been able to
realise his
own standard of
is
who
find it a
work of
toil to
Dr ZELLEK S work
attempt to meet
it
a gentle criticism.
GLENFRIARS, TORQUAY
May,
1877.
CONTENTS.
PART
I.
CHAPTER
I.
PAGE 2
Political unsettledness
...
.
2.
.3
4
B.
Sophocles
Euri
.
..
Simonides
..
Pin
Bacchylides
21
3. 4.
The Historians.
Herodotus
.
Thucydides
.
.
24
Comedy. Aristophanes
29
32
C.
viii
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
II.
A. Distinction of Socratic
1.
38
Knowledge substituted
nature
2.
........
....
. .
.38
3<j
.40
41
.42
43
C. Distinction of Socratic
1.
Knowledge believed
44
2.
.45
47
Plato
Aristotle
......
by Socratic Schools
48
49 50
Difficulty caused
PART
II.
SOCRATES.
CHAPTER
A. Youth and early training B. Active life
III.
....
52
6l
CONTENTS.
ix
CHAPTER
IV.
70
74
.-
.77
82 82
84
.
D.
The
Saiptviov
.
.
..
.
....
.
.
1. 2.
^aifj.6viov
3.
4.
Kegarded by Socrates as an oracle Limited in its application . Correct view of the 8aip.6viov
. .
90
94
3^"
CHAPTER
V.
PHILOSOPHY OF SOCRATES.
A.
as authorities
.
98
B. General point of
C.
view of Socrates
...
.
104
Theory
of
knowledge
of conceptions considered
.
.
109
..
. .
.
..113
.
116
CHAPTER
,
VI.
A.
Knowledge
121
B. Search for
Eros and
.
, .
.
Irony
C.
124
.128
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
VII.
ETHICS.
. .
PAGB 134
knowledge
Socratic Ethics
C.
40
2.
Theoretically Virtue is knowledge about the Good Practically the Good determined by custom or
utility
.
147
3.
.151
161
. .
148^
160
163
Friendship
The State
Universal philanthropy
.
165
.
.
.
4.
170
CHAPTER
VIII.
View
1.
of
Nature
........
. .
172
175
175
B. Notion of
2. 3.
God and the Worship of God Language about the Gods taken from popular use God conceived as the Reason of the world The Worship of God
. .
176 177
]
C.
man
IX.
78
CHAPTER
XENOPHON AND PLATO.
A. Value of
1.
181 183
2.
Schleiermacher
objections refuted
which he lived
185 187
CONTENTS.
xi
CHAPTER
X.
2.
3.
4.
. .
.
*
.
...
*
.
i
.
...
.
, .
-
.
.
B. Causes
ft
which led to
his sentence
1.
......
,
. ,
. .
Personal animosity only partially the cause Political party-feeling only partially involved 4. The teaching of Socrates generally believed to be
2. 3.
210
213
dangerous
C. Justification of the
1.
sentence
220
2.
Unfounded charges brought against Socrates The views of Socrates subversive of old views
.
of
.
3. 4.
authority political life religion Relation borne by his views to cotemporary views
.
PART
III.
CHAPTER
XI.
236
Xenophon
239
;
. .
.
C. ^Eschines
245
246
xli
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
The Megarians
A. History of the School
B. Their Doctrine
1.
.
XII.
...-.-....
.
:
249
255 259 262
2.
C. Eristic
1.
2.
3.
Euclid Eubulides
.........
. .
.
26f
265
4.
5.
Destruction
the Possible
The Possible
of
Hypothetical sentences
, . .
. .
Meaning
6.
Stilpo. Subject
the Good
. . .
Cynic
. .
Morality
.......
.......
XIII.
CYNICS*.
. .
)
279
281
CHAPTER
THE
A. History of the Cynics
.
284
991
. . .
*
.
2.
291
295
3Qj_
.
C.
2. 3.
301
Wisdom and
Folly
.....
.
.
310
313
CONTENTS.
D. Practical results of Cynic teaching
1.
.
.
xiii
PAGE 314
2.
.315
. .
Modesty
3.
...
.
Civil Life
.
319 327
331
Renunciation of Religion
.
....
CHAPTER
A. History of the Cyrenaics
.
XIV.
THE CYRENAICS.
.
.....
..
. .
2.
3.
4.
5.
General position Feelings the only object of knowledge Pleasure and pain . . The Highest Good Modified form of the extreme view
.
369
369
375
3*76
2.
Theodorus
Hegesias Anniceris
.
376
.
3.
380 383
CHAPTER XV.
RETROSPECT.
A. Inconsistencies of the imperfect Socratic Schools
. .
386
B. These Schools
the Sophists
C.
.......
to Socrates than to
387
389 393
INDEX
....
PAET
I.
CHAPTER
I.
THE
intellectual life of
CHAP
of either
altogether, or attempting a thorough transformation upon a ne,w basis. The older schools were not indeed
wholly extinct but all dependence in their systems had been shaken, and a general disposition to doubt
;
had
set in.
From
the Sophists
men had
learnt to
to attack or defend call everything in question with equal readiness every opinion. Belief in the truth of human ideas, or in the validity of moral
laws,
had been
lost.
Not only
enquiries respecting
nature, which had engaged the attention of thinkers for upwards of a century and a half, had become
had given mere superficial facility of thought and expression and the acquisition of attainments useful
distasteful,
itself
place to a
only for the purposes of social life. Yet this state of things naturally suggested the need of a new method, which would avoid the defects and onesidedness of previous systems by a more cautious treatment of scientific questions. The way thereto
had not only been indirectly prepared by the clear ing away of previous speculation, but the very instrument of research had been sharpened by the
quibbles and subtleties of sophistry ; ample material, too, for the erection of a new structure lay to hand
in the labours of preceding philosophers.
Moreover,
by the practical turn which the Sophistic enquiries had taken, a new field of research was opened up, the more careful cultivation of which gave promise of a
Would a rich harvest for speculative philosophy. creative genius be forthcoming, able to make use of
these materials, and to direct thought into a
new
channel?
Before this question Greek philosophy stood at the time when Socrates appeared.
The answer was determined in great part by the course which political circumstances, moral life, and general culture had taken. Between these and philo
sophy the connection is at
all
times close
it
more than ever apparent. The most sweeping had taken place in the fifth century in changes Never has a nation had a more rapid or Greece. more brilliant career of .military glory in union with high culture than had the Greeks. Yet never has that career been sooner over. First came the great deeds of the Persian war, then the rich bloom of art
ILLUSTRATED
of the age of Pericles
;
#F
POLITICS.
CHAP.
internal
conflict
which
prosperity of the free states of Greece in unhallowed domestic quarrels, which sacrificed anew the indepen
dence so hardly won from the foreigner, undermined her freedom, threw her moral notions into confusion, and irretrievably ruined the character of her people.
A progress which elsewhere required centuries was in her case compressed within a few generations. When the pulse of national life beats so fast, the general
must be exposed to a quick and susceptible change and when so much that is great happens in
spirit
;
so short a time,
an abundance of ideas
is
sure to crop
hand
to range
them
greatest importance for the future of philo was the position won by Athens since the close sophy of the Persian war. In that great conflict the con
sciousness of a common brotherhood had dawned upon the Hellenes with a force unknown before. All that fancy had painted in the legend of the Trojan war seemed to be realised in actual history
:
Of
Hellas standing as a united nation opposed to the East. The headship of this many-membered body
had
city
fallen in the
main
to Athens,
all intellectual
move
l
ments, the Prytaneum of the wisdom of Greece. This circumstance had a most beneficial effect on
the further development of philosophy.
1
No
doubt
tendency may be noticed in the several schools to come forth from their isolation; it maybe seen in the natural
philosophers of the fifth century that an active inter change of thought was being carried on between the
East and theWest of Greece and now that the Sophists had begun to travel from one end to the other of the
;
Hellenic world, to carry to Thessaly the eloquence of Sicily, to Sicily the doctrines of Heraclitus, these
various sources of culture could not fail gradually to flow together into one mighty stream. Still it was of
great importance that a solid bed should be hollowed out for this stream and its course directed towards a
fixed end.
rise^
After that, in Athens, as of the Attic philosophy. the common centre of the Grecian world, the various
lines of pre-Socratic enquiry
had met and crossed, more comprehensive and ever afterwards Greek philosophy philosophy;
Socrates was able to found a
to the time of the
continued to be so firmly tied to Athens, that down New Academy that city was the
It birthplace of all schools historically important. was even their last place of refuge before the final
extinction of ancient philosophy. To make clear, by means of the literary remains we possess, the change which took place in the Greek
mode
of thought during the fifth century, and to estimate the worth and extent of the contributions
yielded to philosophy by the general culture of the time, the great Athenian tragedians may be first appealed to. For tragedy is better suited than any
ILLUSTRATED
Y TRAGEDIANS.
CHAP.
;
pourtray the moral consciousness of a people, and to express the highest sentiments of which an age, or
at least individual prominent spirits in
capable.
flicting
rests
To make
the origin of the plot, to unfold the action psycho logically, to produce the general impression intended,
the poet must bring these two points of view before us, allowing each to advocate its cause in lively speech
and counter-speech he must go into the analysis of moral consciousness, weigh what is right and what is As faulty in human action, and expose it to view.
:
a poet he will do this, always having regard to the particular case before him. Still, even this he cannot
do without comparing one case with another, without going back to general experience, to the generally
received
notions
in
Hence tragic short, to general moral conceptions. poetry must always give a lasting impetus to scien tific speculation on moral conduct and its laws,
affording,
itself,
too, for such reflection ample material and that to a certain extent already prepared,
1
and inviting partly use, partly correction. Moreover, inasmuch as moral convictions were in the case of
the Greeks, as in the case of other nations, originally
boimd up with
to
religious convictions,
and inasmuch
owing
it
deals, it
1870
vol.
1 On this point compare the excellent remarks of Gfrote, Hist, of Greece, P. II. c. 67,
vii. 7, ed.
-f
connection between tragedy and principles of morality applies also to the connection between tragedy and principles of theology nay more, in exactly the
:
-j
same way tragedy must busy itself with the nature and state of men whose deeds and fate it depicts. In all these respects a most decided and thorough change in Greek thought may be observed in the
generations, whose character finds such fit ting expression in the three successive tragedians,
three
Without going
so far as to attribute to the poets themselves every word which they put into the mouths of their heroes,
the general tone of their sentiments may be gathered partly from their general treatment of the
still
utterances,
JE*-
is an earnestness of purpose, a of religious feeling, an overwhelming force and depth majesty, worthy of a man of ancient virtue, who had
In ^Eschylus there
himself taken part in the great battles with the At the same time there is a something Persians.
bitter
deeds and
and violent about him, which a time of heroic sacrifices, of mighty capabilities and in
spiriting results, could neither soften down nor yet The spirit of his tragedies is that of dispense with.
by
gods, by the
order,
is
by resignation to a destiny from which there no escape. Never were the Titan-like defiance of
ILLUSTRATED
BY
TRAGEDIANS.
CHAP.
unbridled strength, the wild fury of passion and frenzy, the crushing might of fate, the paroxysms of
divine vengeance, more thrillingly painted than by At the bottom of all his sentiments lies ^Eschylus.
reverence for the divine powers ; yet these are grouped almost monotheistically together, in his vast vision, as one almighty power. What Zeus says happens ; his
will always
notice of
will
2
;
pass, even though it escape the no mortal can do aught against his none can escape the decision of heaven, or
comes to
l ;
men
rather of destiny, 3 over which Zeus himself is power 4 In face of this divine power man feels himself less.
his
;
his life
like a picture
which a
5 That man mistake not his sponge washes out. position, that he learn not to overrate what is
6 human, that he be not indignant with the Grods when in affliction, 7 that his mind soar not too high, that the grain of guilt planted by pride grows to a
harvest of tears, 8
the teaching which, with glowing words, flashes on us in every page of the
such
is
poet.
Not even ^Eschylus, however, was able to grasp these ideas in their purity, or to rise above the con tradiction which runs not only through Greek tragedy,
but through the whole of the Greek view of
1
life.
On
Suppl. 598
Agamemnon,
1327.
1485.
8 3
Prometh. 550.
Pers. 93
;
Niobe, Fr. 155, (154). Fragm. 369 Dindorf. Stobceus. Serm, 108, 43, attributes the words to Euripides.
7
Pers. 820.
Agam.
the wave of
when it bears man highest on its crest, breaks on a hidden reef; would the man on whom
fortune smiles escape ruin, he must voluntarily throw 1 even fate itself ordains away a part of what he has
;
2 On utterly destroying a family. the other hand, ^Eschylus never tires of insisting on
guilt,
when bent on
Not the connection between guilt and punishment. in the old stories of Niobe and Ixion, of the only
house of Laius and of that of Atreus, does he paint with telling touches the unavoidable nature of divine
vengeance, the mischief which follows in the wake of pride, the never-dying curse of crime but also in
;
the unexpected result of the Persian expedition he sees a higher hand, visiting with punishment the
self-exaltation
of the great
insults
Man must suffer 3 offered to the gods of Greece. according to his deeds ; God blesses him who lives
in piety without guile
though
it
may
be slow at
suddenly overtakes
the transgressor of right; some Dike strikes down with a sudden blow, 5 others she slowly crushes from generation to generation the curse of crime gathers
;
descend on
;
Agam. 1563
Eumen. 530
Choeph.
61.
Choeph. 309
Fr. 283.
Fr. 282.
4
;
tus,
2
iii.
40.
;
blamed by
Agam.
750.
ILLUSTRATED
children and children
s
Y TRAGEDIANS.
;
children
CHAP.
_
the destiny of men, avenging the fathers sins on the sons, sucking the criminal s life-blood, stealthily
1
clinging to his feet, throwing round him the snares of madness, pursuing him with punishment down to
Thus severely and clearly through all of JEschylus runs the thought of divine the plays justice and of implacable destiny.
All the
the shades. 2
is
the
vigour with which the poet breaks through the fetters which this view of the world imposes. In the Eu-
menides, these moral conflicts, the play of which 3 ^Eschylus can so well pourtray, are brought to a satis
factory issue, the bright Olympic Groddess appeasing the dark spirits of vengeance, and the severity of the ancient bloodthirsty Justice yielding to human kind
ness.
In the Prometheus, natural religion as a whole celebrates its moral transfiguration ; the jealousy of the gods towards mortals is seen to resolve itself
Zeus himself requires the aid of the Wise One, who, for his kindness to men, has had to feel the whole weight of his wrath yet, on the other
into
mercy
Titan must be and Zeus rule of might be changed by softened, What the willing submission into a moral rule.
hand, the unbending
of the
mind
is
in reality the
of
his
of
his
own mind.
uEschylus stands on the boundary line between two periods of culture, and the story he tells of the miti1
Bum. Bum.
Choeph.
896
Emn.
198,
566.
10
CHAP,
the generation of Marathon giving place to the cheerful beauty of the age of Pericles. ^ * ne spirit of this new age Sophocles has (ft) Soplw**vrn. fir*. given the most fitting expression. Agreeing as he
I
/
does in principle with his predecessor, his poems, The nevertheless, convey a very different impression. of the poetry of Sophocles is likewise reve keynote
rence for the Grods, whose hand and laws encompass human life. From them come all things, even mis
fortune
*
their never-decaying
;
nothing can escape its destiny their eyes no deed and no thought can be hid
withstand
4
3
;
their
eternal laws, created by no mere human power, dare no one transgress. Men, however, are weak and mere shadows or dreams, a very nothing, capable frail,
5 No only of a passing semblance of happiness. 6 mortal s life is free from misfortune, and even the
happiest man cannot be called happy before his death ; 7 nay, taking all things into account, which the changing day brings with it, the number of woes,
the rarity of good fortune, the end to which come, it were well to repeat the old saying,
all
must Not to
is
is
the best
lot,
8
to die as soon as
wisdom
1
is,
2 3
4
Electra, 657. (Ed. Rex, 864 ; Ant. 450. Ajax, 125; (Ed. R. 1186;
Fr. 12, 616, 860. 6 Ant. 611 Fr. 530. 7 (Ed. R. Trach. 1, 943 532, 583. 8 (Ed. Col. 1215.
;
Fr.
ILLUSTRATED
That
BY
man
TRAGEDIANS.
God, to be
31
CHAP.
resigned to fate.
self
above
is
human measure,
1 acceptable to the Gods, that it is absurd to seek a higher instead of being content with a
man
that arrogance hurries on to sudden that Zeus hates the vaunts of a boastful destruction, 2 tongue, all this Sophocles shows by the example of
moderate
lot,
hurled from
the
summit
of
recklessness
and
He, too, is impressed by the thought overbearing. of the worth of virtue and of divine retribution. He
knows that uprightness is better than riches, that is better than unjust gain, that heavy guilt entails heavy punishment, but that piety and virtue are worth more than all things else, and are rewarded
loss
3
;
he even
more important
all
to please those in
He is more wisdom comes from the Gods, and that they always conduct to what is right, 5 albeit men may never cease from learning and striving after it. 6 He bids them to commit their griefs to Zeus, who from heaven above looks down and orders all things, and to bear what the Gods send with 7 and in this belief is neither puzzled resignation,
(Ed. Col. Ajax, 127, 758 1211 Fr. 320, 528. 2 (Ed. R. 873 Ant. 127. 3 Fr. 18, 210, 186; Philoc.
;
;
;
5 Fr. 834, 227, 809, 865 in the unintelligible 0eia ^/xe pa probably there is a 0ei a juo?pa.
;
6
7
1440.
4
Ant. 71.
by the good fortune of many bad men, nor yet by many good ones. The same thoughts had inspired the poetry of ^Eschylus, and yet the spirit of the drama of Sopho cles is a very different one from his. Sophocles can show a higher artistic execution, a fuller dramatic handling, a more delicate delineation of the inner life, a more careful unravelling of action from cha racters and of characters by means of actions, a better proportioned beauty, a clearer and more pleasing
the misfortunes of
1
whereas for tempestuous force, for wild exultation, for majestic view of history, JEschylus is Nor is the moral platform of the two unrivalled.
language
tragedians quite the same. (Both are penetrated with reverence for the divine powers ; but in ^Eschylus
this reverence is
first
to be set aside, and with an antagonism which has to be overcome before it can come up to the
and the
blissful peace
of the
The power
^Eschylus much harsher, because less called for by the character of those whom it reaches the reign of Zeus is a reign of terror, mitigated only by degrees,
;
the Deity enter into too close Both poets celebrate the victory
if
human
self-will
but in ^Eschylus
as a stern
the victory
struggles.
1
is
preceded by severer
Fr. 104.
the
Prometheus, espe-
daily
v. 887, &c.
ILLUSTRATED
BY
TRAGEDIANS.
13
and fearful power, crushing the refractory ; whereas, with Sophocles, it completes its work with the quiet certainty of a law of nature, awakening rather pity
for
CHAP.
terror.
That
conflict of the
which
the Eumenides of ^Eschylus play, Sophocles has left behind ; with him j ustice is, from the very begin
ning, harmoniously united with mercy, and the most accursed of all mortals finds in the GEdipus Colo-
neus
reconciliation at last.
His heroes,
too, are of
a different order from those of his predecessor. In moral opposites are so hard, that human JEschylus
representatives of them do not suffice him ; hence he brings the Grods themselves into the battle-field
Zeus and the Titans, the daughters of Night and the denizens of Olympus whereas the tragedy of Sopho
;
cles
moves entirely in the world of men. The former deals by preference with violent natures and uncon
depict what
is
trolled passions
is
resignation.
Hence
his
so
specially successful.
Sophocles in an Antigone pourhow to love, but trays pure womanhood, knowing not to hate, l and putting even hatred to shame by the heroism of her love. In short, the poetry of Sopho
its repulsiveness.
Ant. 523.
CHAP,
look on
human
nature and
that belongs to
it
in a
cheerful spirit, to prize its greatness, to mitigate its sufferings by wise resignation, to bear its weaknesses, to control its excesses by custom and law. FromJnm, as
is
gathered of a beautiful
natural agreement between duty and inclination, be tween freedom and order, which constitutes the moral
Greek world. some four Olympiads later comes Euripides. Only Yet what a remarkable change in ethical tone and As an artist, view of life is apparent in his writings
ideal of the
!
too fond of substituting calculation Euripides for the spontaneous outcome of the poet s mind, criti
is far
by chorus-songs often loosely connected with the action of the play, by rhetorical declama
character,
tion and moralising, he seeks to produce an effect which might be gained in greater purity and depth from the unison of the whole. That harmony between
the moral and the religious life which commended itself so agreeably to us in Sophocles, may be seen in
a state of dissolution in the plays of the younger Not that he is deficient in moral maxims and poet.
religious thoughts.
He knows full well that piety of temperance are the best things for and the virtue man ; that he who is mortal must not be proud of
advantages nor despair in misfortune
;
that he can do
ILLUSTRATED
good man modest lot
poor
BY
;
TRAGEDIANS.
ir,
that in the long run the fares well and the bad fares ill that a
;
CHAP.
man s
l preferable to fitful greatness ; that the fear of God is worth more than the osten
is
tatious sacrifices of
many a
rich
man
2 intelligence are better than wealth and noble birth. He discourses at length of the benefits conferred by
the (rods on
he speaks right well of their 4 righteous and almighty rule, and he even traces back human guilt to their will. 5
;
men
However
his
may
be in
view of the world, neither is the ethical pecu liarity of his poetry to be found in them. Euripides
has
sufficient appreciation of what is great and morally beautiful, to be able to paint it when it
For
1 lo Schl. HipBaccli. 1139. Fr. 77, polyt, 1100. Kirchh. 80, 257, 305, 355, 395, 507, 576, 1027 621, 942, 1014, 1016,
Nauck.
2
940.
Suppl. 197. Troad. 880 Hel. 1442. Compare the concluding verses of this piece, which also occur at the end of the Andromache and Bacchae. Fr. 797, 832, 875, 969. 5 Hippol. 1427. 6 The Testimony of the ancients respecting the connection between Euripides and Anaxagoras has been quoted in
4
;
HARfragments, compare TUNG S Restitut. Euripides 139. 109, 118, Anaxagoras, however, does not, like Eurimake Earth and Ether, pides, but Air and Ether come first after the original mixing of all
things.
beautiful
902)
commending the
is
immortal nature,
Anaxagoras.
7.
referred to
:>
CHAP,
and morality. His sober understanding feels the improbability and unseemliness of many legends, and the artistic spirit has not such an exclusive hold on him that he can overlook this for the sake of the The ideas they embody, or for their poetic worth. fortunes of men do not seem to him to be directly
faith
the revelation of a higher power, but rather to be proximately the result of natural causes, of calcula
tion, of caprice,
ciples
and of accident. Even moral prin If, on the whole, their appear wavering.
is
authority
admitted,
still
much
The grand
way
setting
forth
of
plain
natural facts.
^Eschylus
brought the Eumenides, all in the uncouth guise of antiquity, yet with most fearful effect, on to the
whereas the Electra of Euripides says to her brother, or rather the poet himself says, that they
stage
;
Whilst Iphifancies of his imagination. 1 is preparing to sacrifice the captives, she re geneia flects that the goddess herself cannot possibly require
are
this
sacrifice,
mere
feast
of
and Socrates, Euripides may have known, but cannot have Orest. 248, 387. been their pupil.
ILLUSTRATED
Tantalus
is
BY
TRAGEDIANS.
2
17
a fable. 1
the
CHAP.
tragic chorus doubts as to the wonder of the In the Troades, 3 in the course of the sun.
change
Hecuba
questions the story of the judgment of Paris, and ex plains the assistance of Aphrodite in carrying off Helen to mean the attractive beauty of Paris. In
the Bacchas, 4 Teiresias gives an insipid, half-natural 5 The Gods, explanation of the birth of Bacchus.
says Euripides,
stories
have no needs, and therefore the which impute to them human passions cannot
possibly be true.
vengeance give
as a
Even the general notions of divine him offence. This he will not regard
for particular acts,
punishment
7
but rather as a
universal law.
blame, the character by of the acting persons and go unpunished in the sequel, so that it necessarily appears as the poet s own conviction ; 8 whence he concludes at one time
too, for the
commands
up
to
blame
most
that
man need
the
faults, since
the Grods
time, that
true. 9
stories
The prophetic
tion
by Euripides.
The opportunity
is
seized in the
Iphig. Tatir. 372. 734. 963. 265. Frag. 209. Here. Fur. 1328. Fr. 508, with which
that G-od cares only for great leaving unimportant things to chance. 8 lo 448, 1315 Elect. 1298 Orest. 277, 409 Here. Fur.
events,
;
;
339, 654.
the
is
connected,
18
Helen, that it
to prove, on
is all
however, belief in the (rods is most thoroughly interwoven. No wonder, therefore, that the poet often puts into the mouths of his heroes
rites,
and
statements respecting the existence of the Gods, which would sound more natural coming from Pro tagoras than from men and women of the legendary
past.
are Gods, or whether Chance guides all things ; 3 another doubts their existence, 4 because of the unjust distribution of good and bad fortune ; Hecuba in
her prayer wonders what the deity really is, whether Zeus, or natural necessity, or the spirit of mortal
Hercules and Clytsemnestra leave it open whether there are Gods, and who Zeus is 6 even the
beings
; ;
7 So much at least explained to be Zeus. these utterances prove that Euripides had wandered
Ether
is
Allow he says that only a fool ing that he is sincere when can deny the deity and give credence to the deceitful
far
assertions of philosophy respecting what is hidden, 8 still his attitude appears to have been prepondera-
tingly
faith.
sceptical
and
critical
God
743.
1033, Antig. makes Cleon attack the prophet, but his accusations are refuted by the sequel. Not so
Sophocles,
Iph. Aul.
and the
Fr.
fragment
483.
7 8
of
Melanippe
with Euripides.
3
4
Hel. 484.
Fr. 288
;
ILLUSTRATED
certainly
BY
TRAGEDIANS.
19
notions
respecting the (rods holding that the essence of Grod could not be known, and assuming
CHAP.
1
the oneness of the divine nature either by glossing over or by plainly denying the ruling Pantheism.
1
Naturally enough, he makes use of them when a poet can use them, but then it is also said, that we know not how
it is
with another
2
opinion.
opinion, pointing partly to Orphic -Pythagorean tra ditions, and partly to the teaching of Anaxagoras
spirit returns at
4
;
death to
it
apparently leaving
or to
an
what extent, all, consciousness belongs to the soul when united with That the sphere of morals did not the ether. 5
1
Fr. 904
all
things
is
point
to the opinion that the popular Gods are only different names Helios and for the one God. Apollo are identified (Fr. 781, 11) according to the tradition of Orpheus. 2 Hippolyt. 192. 3 Compare teller s Philoso-
sciousness (yvdw aedvaros) after it has united with the immortal Ether. From this he deduces the belief in retribution after death, and he asks (Fr. 639, compare Fr. 452, 830),
I.
pp.
388, 430, 822, 846. 4 Suppl. 532, the genuineness of which Kirchhoff wrongly suspects Hel. 1012 Fr. 836.
; ;
5 He says in the Helen The soul of the dead no longer lives, but yet it has an eternal con:
On the other hand, in the Troades, 638, it is stated that the dead man is feelingless, like an unborn child in Fr. 536 that he is a nothing, earth and a shade Fr. 734 appears only to recognise the immorand in the tality of fame Heraclid. 591, he leaves it an open question whether the dead have feelings or not.
;
;
c 2
CHAP,
from those particular utterances which in some measure sufficed to give offence even to his
definitely than
The tragic movement in Euripides, cotemporaries. unlike that conflict of moral forces which ^Eschylus
1
rather
in
personal
passions,
arrange
His heroes have not that ments, and experiences. ideal character which makes them types of a whole
Hence, in most cases, that higher necessity, which called for our admiration in the case of ^Eschylus and Sophocles, is not active in the de
class.
velopment of the Euripidean drama, but the final result is brought about by some external means, either by divine interposition or by some human
Thus, rich as he may be in poetic successful in painting individual characters, beauties, experienced in knowledge of human life and human
cunning.
of the speeches and most undeniably he has yet come down from the moral and artistic height of his two great predecessors, by introducing into tragedy habits of inward reflection, of studied effect, and of artificial language, which Agatho with his dainty
weaknesses, thrilling in
scenes in his tragedies
;
many
As for instance
&c.
7/
7\w(T<r
Hippol. 607, or the language of Eteocles in Phoen. 504, 525, that men will
ofjLwfjLOKe,
throne
but that all means of vengeance are lawful in case of injury. It is true Euripides does not give these as his own sentiments. Yet even his cotemporaries noticed their resemblance to the moral teaching
of the Sophists,
ILLUSTRATED
BY DIDACTIC
POETRY.
moralising,
21
CHAP.
Cotemporary with ^Eschylus, or even a little (2) Didactw P oetr ybefore him, the poets Epicharmus, Simonides, and soon after him Bacchylides. Pindar, flourished
:
of these, Epicharmus, it has been shown in an earlier work, 2 takes a rational view of the
The
first
world, and entertains clear notions on morals, and theology, thanks to his knowledge of philosophy.
3 Simonides, so far as his views can be gathered from O) h scattered fragments, appears mainly to insist on that
Si-mo-
frailty.
is
5
Our
uncer
is
of toils
and cares
its
fortune
tain
imper and unstable it changes with circumstances the best man is he on whom the Gods bestow pros A faultless man must not be looked for; perity.
fect
; ;
swiftly it hurries away ; even prudence lost by men ; their hardly- won virtue is easily
;
too
enough to
The same
on
knows that no one is altogether happy, that few are spared some heavy changes of fortune, and bursts, yet not alone, into the complaint Not to have been born were 7 the happiest lot. Hence the highest practical
:
1
whom
(b)
Bac-
chJ hdes -
Zeller s
Geschichte
der
Philosophic, Part I. p. 925, and Nauck. Trag. Frag. 599. 2 teller s der Philosophic Greichen, Part I. p. 427 (Ger-
man).
3
6
7
Fr. 32, 36, 38, 39, 85 Fr. 42. Fr. 5. Fr. 1, 2, 3, 21.
wisdom consists, in his mind, in equanimity, in a contentment with the present, and absence of care At the same time he shares the for the future.
1
conviction that
man
is
right,
and
that Zeus, the all-seeing ruler of the world, is not to blame for the misfortunes of mortals. 2 These
are the
same sentiments
as in the older
moral poets,
A spirit far more peculiar and more powerful, and more nearly akin to ^Eschylus, finds utterance At the bottom of Pindar s in the poems of Pindar. view of the world, as of that of ^Eschylus, lies a most exalted notion of the deity. God is the all 4
:
nothing
failure
5
is
for
Him
impossible.
;
Zeus governs
all
He
bestows success or
and immortals, with mighty hand. 6 Nor purposes accomplishes are the deeds of men hid from the all-seeing eyes of
law, which governs mortals
its
God. 7 Only beautiful and noble traits can be attri he who accuses it of human buted to the deity
;
2
3
4
^
:
upon God.
Fr. 119
x. 29.
;
Pyth.
ii.
49,
88
Kem.
6
7
Fr. 146.
01.
01.
i.
Clement appears to give the words beginning ri as a quotadon, it seems hardly likely that they can have stood in
Pindar. Perhaps Pindar used the words 0ebs rb nav in the same sense that Sophocles said
64
Pyth.
iii.
28
ix. 42.
8
i.
28,
where, with a
curious combination of credulity and rationalism, the story of the feast of the Gods in the house of Tantalus is declared
ILLUSTRATED
BY DIDACTIC
POETRY.
<
exalted position of God, man occupies thereto a twoOn the one hand he has a nature fold attitude.
CHAP
the race of men, the race of Gods is another, yet both descend from the same mother ; hence in nature and spirit mortals
related to that of the
;
Gods
one
is
are not altogether unlike immortals. hand, looking at their power, there
2
On
is
the other
infinite
an
difference,
for changeful is
our
lot,
sorrow
us ever near together. 3 True wisdom, therefore, consists in not transgressing the bounds of what is human, in looking to the Gods for all that is
lie for
good, in taking with contentment what they bestow. 6 Seek not to be a God, exclaims the poet mor
:
tality
becomes mortals
will,
like Bellerophon,
where
God
hand
determined by destiny. 6 From the deity comes all virtue and knowledge 7 and doubtless for this very
;
being a gift of God, natural talent is Pindar far above all acquirements, and placed by the creative spirits on whom it has been bestowed,
reason, as
above
all
is
above
supplied by the carrying off of Pelops by Poseidon. 1 This, rather than the identity of both sexes, must be the meaning of the words avSpuv fv Qewv yevos men form a race by themselves, the Gods form another different therefrom.
:
which was
aluvos, comes from God alone, and proves its higher nature during the sleep of the body in
v.
14
vii. 42.
5
Fr. 85,
where probably
eV
stands for
6
4s.
Nem.
vi. 1.
According to
Pyth.
Pyth. i.41
24
CHAP,
We
bear His
;
adapt yoke without kicking against the pricks seek not what is impos yourself to circumstances beware of sible ; in all things observe moderation
; ;
highly placed
give greater weight to his moral not unfrequently appeals to a future retribution, of the wicked as well as of the good, sometimes following herein the received notions
Nay more,
to
counsels, he
3 of respecting Tartarus, Elysium, and the islands the blest, at other times connecting therewith a belief in the migration of souls. 4 In the main,
Pindar
platform, both religious and moral, is not different from that of ^Eschylus, albeit the thought of divine vengeance does not stand out with him in
s
Would we
see this
view of
life
in transition to
O)
Hero-
the later form, no better example can be selected than Herodotus. This friend of Sophocles, in writing
history,
1
be guided by the
by some
Accor-
01.
;
ii.
ix.
100
;
Nem.
i.
25
2
iii.
40.
iii. 21, 59, Pyth. ii. 34, 88 103; xi. 50; Fr. 201. 3 01. ii. 56 Fr. 106, 120. Fr. 108 seems only to presuppose the current notions, with this difference, that a more intense life is attributed to souls in Hades than was the view of Homer and the mass of the people. Fr. 109 is pro;
ii.
68.
ding to the latter passage, in which Pindar is most explicit, reward or punishment follows in Hades. Some few distinguished men are allowed to return to life, and may, by a
threefold life of innocence, enjoy the higher bliss on the
islands of the blessed.
ILLUSTRATED BY HISTORIANS.
notions
of olden times.
He
CHAP.
1 divine providence in the order of nature, and equally clearly in the fortunes of men, and especially in
punishment, which overtakes the guilty, even though he have acted in the excess of an excusable passion. 2
3 Popular forms of worship are honoured by him, as he does that every nation likes its own knowing
; only a madman, he says, can treat these with disdain. 4 Credulous, too, he is, so far as to relate, in all good faith, divers wonders and pro
rites best
phecies, among them some of the most extraordinary Even his piety is of an antique type, affected kind. with that fear of the divine powers which is so
peculiarly suited to natural religion, where the ex altation of Grods above men is not conceived of as an
essential difference,
Man
his
is
but is more physical than moral. not destined to enjoy perfect good fortune ;
;
life is exposed to changes innumerable death no one may be called happy nay it
;
before
is
even
a general matter for doubt whether death is not better for a man than life. 6 He who in prosperity
imagination soars above the lot of men, is in variably struck by the envy of the Deity, which, jealous of its privileges, will not brook a mortal
or
rival.
1
All this
is
quite in agreement
5
with
65
;
the
ix.
ii.
vii. 12,
57
viii. 37,
vi.
84
viii.
3
129;
vii. 133.
For this reason he hesitates to utter the names of Egyptian Gods in a context which might
desecrate them,
ii. 86, or to speak of Egyptian mysteries. 4 iii. 38.
tains no doubt.
6
7
ii.
31.
On
i.
32. 34
CHAP,
Greece.
For
the son of an
to shake
epoch, in
the foundations of a simple faith. Notwithstanding the naivete with which he tells many a wonder ; T there
are times
when he cannot
resist
^
.
plain away the marvels of legend, either referring them to natural causes in the rationalising spirit of
the Sophists, or at least mentioning such explana tions given by others with approval. Thus the
is
referred
to
a very
common
The prophetic doves of Dodona turn into trick. 3 The Egyptian stories re Egyptian priestesses.
specting Paris and Helena are preferred to those of 4 Homer, and the general tradition of the Greeks, on grounds far removed from ancient poetry. When
he- interposed
Add
to this that
men know
i.
60.
8.
ii.
120.
2 3
i.
vii. 129.
ii.
56.
ILLUSTRATED
1
BY
HISTORIANS.
27
and it will be patent, how much doubt had already taken the place of the ancient faith. In Thucydides, the next great historian, doubt
Orods,
CHAP.
(ft)
Thu-
has gone over into the matter of fact treatment of The high moral tone of his style no one history.
in its unfinished form his history of the Peloponnesian war has all the effect of a touchingwill deny.
cyc
Even
This effect, however, is secured simply tragedy. by a plain setting forth of historical facts, without introducing the interposition of the (rods to explain
events.
is
scription,
how deeply he
moral but religious of his country. 2 Yet the rule of the deity and of moral order in the world is only
apparent in his pages by the progress of events. Convinced that human nature is always the same,
he exhibits moral laws by showing how in the case before him ruin naturally resulted from the weakness
and the passions of men, which he knows so well and can judge so impartially. 3 Nowhere is a belief betrayed in those extraordinary occurrences, in which the hand of Grod manifests itself in Herodotus.
Where
cotemporaries see the fulfilment of a he contents himself with sober criticism. 4 prophecy, To depend on oracles instead of using remedies, he
his
calls
1
5
;
he openly expresses
30
;
ii.
See the well-known passages ii. 53 iii. 82. s iii. 82, 84 and in the description of the Sicilian expedition, its motives and results,
;
is,
For instance, ii. 17, 54. v. 103, where the Athenian without doubt, expressings
the writer
opinion,
28
disapproval of the disastrous superstition of In the panegyric of the dead, 2 which is Nicias. 1 quite as much a memorial of his own spirit as of the
his
spirit of Pericles, there is
history of Athens, that hackneyed theme of earlier panegyrists ; but instead thereof, there is a states
man s mind
His history is a brilliant evidence of a mature judg ment, of high intellectual culture, of a many-sided
of a calm, unimpassioned, pene It is a trating, and morally sober view of the world. work which kindles the highest respect not only for the
experience of
life,
such a genius. Nor yet does this work conceal the darker sides of
/
Eead only the descriptions it gives 3 of that period. the confusion of all moral notions in the factious
struggles of the Peloponnesian war, of the desolation of Athens by the plague, of the decline of piety and self-sacrifice, of the running riot of all the selfish
passions, to be satisfied of the decay of moral excel lence, even in that period of might and culture. Be
yond
all question, along with this outward change of conduct, universal convictions were shaken also in proof of which, Thucydides puts in the mouth of
;
and particularly of those coming from Athens, naked avowals of the most selfish principles, such as could only come from the
several
of his
speakers,
some one of the younger Sophists. All who have the power seek to rule no one is restrained by
lips of
;
1
vii. 50.
ii.
35.
ii.
53
iii.
82.
ILLUSTRATED BY COMEDY.
considerations of right from pursuing his advantage by hook and by crook ; the rule of the stronger is
at bottom every one what is right and honourable by his own judges even the best regulated interests and enjoyments
29
CHAP.
on this idea, at least- in their foreign rela These and such like utterances are put into tions. the mouths of Athenian popular men and ambassa
states act
Even those who have to from Athenian self-seeking are in the end 2 Have we not here moral hardly able to blame it. and political conditions keeping exact pace with the
dors on every opportunity.
suffer
1
however
was bringing upon them, they were able to control it, or to run counter to the spirit of their times. Take, for
ua
s.
example, Aristophanes. This poet, an enthusiastic Aristou admirer of the good old time, as he paints it with its p
steady morality,
its its
strict
education,
its
military
prowess,
warms
to his
of Marathon. 4
With implacable
satire,
now
in the
form of bantering jest, now in that of bitter earnest ness, he lashes the innovations which have taken the
place
of
time-honoured
with
40
v.
running
1
riot
its
institutions
i.
76
iii.
89, 105,
nians, 676.
3
Ill;
2
3 4
vi. 85.
Wasps; Clouds,
568.
The
iv. 61.
moral
idea, fallen
from
its
its
artistic
height
l
;
sophistic
culture
with
fruitless
speculations,
dangerous alike to faith and morals, the produce of shameless quibblers, atheistic rationalisers, 2 or con
scienceless perverters of justice,
citizens
instead of steady
ancient
is
and sober-minded men. Love for what is with him undeniably an affair of personal
conviction.
Of this
beauty of those passages which set forth the praise of the olden time and its customs. Greater proof still lies in the general tone of his comedies.
classic
and
Boastful himself, with reason, of the courage with which he discharged his duty as a citizen against
3 Cleon, he extracts even from us the testimony of his being an honourable man fighting for a principle.
Whilst warmly taking the field against the spirit of innovation, he at the same time not only presup poses this spirit in his audience, but actually
and promotes it. Demagogues and syco he lasbes yet whilst lashing them he tells phants
furthers
;
us that every place is full of them that democracy has a hundred heads, ever full of vitality ; that the
;
Athenian people, like a childish old man, are always the victim of the most impudent of their flatterers that the steady men of the older generation are just as eager for their judicial dues as the whole body of
;
that the
951
Frogs, 1491.
ILLUSTRATED BY COMEDY.
young champions of Spartan bauched as the demagogues
;
31
severity are as
}
de-
CHAP.
that the sovereign after the re-establishment of Solon s constitu people, tion, has gone on as capriciously as before, only
2 wanting female government to complete the folly. Even in his plays he indulges in the arts of the
demagogue and the sycophant Socrates he slanders, and many another as heartily as any rhetorician could do and to outbid those who squandered the public property in order to bribe the people, he tells the
;
;
citizens of
Athens that
if
they ought to receive far more than they did. For a reform in religion and morals, the prospects with him are bad. He praises the moral training of the
little
ancients, but observes with a smile that morality is at home amongst his hearers, 4 and finds the
vices
natural. 5
from which his people suffered at bottom very Women he brings on the staere to lash O O
;
their licentiousness
presents as so
but that licentiousness he re deep and so general, that there can be hope of improvement. He makes an on hardly slaught on the philosophers who deny the Grods, but in one of his first comedies he gives us to understand,
6 that belief in his time rested on trembling feet. 7 Not only here and there, but in whole acts and
8
plays,
1
Birds, 38. Eccles. v. 456 conf Plato, Kep. viii. 563, B. 3 Wasps, 655. 4 Clouds, 1055.
Wasps
Knights, 32.
; ;
;
Clouds, 369, 396, 900, 1075 Eccles. 778 Birds, 554, 1608 Plut. 123, 697.
Compare
;
148
Frogs,
Frogs,
Peace, and
priests,
human
level
and to what
low and
common
in which they resemble men nakedly and minutely making the world of (rods, like that of men, turn in
such a wild whirl, that neither the spectator who takes delight in this perverted world, nor yet the poet, can have any real respect for beings who are so readily and recklessly at the service of his
imagination.
license of
Much
l ;
of this
may be
attributed to the
comedy
to
show that the poet himself, as well as his audience, had strayed far from the ancient morality
so regretfully wishes to recall fanatical devotion, like Rousseau s wild
;
which he
that his
dream of
returning to a state of nature, is only the outcome of discontent with the present, only the expres sion of a romantic idea, not a sentiment pene
life, and ruling his thought Thus everywhere where we touch feelings. upon them, the age and the surroundings from which Attic philosophy came forth appear penetrated
and
by a spirit of innovation, rendering it impossible for the most decided lovers of antiquity to adhere to the life and beliefs of their ancestors.
C. The problem
Amongst other signs of this change, one pheno menon deserves to be noticed, which appears about
fc
.
forms of
religious
the time of the Peloponnesian war the increasing spread of the worship of the mysteries, and of sooth
saying
in
worship.
connection therewith.
1
Hitherto,
the
Pint. 665.
ILLUSTRATED
BY NEW RELIGIOUS
IDEAS.
CHAP
I.
,33
reputed predictions of the older prophets had been 1 appealed to indeed, as is the wont of men, but only in exceptional cases ; now the mischief and abuse which
pitch. writers
To judge by
of this
this
Orphic and Corybantic mysteries probably gained at time both ground and supporters. 3 Such an
more than
Looking at it from an outside point of it was one thing to seek counsel from public view,
one respect.
oracles
rites
;
naturalised
a very differ-
and
Part
;
I.
;
(Phasdo, 69, C.
in Aristophanes, who loses no opportunity of lashing the pro phets. Not to mention cursory attacks, as in Clouds, 330 Birds, 521; in Knights, 109,
;
364, B. Laws, vi. 782, C.), and more particularly Euripides and The former Aristophanes. (Hippol. 949) describes Hippo-
818,
767),
30, 967 (comp. Lysist. he shows what liberal use Cleon and other demagogues
of superstition to natter the self-love of the people, and to direct its will by the socalled prophecies of Bakis. In Peace, 1047, he introduces a
made
prophet Hierocles, who, from interested motives, opposes the conclusion of peace, and is evidently meant for a real in the Birds, 959, a person prophet, who thrusts himself in at the founding of a city, to catch a trifle. Such like pheno mena may have given occasion
;
and the Curetes, devotes himself to an Orphic life. The latter not only depicts (in the Frogs, 145, 312) the life of the initiated and uninitiated in Hades as rudely and vividly as the consecrated priests do in
reus,
lytus as a pupil of Orpheus, and (Fr. 475) introduces a mystic, who, initiated into the orgies of Idasan Zeus, of Zag-
Plato, but also (in Peace, 374) hints at the opinion that man cannot die quietly without re ceiving initiation before death, and (in Wasps, 119) alludes to the custom of initiating the sick for the purpose of healing
them.
34
CHAP,
and
claiming to elevate all who took part in it as the special elect above the mass of mankind, both in this
What was this increasing fondness for private worship and irregular prophecy but a proof that the public religion was not altoge ther satisfactory, whilst it contributed at the same
time to intensify the
evil ?
Looking
In
it,
at
its real
from the
life.
the notions
of the gods, flowing into each other, begin to lose l their distinctness ; perhaps even the tendency to
resolve all into pantheism, which may be already seen in individuals in the fifth century, may be referred
thereto. 2
human
The conception of human life and of nature has assumed an altered character,
owing to a clearer belief in immortality, introduced by the dogmas of the migration of souls and of
1 This is more immediately true in the case of Dionysus, In mystic theology this God, as the representative of the changing life of nature, dying in winter, reviving in spring, was honoured under the name
be found the God in whose service they were enlisted. At a later time, following Heraclitus example, Dionysus was identified with Plato. See
Zeller s Gesch. d. Phil. Vol. 51, 3 592, 5.
;
I.
On this the nether world. account the Dionysus-mysteries are so important for the future
life.
Besides the extracts from Euripides already quoted, p. 19, 1, compare the fragment in Clemens, Stromat. v. 603, D,
JVauck, Fragm. Trag. 588, attributes in all probability to ^Eschylus son Euphorion Zeus fariv alOrjp, Zeus 5e 7?}, Zeus r ovpavbs Zevs roi TO.
:
which
(Plato, Phgedo, 69, C. comp. AristopJi^ Frogs) may be promised life in Hades with the
Gods,
surely
-ndvro
x&~
ILLUSTRATED
future retribution
BY NEW RELIGIOUS
l ;
IDEAS.
35
and even of
this
change traces
CHAP.
I.
may be
seen in the poetry of the time of Euripides. 2 Lastly, in connection herewith an ascetic code of morals 3 has come into vogue, enjoining abstinence
from animal food, 4 celibacy, 5 the avoidance of certain 6 and the wearing of white clothing. defilements, Philosophy, it is true, could only appropriate in an
intellectual
form the general idea of this asceticism, the renunciation of what belongs to the senses. Not till a later time did it embrace it as a whole with
all
its
belongings, in the system of the Neopythagoreans. Before that time came, thanks to
external
brilliant career.
1
Comp.
Zeller,
Vol.
I.
54,
Besides Euripides (p. 19, 1), Melanippides (Fr. 6 in Bergk, Lyr. Gr. p. 982) appears to have regarded the soul as immortal,
lo, too (Fr. 4 in BergTt, p. 464),
holds up Hippolytus as a type of an Orphic, probably only because this despiser of Aphro dite (Hippol. 10, 101), by his
of of chastity also occurs in Electra. v. 254, and it is well known that marriage was forbidden to
typical
chastity,
reminds
Orphic virginity.
A vow
appropriates the
Pythagorean
belief in immortality. reso lution of souls into aether may also be implied in the popular belief mentioned by Aristo
many
priestesses,
though more
phanes (Peace, 832), that the dead become stars. 8 See Euripid., Hippol. 949 Fr. 475 Plato, Laws, vi. 782, C., comparing therewith the principles of Empedocles and
;
;
veKpo9f)KTf)S
ou xpt/iT nfyiej/os
16),
(Eu-
Pythagoras.
4
consequently the same naOapcvew airb /nrjSous Kal \exovs (touching a corpse or woman who has been con fined), which the Pythagorean of Alexander in Polyhister Birth Diff., viii. 33 requires.
regarded as pollu
Tlwc.
iii.
ting.
Taur. 372
104.
D 2
36
CHAPTEE
II.
THE age
had
a rich treasure of religious ideas, of moral principles, and scientific conceptions ; at the
gone before
%
it had declined at every point from the Traditional tone of thought and custom. new paths lines seemed now to be all too narrow
same time
earlier
new problems
had
The legendary
and the
meaning
for
the great majority of the educated ; l the very exist ence of the Grods had been denied by many; ancient
the orderliness of
the simplicity and purity of domestic life, had given place to a wanton dissoluteness of conduct,
and an unscrupulous pursuit of pleasure and profit. Principles subversive of all law and of all right were
^
the
cheerful
approval of the younger generation. The severity and grandeur of the earlier art, the lucid beauty, the
classic grace, the self-contained dignity of the later
art,
i.
330, D.
ILLUSTRATED
mere
effect
;
BY PROGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY.
1
37
whilst under the influence of sophistry, had come to disbelieve, not only in indiphilosophy vidual systems, but also in the whole course of previous enquiry, and even in the possibility of know
CHAP
ledge at
all.
Far, however, from being exhausted hereby, the spirit of Greece was only completely delivered by Its the throes and struggles of the fifth century.
thought was sharp ened its views and conceptions enriched. Its whole consciousness had gained a new field since its suc
mental horizon was widened
;
;
its
cess in renowned exploits and glorious undertakings. If the meridian of classic art and of free political life was past towards the close of this period, still
the newly-awakened culture of the understanding was full of intellectual promise for the future for
;
Some new and was called for to satisfy not only thorough change Ancient practical but also intellectual requirements. of conduct, and the received philosophic propriety
suggesting,
not accomplishing.
teaching having been once ousted by the altered spirit of the times, simple return thereto became im
possible.
But
to despair
all
on this account of
all
knowledge, and of
principles of morality, was most Allowing even that the received view
by no means followed, that all science, and all morality was impossible. On the contrary, the more the pernicious conse
quences of such a view were exposed, the more urgent became the duty of avoiding them by a thorough
38
transformation of the
thought, without, however, attempting the impos sible task of simply restoring the past.
A. Dist mc-
Socratio
What
fromprepMlosojffJty.
that path should be, a far-sighted eye could discern with sufficient clearness by the aid of the
experience of the past. Traditional propriety of conduct had given way before the spirit of innovation,
pre-Sooratic tradl-
inasmuch as it rested upon instinct and custom, auc no t on any clear recognition of necessity. He
j.
Socmtio
7
estl?
!f
life
must found it upon knowledge. Earlier philosophy had been unable to satisfy the requirements of the times, because it had been directed exclusively
to a study of nature
;
men
it
did not give sufficient preliminary education for the work of life, nor to the thinking spirit any clue to
the problem of
its
New
philo
must direct its attention to the sphere of mind and morals, and work into shape the ample supply of ethical ideas underlying Earlier sys religion, poetry and received custom. tems had succumbed before the doubts of sophistry, inasmuch as their method was too one-sided, depend
sophy must meet
this want,
(
ing too little on definite conceptions respecting the nature and problem of knowledge to be able to with
stand a searching criticism which destroyed their several platforms by means of each other, and argued
from the change and uncertainty of the phenomena of the senses that knowledge must be impossible.
No
ILLUSTRATED
BY PROGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY.
39
by laying the foundations deeper, except by finding some means of supplementing these several points
of view
CHAP.
1 contradictory in some higher bond of union, and of grasping the unchangeable essence of things amid
changing appearances. The means wanted was sup plied by Dialectic, the art of forming conceptions, and the result was philosophical Idealism. Thus the
knowledge of the faults and deficiencies in existing circumstances led naturally to the turn taken by
Scientific philosophy after the time of Socrates. became necessary because of the tottering of moral convictions ; a wider enquiry, because of the
ethics
narrowness of the philosophy of nature ; a critical method, because of the contradiction of dogmatic
systems ; a philosophy of conceptions, because of the uncertainty of the observations of the senses ; Ideal ism, because of the unsatisfactory nature of a materia
listic
Precisely these features distinguish the Socratic philosophy from that of the previous period. The
The
a pre-Socratic philosophy was simply and solely a *?/% 2 philosophy of nature; the transitional philosophy nature; of the Sophists was the first
ethical
to
leave
nature for
tlC Of COIl
and
dialectical questions.
is
After
Socrates
oeptians.
supreme.
tion was exclusively occupied with determining con With ceptions, and enquiries respecting virtue.
rare exceptions the imperfect Socratic schools con1
Comp.
Zeller s
I.
Phil,
der
I.
Griechen, Part
p. 854, 860.
155.
40
same
field
Plato, founding
his system in conceptions, completing it in morals, forms a marked contrast to the natural philosophers, who went before him. Even in Aristotle who treats
of physics in detail and with an evident prefer ence for the subject, they are only a single branch of a system, and in point of value subordinate to
metaphysics.
-V
what had been before ? For the same reason the In previous philosophic method was a different one. had dealt directly with its obphilosophy thought In the Socratic and post-Socratic / as such. ec f J
i
systems
it
concep-,
an(j on jy ith objects indirectly, through the medium The older systems asked, without of conceptions.
instance, whether
further ado, what predicates belonged to things ; for what is real admits of motion or
not
is
made.
The
Socratic philosophy ever asks, in the first place, what things are in themselves according to their concep
thinking not otherwise to obtain information respecting their properties and conditions than by
tion,
the help of the conception of things thoroughly mastered. No conception of a thing can, however,
1
1
ment in the
Phsedo, 99,
After
41
various
CHAP.
contradictions,
by separating what
lasting
from
what is changing, in a word, by that critical method, (i)Definiwhich Socrates introduced, and which Plato and Aris- conceptwn totle elaborated and developed. Former philosophers
"
having gone forth from particular prominent features to arrive at the essence of things, and having failed because of their one-sidedness it was now required
;
that all the properties of an object should be taken: into account and weighed from every side, before a
Thus the judgment could be formed thereupon. ilosophy of conceptions steps into the place of dogph matism. In this way reflection which by means of sophistry had destroyed the older philosophy was taken into the service of the new philosophy the
;
various aspects under which things may be regarded, were brought together and referred to each other ; but
not content with the negative conclusion that our notions cannot be true because they contain opposite determinations, the new philosophy aimed at uniting
these opposites in one, and showing that true science is not affected by contradiction, inasmuch as it only refers to that which unites opposites in itself, and
excludes contradiction.
with the enquiries of the natural philosophers he declares
himself convinced, that he has only got into deeper darkness by directing his enquiries into things in themselves. (TO. ovra irpbs ra
auruv.)eSo^
\6yovs
Ka.Ta$vy6vTa. eV
(TKOTTC IV TQJV
ovrwv
rrjv
(the true essence of things), i.e. instead of irpdy^ara., \6yoi, instead of ovra, a\-fideia rwv
ovr<av.
42
through conceptions
is
the
common
peculiarity of
_J
the Socratic, the Platonic, and the Aristotelian philo That the lesser Socratic schools follow the sophy.
same bent
If only conceptions can give true knowledge, it follows that true being can only belong to that which
is
known by means
of conceptions
that
is,
to the
sought
Anaxagoras had early realised that matter could only become a world by means of spirit since then the old materialistic physics had been
;
;
discredited by sophistry
regard the form and purpose of things, the immaterial part in them as most essential for determining the
conceptions, nay, even to assign to it a true reality underlying the appearance. In this way the Socratic
philosophy led logically to Idealism. // The beginnings of this Idealism are unrnistaka^j e even j n Socrates.
panded
6
%
^
PUto and conclusively that he attributed to the inner world a Aristotle. much higher value than to the outer world. Kesolve
his theory of final causes applied to nature into the
metaphysical elements out of which it is composed the conclusion is inevitable that not the material of
;
which a thing
made, but the conception which gives it shape, makes a thing what it is, and that This this accordingly represents its true nature.
is
Idealism is more pronounced in the school of Megara ; and in Plato it runs through all parts of his philo-
>
ILLUSTRATED
BY PROGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY.
faithless to this view.
4
CHAP.
Whilst denying the independent existence of the Platonic ideas, he nevertheless asserts that reality
matter but in form, and that the matter. highest reality belongs to spirit free from his physics, agree On this ground he states even in
consists not in
ing herein with his predecessors, that final causes are Compared therefore higher than material causes.
with the
natural philosophers of the pre-Socratic even Aristotle may fairly be called an Idealist. period, Starting from a consideration of nature, the pre-
Socratic philosophy made it its chief business to en quire into the essence and causes of external things,
for this
ties.
entirely different character is displayed in This begins the philosophy founded by Socrates. with the study of self rather than the study of nature with ethics rather than physics. It aims at
An
explaining phenomena,
first
of
all
by means of con
It ceptions, and only in the second place naturally. substitutes an attitude of enquiry for dogmatic state
ment, idealism in the place of materialism. Mind is now regarded as the higher element compared with
matter.
The philosophy
into a philosophy of conceptions. Not that as yet the claim was advanced on be-
half of the
human mind
to be the
measure of truth
-
Far from reaching the sub- from # ost idealism of Fichte an idealism in fact only tianphilojective
and the end of science.
in
possible
modern times
ll>
J-
period
is
telian schools. 1
regarded only as a
means
to virtue
whereas the independent value of science is fully ad mitted by the great philosophers of the present
period.
To them knowledge
is
is
an end in
;
itself
speculation
is
action
depend upon knowledge, not knowledge to depend upon the aims of active life. Only a few one-sided followers of Socrates, who, however, prove nothing as to the general tendency, are an exception
to
made
to this rule.
the attain-
A simple belief in the possibility of knowledge here displayed which was wanting in the postAristotelian philosophy. The doubts of the Sophists
is
the
mind
of the
philosopher
there
is
The problem
proposed
How
in what kind of mental representations must it be sought, how must the conception of it be deter
mined ?
No doubt
is
felt
really possible.
The search
later schools
altogether
unknown unknown
1
Equally
to
them
the
knowledge
;
(eTrKmrjjurj 6, ri trore
ILLUSTRATED
They did
BY PROGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY.
and
Stoics, cut
it.
CHAP.
short the question by practically begging They did not, as did the Sceptics, despair of knowledge.
They did
higher revelations.
well-regulated thought Even that branch of science, the independent pursuit of which was much neglected by later thinkers
the
source
of
truth.
was studied in this epoch with success. physics Socrates and the majority of his pupils may have
neglected
it,
and Aristotle
carries it
to a point final in the main for nearly two thousand If the post- Aristotelian Ethics proved at last years.
faithless to the principles of the old
Greek morality,
partly under the influence of a world-wide extension, partly owing to their severance from politics, owing to the withdrawal of the moral consciousness from
the outer world, owing to a dumb resignation and a the difference of epochs in this sour asceticism
;
simply seen by recalling the many-sided sympathies of Socrates, with his cheerful enjoyment
respect
of
is
life,
that of Aristotle concerning virtue and society, or the relation of the Cyrenaic to the Epicurean doc trine of happiness. 1
true that the philosophy of this second period attempts in ethics to get beyond the established bounds ? It supplements the propriety of custom by a
Is
it
(2) Dis~
^YA?^
Comp.
Zeller,
1,
c.,
i.
139.
more
definitely than the ordinary view between the It requires a outward deed and the intention.
what
is
ideal.
is
A universal philanthropy is not lost in local patriotism: and taught, which accordingly the state is only regarded as an institu
tion for the attainment of virtue and happiness, and not as the final moral cause. For all that this period
removed from the apathy of either Stoic or Epicurean, from the imperturbability of the Sceptic,
is
far
not to sever
from the asceticism of the Neoplatonist. It seeks man in his moral activity from nature
;
with Aristotle
a natural gift
of
;
it
regards virtue as the perfection of with Plato it advances from the love
what
is
what
is
It requires the philosopher to morally beautiful. fellowmen. The world-citizenship of a work for his later time is absent ; absent too is its nationality and
political life.
classic
world, and a narrow withdrawal therefrom. Compared with the pre-Socratic era, the age of Socrates is characterised by the diversion of philo
sophy from external nature to thought or to ideas. Compared with the following age, it is marked by
its thought, that is, by the fact not ultimately thrown back on himself and the certainty of his own knowing, but
on attaining to the knowledge of what is in itself In short its theory of a knowledge of real and true.
ILLUSTRATED
conceptions
BY PROGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY.
its its
determines
character.
From
this
CHAP.
breadth of view reaching theory may alike beyond the physical one-sidedness of the preSocratic, and the moral one-sidedrjess of the postAristotelian schools, its critical
to the earlier
be deduced
and
later
without, however, entailing any withdrawal therefrom. The development of tHis theory was carried
-De-
out in a simple and natural order by three philoso- Of ^ie phic schools, the founders of which belong to three &cratic
and are personally connected First comes Socrates assert that the standard of human thought and action ing lies in a knowledge of conceptions, and teaching his followers to acquire this knowledge by dealing
successive generations, 1 as teachers arid pupils.
philoso-
phy.
~f
with notions
critically.
objective conceptions are in the true sense the only real things, a derivative reality belonging to all other things, a view which he upheld by a more
critical analysis,
and developed to a system. Lastly, Aristotle arrived at the conclusion that in a thing the conception itself constitutes its real essence and
moving power.
scientific
By an
method, he showed how conceptions were to be formed and applied to particulars, and by a most
comprehensive enquiry into the several parts of the universe, he examined the laws and connection of
conceptions, and the thoughts which determine all that really is. Socrates had as yet no system. He
1
(1) So
crates.
Comp.
Zeller,
1,
9, 136, 142.
48
CHAP.
Convinced]
that only in acquiring conceptions is true knowledge/ to be found, that true virtue consists in acting*
according to conceptions, that even the world has been ordered in accordance with definite conceptions,:
and therefore shows design, in any given case he tries by a critical testing of prevailing notions to gain a conception of the object with which he has to deal, and to this he devotes all his powers, to the conclusion of every other interest. But he never went beyond this formal treatment. His teaching was confined to general requirements and presump tions. His importance lies not in a new view of
things, but in a new conception of knowledge, and in the way he forms this conception, in his view of
the problem and method of science, in the strength of his philosophical bent, and in the simplicity of his
(2) Plato.
philosophical life. The Socratic search for conceptions has grown in Plato to a discovery of them, to a certainty of pos
sessing them,
With him
objective thoughts or ideas are the only real things. Mere idealess existence or matter as such is simply
things else are made up partly of is not ; they therefore are in proportion to the part they have in the only real idea. Granting that this is in advance of the
non-existent
all
what
is
Socratic view,
it
is
no
less
The Platonic
ideas, as
Met,
i. 6,
987, b,
1.
ILLUSTRATED
BY PROGRESS OF PHILOSOPHY.
40
conceptions, which Socrates had arrived at, separated They are also the
CHAP.
central point of the speculations of Aristotle. With him the conception or the form constitutes the
essence, the reality,
and
is
as it
only form without matter, simple spirit thinking of itself, is absolutely real ; only thought is to man the most intense reality, and therefore also
things
;
^re
Yet there is this the most intense pleasure in life. difference between Aristotle and Plato, that whereas
Plato separates the conception from the appearance,
as an I$a 9 Aristotle, it as independent in things themselves, without, however, implying that form stands in need of matter to be come actual, since it is in itself actual. Moreover, Aristotle will not remove the idea out of the world
regarding
it
places
of
appearances,
because
it
cannot in
a state
of
separation serve as a connecting link between indi vidual things, nor can it be the cause and substance
Thus the theory is seen to be one and the same which Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle represent
of things.
at different stages of growth.
In Socrates
it is
un
developed, but full of vitality, pushing itself forward through the husk of earlier philosophy in Plato it
;
has grown to a pure and independent existence and in Aristotle it has overspread the whole world of being and consciousness, exhausting itself in the
;
effort,
in later systems.
Socrates, so to speak, is the preg nant germ, Plato the rich bloom, Aristotle the ripe E
50
CHAP,
\
of Greek philosophy
historical growth.
(4) Diffi-
One phenomenon
torical chain,
fall
eaused by Socratic
Greek thought, viz. the imperfect attempts to expand the Socratic principle which are seen in the Megarian, the Cynic, and the Cyrenaic schools. Tn
of
a real and essential progress of the consciousness was not indeed to be found, philosophic inasmuch as philosophy, which had arrived at any
these
schools
Socrates at
objective knowledge, such as could only be found in a system, was by them limited to subjective train
ing of thought and character. Nor yet can they be For not only were said to be wholly unimportant. at a later period starting points for Stoicism, they,
moted, independently of this, many scientific enqui by means of which they exercised an undeniable
The same
case
is
met
both of which had no independent influence on the growth of philosophy, but yet cannot be overlooked
Of all these phenomena one and the same thing must be said. Their chief importance lies
in
its history.
not in their having expanded a principle theoretically, but in their having been practically helpful in ad
by preserving the older forms of culture for cotemporaries to see, here and there improving and widening them, and by thus keeping the philovancing
it,
61
mind
CHAP.
schools
is
not
met with
until philosophy
had attained a
certain general extension, in Greece not until the time of Socrates and Plato. Whereas Plato, by sum
ming up
all
their existence
after his
for
ward which did not propagate the time that Neoplatonism put the coping-stone on Greek philosophy, in and with which all previous
systems were extinguished.
a school until
many
few of
them
The
and
cannot, i n considering the peculiar philosophical character of an age, be taken further into account.
They need
therefore only to
be mentioned by the
historian in a passing way. This statement applies to the imperfect followers of Socrates. Their doc
trines are not
an advancement in principle, but only incomplete reproductions of Socratic views, and con nected with Socrates in the same way that the elder
Academy
is
with Aristotle.
E2
PAET
II.
SO CRA TES.
CHAPTER
III.
^ 7* -
A ff
THERE
is
whose importance
bound
up with his personal character as a man as it was in the case of Socrates. Every system, it is true, as
being the work of a definite person, may best be studied in the light of the peculiarities, culture, misfortunes and circumstances of its author yet in
;
it is easier to
life
of their intellectual
;
from
they grew doctrines can generally be received and handed down quite unchanged by men of very dif
ferent characters.
is
His teaching aimed far less at which can be equally well em braced by different men 5 than at a special tone of life and thought, at a philosophic character and the
art of intellectual enquiry, in short, at a
HIS LIFE.
53
CHAP. but to be propagated freely, others being stirred to an analogous development of their peculiarities. __ up So much the more anxious should this make us for
detailed information as to the training of a character which has had so powerful an influence on history.
What Here a very common difficulty meets us. Socrates was, and how he acted in his riper years, is well known but only the roughest outline is pre Over the served of the circumstances of his life.
;
earlier part of it
deep darkness rests. For the history of his intellectual and moral training, if we except a
few scanty and for the most part untrustworthy statements of earlier writers, we are left entirely to
conjecture.
The youth and early manhood of Socrates fall in Born the most brilliant period of Grecian history. the last years of the Persian war, 1 he was during
1
in the life of Socrates is the date of his death. According to Demetrius PJialereus and
Apollodorus (in Diog. ii. 44), it happened in Olympiad 95, 1 (Diod. xiv. 37), probably in the second half of the month
Thargelion.
the
condemned in April or 399 B.C., and have suff ered death in May or June the same year. Since at the time of his death he had passed his seventieth year (Plato, Apol. 17, D.), but not long (Crito,
been
May
have fallen later than 01. 77, 3, or 469 B.C. If his birthday is rightly fixed for the 6th Thargelion (Apoll. in Diog. ii. 44, Pint. Qu. Conv. viii. 1, 1, JElian, V. H. ii. 25), and was not past at the time of the
judicial
enquiry,
we should
says definitely thirty days), i.e. in the month Munychion, the judicial
(Xenopfton,
Mem.
iv. 8, 2,
Socrates
have to go back for it to 470 or even 471 B.C. (Comp. Bockh. Corp. Inscript. ii. 321 L c. 7). Hermann, The question then arises whe;
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
III.
nearly cotemporary with all those great men who adorned the age of Pericles. As a citizen of Athens he participated in all those elements of culture,
which thanks to
its
congregated in that great metropolis. If poverty and low birth somewhat impeded his using them, still
ther these statements respect ing the time of his birth are and facts or a mere fiction whether the birthday of So crates, the fj.aiuriK6s, was not placed on the 6th of Thargelion to make it agree with that of Artemis, as Plato s was made to agree with Apollo s. If so,
;
guage of the Thecetet. 183, F., and the Parmen. 127, C., iravv
veos, fftyofipa j/eos.
1
cus
Plato,
(Xen. Hellen. i. 7, 15 Lach. 180, D. how Epiphanius, Exp. Fid. 1087, A.,
call
comes to
him Elbaglus,
is
he may have been born in 469 B.C. (Olym. 77, 3). Any how, Apollodorus, placing it in 468 B.C. (01. 77, 4), (Dwg. 1. c.) is wrong. Nor can the state ment noticed by Diogenes that he was only sixty years of age
was a sculptor, may be gathered from Diog. ii. 18. The services of his mother Phsenarete as a midwife are known from Plato s Theastetus, As regards circum 149, A. stances, it is stated by Demet
difficult to say)
rius Phaler. in Plutarch s Life of Aristides, c. 1, that he not only possessed land, but had seventy rainge a considerable sum at
weigh against the clear lan guage of Plato, and probably rests upon a transcriber s mis
take.
(Plat. Phil. 666,
setat. ii.
Hermann s De
observation
Philos. Jon.
A. 39) that Socrates could not have been born in the third or fourth year .of an
Olympiad, since he was twentyCalv. Enc. c. 17) at the time of his interview with Protagoras, which inter
five (Synes.
interest but this statement is at variance with the testi mony of the best witnesses. The reasons for it are without doubt quite as weak as those for a similar statement respect
;
view happened (Plato, Parm.) at the time of the Panathensea, and consequently in the third year of an Olympiad, will not
hold water. Supposing the interview to be even a fact, which is very doubtful, the remark of Synesius (Calv. Enc. c. 17) respecting the age of Socrates is a pure guess, and
altogether refuted by the lan
Plato
Rep.
i.
ii.
HIS LIFE.
in the Athens of Pericles, not even the lowest on the from enjoying the rich procity roll was debarred
fusion of art,
55
CHAP.
which was
for the
,/
to the purposes of the state, nor yet from associating with men in the highest ranks of life. This free
personal intercourse did far more to advance intellectual culture at that time than teaching in schools
;
manhood before the Sophists introduced a formal system of instruction. Intelli gible as it thus becomes, how an energetic man in the
Socrates had reached
position of Socrates could find many incitements to and means of culture, and how even he could be
away by the wonderful elevation of his native city, still nothing very accurate is known respect ing the routes by which he advanced to his subse
carried
1
quent greatness.
We may
the usual education in gymnastics and music, 2 al though the stories which are told of his teachers in
estimating his whole property,
inclusive of his cottage, at five minae. The story of Libanius (Apol. Socr. t. iii. p. 7), according to which Socrates inherited eighty minse from his father, and lost them by lending, bearing his loss with extreme composure, looks like a story intended to show the indifference of a philosopher to wealth,
Porphyry s state(in Theod. Cur. Gr. Aff i. 29, a statement unp. 8) doubtedly derived from Aris-
ment
toxenus that Socrates was too uneducated to be able to read, need scarcely be refuted by authorities such as Xen. Mem.
i.
6,
14
iv. 7, 3, 5.
Had
It is clearly
Xenophon
we may be
not have omitted to tell it. See the work of K. F. Hermann, De Socratis magistris et disciplina juvenili, Marb. 1837.
2
pher, but was readily taken hold of and exaggerated by jealousy in later times.
56
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
III.
music
learnt
deserve no credit.
We
enough of geometry to be able to grapple with difficult problems, and that he was not ignorant of
astronomy
2
;
in his youth, or only in later years, and who was his 3 see him, in mature teacher, we cannot tell. years, in relations more or less close with a number
We
of characters
and
1
beyond
xxxviii. in
Alexander (in poetry. Diog. ii. 19) calls him a pupil of Damon, whereas Sextus
(Matth.
vi.
his teacher.
have
passages in Plato, which are ir relevant. Socrates calls Connus his teacher (Menex. 235, E., and Euthyd. 272, C.), but ac cording to the latter passage he was a man at the time, so that he must have gone to Connus simply with a view to revive a skill long since ac
quired.
It is
an important from his connection with Pericles. The Phaedo, 60, C., and the Apology, 20, A., mention Euenus, yet not as a teacher, and hardly even as an acquaintance of Socrates. And lastly, the Lampo of Sex tus probably owes his existence to a mistake. Sextus may have
Socrates,
and
as
political
character,
written
Damon
instead of
29, 68,
Con
has
more probable
(however often such notices are given as historical, and with further details: Cic. ad
Quint, i. 10 Diog. ii. 32 Flor. 29, 68) that the passages in Plato refer to the Connus of the comic poet Ameipsias, from which the whole fabrication comes. See
ix.
; ;
Connus in the same connection) or else Lamprus (a name which occurs in the Menexenus, though not as that of a teacher of Socrates), and transcribers made it Lampo. The celebrated
prophet of this name cannot of course have been intended. 2 Xen. Mem. iv. 7, 3, 5. 3 Maximus 1. c. says Theodore of Gyrene, but this is only an
inference from Plato
tus,
4
Fam.
22
Val. Stob.
Max.
viii.
Theaste-
Hermann,
p.
24.
Damon
in
;
name
iii.
is
mentioned
C.,
the
Polus, Protagoras, Gorgias, Thrasymachus, but Hippias, Cf. Plato, especially Prodicus.
Prot., Gorg., Hip., Rep.
i.
Kep.
Xen.
5,
in
which musi
Mem.
ii.
1,
21
iv.
4,
&c.
Also Euripides,
who was on
LIFE.
doubt that he owed
57
much
to such relations
but
CHAP.
III.
these friends cannot in strict accuracy be described as his teachers, although we may often find them
neither is any light derived hence for further meet of his early training. the history that he must have had with expressions which show
so-called
1
;
We
and Heraclitus, of the Atomists, of Anaxagoras, and 2 Whence he derived this perhaps of Empedocles.
knowledge, it is impossible to say. The stories that he received instruction in his younger years from Anaxagoras and Archelaus, can neither be supported
by satisfactory evidence, nor are they probable in themselves. 3 Still more uncertain is his supposed intersuch intimate terms with him that the comic poets charged him with borrowing his trage
the two ladies consisted in free personal intercourse, even al lowing that Diotima is a real person, and the Menexenus a not only genuine dialogue the same applies this, but equally to Prodicus. Maximus calls Ischomachus his teacher
;
from Socrates. (Cf. Diog. 18; JEtian, V. H. ii. 13. Also Aspasia ; cf Xen. OEc. 3, 14 Mem. ii. 6, 36 ^Eschines in Cic. de Invent, i. 31 in Max. Tyr. xxxviii. 4 conf Hermann De JSsch. relig. 16 Hermesianax in AtJien. xiii.
dies
ii.
. ; ; ; ; .
599, a
we
Plato was
misunderstanding Xen. (Ec. 6, The story that he was a 17. pupil of Diagoras of Melos (the Scholiast on Aristopk. Nubes, v.
828), is obviously false.
2 3
true to facts in bringing them into connection with Socrates. 1 Socrates calls himself in Plato a pupil of Prodicus (Zeller, 1. c. i. 873, D.), of Aspa sia (Menex. 235, E.), and of Diotima (Symp. 201, D.), all of which statements have been re peated in past and present times. See Hermann, Soc.
Xen. Mem.
i.
1,
14
iv. 7, 6.
:
for
Anaxagoras, Aristid. Or. xlv., p. 21, and the nameless authori ties referred to by Diog. ii. 19 and 45, whom Suidas ScaKpdr. according to custom follows
;
ii.
16, 19,
Mag.
p. 11.
We may
by him,
Diocles.
SOCRATES.
("HAP.
Ev^en little
is
III.
known
Sextus, Porphyry (in Theod. Cur. Gr. Aff. xii. 67, p. 175), Clement of Alexandria (Strom,
302, A.), Simplicius, Eusebius (Pr. Ev. x. 14, 13, xiv. 15, 11, xv. 61, 11), Hippolytus, the spu
i.
may not have known of a jour ney which Socrates took in his earlier years. That he should have knowingly omitted to mention it, as Alberti Socr. 40
supposes, is hardly likely. It is also possible some mistake may have been made. lo may not have meant a journey to Samos, but his taking part in the expedition to Samos of 441 B.C., which, strange to say, is not mentioned in the Apology, Or the error may lie 28, E. with Diogenes, who applied to Socrates what lo had said of
rious Galen, and a few others Forsch. 210. conf. Krische, The evidence in favour of
;
Anaxagoras
is
very insufficient,
and the language respecting him used by Socrates {Plato, Phaedo, 97, B. and Xenophon, Mem. iv. 7, 6) makes it impro bable that he knew him person ally, or was acquainted with his views, except from books and hearsay, which of course does not exclude any casual or The accidental intercourse.
traditions respecting his rela tions to Archelaus are better
authenticated; yet even here there is much that is suspicious. Of the two earliest authorities, lo and Aristoxenus, the former, who \vas an older contemporary of Socrates, does not make Ar chelaus his instructor. All that
stated in Diog. ii. 23, on his authority, is that Socrates, when a young man, travelled with Archelaus to Samos. This asser tion, however, flatly contradicts Plato (Crito, 52, B.), who says that Socrates never left Athens, except once to go to the Isth mian games, or when on mili
is
Aristoxenus goes further. Ac cording to his account in Diog. Socrates was the fa ii. 16, vourite of Archelaus, or as Porphyry represents the mat ter, he became acquainted with Archelaus in his seventeenth year, lived with him many
years, and was by him initiated shall have into philosophy. occasion to notice hereafter how
We
Miiller, however, tary duty. gets over the difficulty (Frag. Hist. Gr. ii. 49, N. 9) by sup posing that Plato was only re ferring to Socrates when grown
little
dependence can be placed on the statements of Aristoxe nus respecting Socrates. Were the other statement which is to be found in Diogenes closely connected with this one, that
HIS LIFE.
was acquainted.
Phaedo
his
CHAP.
III.
natural science and the philosophy of Anaxagoras to own peculiar views. But it is most improbable
that this passage gives a historical account of his in tellectual development, if for no other reason, at
3 least for this one, that the course of
development
there leads to the Platonic theory of conceptions; let alone the fact that it is by no means certain that
Plato himself possessed any fuller information re specting the intellectual progress of his teacher. No doubt he began life by learning his father s
4
trade,
Socrates
become a
pupil of Archelaus till after the condemnation of Anaxago ras, its worthlessness would be thoroughly shown for Socrates
;
cratic teaching can be connec ted, it seems probable that he had little to do with the philo sophy of Socrates, even though
Socrates
was seventeen when Anaxago ras left Athens, and had long
passed his years of pupilage. The assertions of Aristoxenus, however, are in themselves im For supposing So probable. crates to have been on intimate terms with Archelaus, when young, twenty years before Anaxagoras was banished, how is it conceivable that he should not have known Anaxagoras ? and if he was instructed by
and
his
Besides,
<f>i\o-
Socrates
(To^nas,
self-taught
to have
philoso
pher.
1
He seems
known
those of Anaxagoras. A sup posed allusion to the writings of Heraclitus (in Diog. ii. 22), is uncertain, nor is it estab lished that he ever studied the Pythagorean doctrines (Plut.
Curios. 2). 2 96, A.
3
him in philosophy, how is it that neither Xenophon nor Plato nor Aristotle ever men tion Archelaus ? All the later authorities for the relation of the two philosophers appear to rest on Aristoxenus. As there is nothing in the teaching of with which the SoArchelaus,
As
Vblquardsen,
(Rhein.
Steinkart,
ii.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
III.
Considering
it to
be
fnis special calling to labour for the moral and intel lectual improvement of himself and others, this con
viction
appear to
forced itself so strongly upon him, as to him in the light of a divine revelation. 2
He
was, moreover, confirmed therein by a Delphic oracle, which, of course, must not be regarded as the
cause
of,
to, his
reforming
A.
How
496,
and when
B.)
Plato (Rep.
there were a wiser man than and the priestess had answered in the negative.
Socrates,
practised sculpture nor is any thing proved by the story that the Graces on the Acropolis were his work (Diog. Paus. i. No allusions are found in 22).
;
The Iambics which purport to answer in Diog. ii. 37, and Suid. belong
contain the
of
(ro<pos
course
to a
much
later
period.
crates,
Aristophanes, Plato, and Xenophon to the sculptor s art. Hence we may conclude that
Socrates ever practised it, he it up long before the play of the Clouds was acted. Duris and Demetrius of Byzantium (in Diog. ii. 19), in stating that he was a slave, and that Crito
if
the sense of the oracle, and, in the hope of finding it, he had conversed with all who made
pretensions to knowledge. At last he has found that neither he himself nor any other man was wise, but that others be lieved themselves to be wise, whilst he was conscious of his
gave
removed him from a workshop and cared for his education, appear to confound him with
Phsedo.
Plato, Apol. 33, C. TOVTO irpoffreTaKTai. TOV deov irpdrreiv Kal e/c
:
t>oi
Se
....
virb
Kal e| zvvTrvioav Kal iravrl wirep rts Trore Kal a\\t) Oeia Kal driovv
3
fjioipa
According
known
B.,
He con himself therefore pledged in the service of Apollo to a similar sifting of men, to save the honour of the oracle, which declared him, al though one so wanting in wis dom, to be the wisest of men. Allowing that Socrates really said this and there is no doubt that he uttered it in substance it by no means fol lows that his philosophical activity dated from the time
want
of
wisdom.
sidered
HIS LIFE.
dawned on him, cannot be determined.
it
Most prob
CHAP.
ITT.
ably grew gradually in proportion as he gained more knowledge of the moral and intellectual circum
and soon after the beginning of .the Peloponnesian war he had found in the main his
stances of his time,
1 philosophical centre of gravity. From that time forward he devoted himself to
the mission he had assumed, regardless of everything His means of support were extremely scanty, 2 else.
life,
3
in
Pythian oracle.
Else
what should have led Chserephon to put the question, or the oracle to give the answer
it
did ? So that if in the apo logy he speaks as though the Delphic oracle had first aroused him to sift men, it must be a
figure
new
of Without speech. going so far as Colotes (in Col. 17, 1), and Pfat. adv. Atlieiueus (v. 218) and many modern writers (Brucker, Hist. Phil. i. 534, Van Dalen and
learning, he must have for years according to a definite method, and have gathered about him a circle of friends. In the Connus of Ameipsias, which seems to have been acted at the same time as the Clouds, he likewise appears as a well-known person, and lo in his travelling memorials had previously alluded to him. See
worked
p. 56, 1
2
3
57, 3.
1.
See p. 54,
suring
him
but it had with making him a philosophi cal reformer as the doctor s de gree had with making Luther a
The story religious reformer. of the response given to his father when he was a boy
who however
;
tells the
same
of
the wife of Pittacus, Tranq. An. ii. 471 JEttcm (V. H. xi. 12)
SOCRATES.
OHAP.
III.
Atherueus
(v.
219);
Synssfat,
&c.), tell so
many
little stories
and disgraceful traits of her that one almost feels inclined to take up the cudgels in her behalf, as Heumann has actu
ally
i.
103).
ii.
10) and Plato (Phasdo, say of her, shows that she cannot have been altogether badly disposed. At least she was solicitous about her family, though at the same time she was extremely violent, over bearing, and hard to deal with. It is remarkable that Aristo phanes in the Clouds says no thing of the married life of
Socrates,
amongst his cotemporaries, and friends, Xenophon, Plato, Aristophanes, and other comic poets, including Timon, there is no allusion to a rela tion, which would most un doubtedly have, had it existed, caused a great sensation and have provoked attack and de fence, and derision in the high est degree. The laws of Athens never allowed bigamy, and the
foes
forded him material for many a joke. Probably Socrates was not then married. His eldest son is called twenty-five years later
(Plato, Apol. 34, D. Phasdo, 60, A.) fj.eipa.Kiov ^5r?, and there are two young children. Besides Xanthippe, Socrates is said to
;
ronymus attempts to give pro bability to his story (the same to which reference is made by Gell. N. A. xv. 20, 6, from the
supposed bigamy of Euripides) never was passed, or must bear a different meaning. The only question is, whether there can be any foundation for the story, and how its rise can be explained. Shall the Pseudo-Aristotle be believed,
either
have had another wife, Myrto, a daughter or grand-daughter of Aristides: after Xanthippe according to Aristotle (in Diog.
ii.
26
;
who
was
his
Posidon in Ps. Pint. De Nob. 18, 3 less accurate is Plutarch s Aristid. 27 which Athen. xiii. 555 follows) before her accord ing to another view (also in Diog.) and at the same time with her according to ArisPhaier., toxenus, Demetrius
; ;
second wife, and the two younger sons her children ? But this cannot be reconciled with the Phsedo 60, A., let alone the fact that Myrto, as a daughter of Aristides, must have been older than Socrates (whose
father in Laches, 180, D,is men tioned as a school companion of her brother), and far too old then
to bear children.
Hieronymus Khod., Satyrus, and Porphyry, in Cyril, c. Jul., so that he had two vi. 186, D. wives at once. The fallacy of the last view has been already exposed by Panaetius (accord
;
Or shall it, on
the contrary, be conceded (with Luzac) that Myrto was Socrates" first wife, and that he married
HIS LIFE.
1 composure, nor could domestic cares hinder the oc-
(ft
CHAP.
III.
Xanthippe
her
13), the
genuineness of which
Xenophon nor Plato know any thing about two wives of So crates, although the Symposium would have invited some men
place,
In the second the biographers (a few unknown ones in Diogenes excepted), and particularly the
tion of
all
all
them.
Pseudo-Aristotle, from whom the rest appear to have taken the story, say that he married Myrto after Xanthippe, and that Sophroniscus and Menexenus were her children. Thirdly, Socrates cannot possibly have married the sister or the niece of Lysimachus, the son of Aristides, before the battle of Delium, since at the time of the battle (Lach. 180, D.) he
did not
sonally.
riage -have been contracted after that date, since Xan thippe s eldest son was grown up at the time of his death. And lastly, in Plato s Theaetet. 150, E., shortly before his death, Socrates mentions this Aristides, as one of those who
Xanthippe survived her hus They thought it un likely that Socrates should be the son-in-law of a man dead before he was born, and they tried to surmount these diffi culties in various ways. As
band.
regards
either it
the
first
difficulty,
was maintained that Myrto was his second wife and that the younger children were hers, in which case it was necessary to place her side by
side with Xanthippe, as Hieronymus actually did, and in vented a decree of the people to make it probable or to avoid romance, this supposition
;
kinsman. Thus the connection between Socrates and Myrto seems to belong altogether to the re gion of fable. The most pro bable account of the origin of the story is the following. We gather from the remains
of
was given
the
(Stob.
irepl
fvyeveias
24,
25;
88,
l
to be his first wife, who then can have borne him no children, since Lamprocles, his eldest son, according to Xeno phon, was a child of Xanthippe. The second difficulty could be
made
For note
64
SOCRATES.
cupation which he recognised to be the business of His own concerns were neglected lest he __!_ his life. v should omit anything in the service of Grod. 2 To be
independent, he tried, like the Grods, to rise superior
CHAP,
and by an uncommon degree of self-denial and abstemiousness,4 he so far succeeded that he could boast of living more pleasantly and more free from troubles than any one else. 5 It was thus possible
to wants
3
;
for
to devote his whole powers to the service of others without asking or taking reward ; 6 and this
got
over
either
him
by
making
Myrto grand-daughter in stead of a daughter of Aristides, the grandson of Aristides the Just. Plato, Lach. 179, The former A.; Theaet., &c. was the usual way. The latter is the view of Athenseus. 1 See Xenophon 1. c., not to mention later anecdotes re specting this subject. 2 Plato, Apol. 23, B. ; 31, B.
3 Conf. Xen. Mem. i. 6, 1-10, where he argues against Anti-
i. 2, 5 i. 5, 6 ; Plato, Apol. 19, D. 31 ; B. 33, A. Euthypro, 3, D. Symp. 219, E. In the face of these distinct testimonies, the statement of Aristoxenus (Diog. ii. 20) that from time to time he collected money from his pupils, can only be regarded as a slander. It is possible that he did not always refuse the presents of opulent friends (Diog. ii. 74, 121, 34 ; Sen. de
;
Xen. Mem.
3
; ;
i.
6,
;
is
a thoroughly
:
Benef.
8;
vii.
Inst. xii.
7,
9).
but
no
is
placed So
The contentment of
He
simplicity of his life, his abstinence from sen sual pleasures of every kind, his scanty clothing, his walk ing bare-foot, his endurance of hunger and thirst, of heat and
cold, of deprivations and hard Conf. ships, are well known. Xen. Mem. i. 2, 1 3, 5 Plato, Symp. 174, A., 219, B. Phasdrus, 229, A. Aristoph. Clouds, 103, 361, 409, 828, Birds 1282. 5 Xen. Mem. i. 6, 4 iv. 8, 6.
;
crates, the
splendid offers of the Mace donian Archelaus and the Thessalian Scopas (Diog. ii. 25 Sen. Benef. v. 6 Arrian or
; ;
Plut,
28;
the first-named individual is concerned by Aristotle, Ehet. ii. 23, in a passage which Bayle, Diet. Archelaus Kem. D. dis
HIS LIFE.
he occupation so confined him to his native city that 1 its gates. rarely passed its boundaries or even
65
CHAP.
To take part
he did
not only holding it to be not, however, feel a call 3 in the Athens of to act as a statesman impossible
that day without violating his principles, and loath 4 ing submission to the demands of a pampered mob ;
but far more because he recognised his own peculiar task to lie in something very different. Any one
sharing his conviction that care for one s own culture o must be preferred to all care for public affairs, and
1
the influencing of the community, which without the other would be profitless 6 must consider it a better
country to educate able statesmen than actually to discharge a statesman s duties. 7 Any one so thoroughly fitted by nature, taste, tone
service
to
his
of thought and character, to elevate the morality and develop the intellect in others by means of
home
in
53, A.,
he says, that except on military duty he has only once left Athens, going as a deputy to the Isthmian games, From the Phasdrus, 230, C., we gather that he rarely went outside the
gates. 2 Plato, Apol. 31, C. 3 Plato, Apol. 31, D. vi. 496, C. Gorg. 521. C.
;
4 Plato, Apol. 33, A., or as the Gorgias (473, E.) ironically expresses it because he was too plain for a statesman. Conf. Gorg. 521, D.
:
Symp. 216,
; ;
Xen. Mem. iv. 2, 6 iii. 6. Plato, Apol. 29, C. 30, D. ; 33, C. Gorg. 513, E.
A.
;
Eep.
Xen. Mem.
i.
6, 15.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
111.
any other
citizen.
line of life. 1
attempted to
move from
By
2 greatest bravery and endurance, he discharged his duties to his country. As a citizen he met un-
1 Socrates asserts this in Plato quite explicitly. In Apol. 31, D., he remarks that his 8ai/j.6viov sent him back from a public life, and wisely too for in a career spent in oppos ing the passionate impulses of the masses he would long since have been ruined. The 8ai/j.6viov which deters him is the sense of what is suited to his individuality. That this sense
;
pense, Apol.
38,
A.
on
irepl aperris
Kal
e/uoG
TUV
irepl
&v
v/j.e"is
a/cohere
8ia\eyofji.evov
Kal
him rightly, is conducted proved by the consideration that a public career, had he taken to it, would not only have been unsuccessful in his case, but would also have been
most injurious for himself and Socrates usually estimates the moral value of conduct by
;
Symp. 219, E. Apol. 28, E. Lach. 181, A. Charm, i. Of the three expeditions men
;
tioned in the Apology, that to Potidsea, 432 B.C., that to Delium, 424 B.C., and that to
B.C., the two are fully described. At Potidaaa Socrates rescued Alcibiades, but gave up in his favour his claim to the prize for valour. His fearless retreat from the battle of Delium is
Amphipolis, 422
first
success. If this consideration, as it no doubt did, confirmed his dislike to a public career, still the primary cause of this dislike, the source of that in superable feeling, which as a
8ai/j.6viov
mentioned with
praise.
An-
preceded every
esti
tisthenes (in Athen. v. 216, b) refers the affair of the prize to the time after the battle of Delium. Probably Plato is right, being generally well-in formed on these matters. The
suit
ed his character as well as the f life he chose, he would as h He have been deterred by its dan gers, as he was by th ed gers of that which he ad.
"lan,
He
stales,
bow-
doubts which Athenaeus raises respecting Plato s account are trivial. Naturally, however, other accounts derived from his account cannot be quoted in support of it. The story that Socrates rescued Xeno-
occupation af forded him great satisfaction with whicli he could not dis
phon at Delium
7
;
(Strabo, ix. 2,
HIS LIFE.
righteous demands alike of an infuriated populace
67
CHAP.
and of tyrannical oligarchs, in every case of danger, firmly and fearlessly but in the conduct of affairs
;
he declined to take part. Nor would he appear as a public teacher after He not only took no the manner of the Sophists. but he gave no methodical course, 2 not profess pay,
ing
to
to teach,
;
others
but only to learn in common with not to force his convictions upon them, but
;
v.
examine theirs not to pass the truth that came to hand like a coin fresh from the mint, but to awaken a taste for truth and virtue, to show the way
to overthrow spurious, and to discover real 3 Never weary of converse, he eagerly knowledge.
seized every opportunity of giving an instructive and moral turn to conversation. Day by day he was
(
v thereto,
about in the market and public promenades, in schools and workshops, ever ready to have a word
with friend or stranger, with citizen or foreigner,
but always prepared to give an intellectual or moral turn to the conversation. Whilst thus serving Grod
1
Xen. Mem.
;
i.
1, 18,
and
2,
;
and
of Favorinus in Diog.
ii.
31
Hellen. i. 7, 15 Plato, Apol. 32, A. ; Gorg-. 473, E. epist. Plat. vii. 324, D. ; see also Luzac, De Socrate cive, 92-123 Grate s Hist, of Greece, viii. 238-285. * Plato, Apol. 33, A. fy& fe
iv.
4,
;
;
futation.
3 Proofs in all the dialogues. See particularly Plato, Apol. 23 B. 29, D. 30, E. 21, B.
;
Kep.
after.
i.
StSao-KaAos
jiiey
ovSevbs
ris
/u.ou
irdmor
method
4
^y^v6fjLt]v et 5e
\4yovros
e</>0J-
V7j<ra,
i.
2,
of
Ibid. 19 D. Xen,. Mem. 3 and 31. The assertion the Epicurean Idomeneus,
Xen. Mem. i. 1, 10; iii. 10; Plato, Symp., Lysis., Charmides, Phasdrus, Apol. 23, B.
;
30,
F 2
SOCRATES.
he was persuaded that he was also serving his country in a way that no one else could do. For deeply as he deplored the decline of and education in his native city, 2 on the discipline
k* s
calling,
1
n *8 h er
moral teachers of his time, the Sophists, 3 he could place no reliance. The attractiveness of his discourse
a circle of admirers, for the most part of young men of family, 4 drawn to him by consisting the most varied motives, standing to him in various
for
won
him
relations,
others for a
for
longer,
lie
part,
was
anxious not only to educate these friends, but to^ advise them in everything pertaining to their good,
even in worldly matters. 6 Out of this changing, and in part only loosely connected societ}^, a nulceus was
gradually formed of decided admirers, a Socratic school, united, however, far less by a common set of
v doctrines, than by a
.
common love for the person of With more intimate friends he fre 7 quently had common meals, which, however, can
its
founder.
Such as scarcely have been a fixed institution. appeared to him to require other branches of in3, 10 thing
;
/*oi
ira.Ko\ov9ovvTs ols
eariv, ol T&V Still we find
trxoA^j
in making friends lovable, by virtue and prudence. Conf. Plat", Apol. 30, A. 36, C. 39, 3; 41, D. Grorg.
1
;
rwv.
among
hi*
521, D.
2 3
Xen. Mem.
iii. 5,
13.
is not with Plato, Apol. 19, D, nor yet with the passages quoted p. 69, 1.
iv. 4, 5,
Mem.
which
at variance
ardent admirers, not only Antisthenes, but also Apollodorus and Aristodemus, who appear according to Plato, Symp. 173, 8, to have been equally poor. 5 Conf. Xen. Mem. i. 2, 14 ; iv. 2, 40 Plato, Theaet. 150, D.
;
Conf. examples,
9
;
Mem.
ii.
3,
7, 8,
7
iii. 6. 7.
iii.
ol
veoi
Xen. Mem.
14.
HIS LIFE.
struction, or
whom
he believed unsuited
for inter-
CHAP.
apply to other 1 teachers, either in addition to or in place of himself. Until his seventieth year he followed this course of
action with his powers of
mind unimpaired. 2
life
The
blow which then put an end to his activity will be mentioned hereafter.
1
and his
Plato,
Thegetet.
iii.
151,
B.
Xen. Mem.
61.
2
Symp.
4,
Mem.
iv. 8, 8.
SOCRATES.
CHAPTER
IV.
ANCIENT writers speak of the character of Socrates in terms of the greatest respect. There are, however, some exceptions, quite apart from the prejudice
occasioned by his condemnation, which no doubt survived some time after his death. Followers of
Epicurus indulged their love of slander even at his 1 expense, and one voice from the Peripatetic School
has scandalous stories to
tell respecting his life as a boy he was disobedient and refractory as a youth, profligate ; as a man, coarse, importunate, given to sudden bursts of anger, and of fiery passions. 2 But
:
Cicero de N. D. i. 34, says that his teacher, the Epicurean Zeno, called him an Attic buff oon. Epicurus, however, according to Dwg. x. 8, appears to have spared him, although he depreciated every other
1
ita<rris
r<p
iraQei
5ia
c&dSt&v Synesms (Enc. Galv. 81) will have this limited to his younger years that of Cyril, c. Jul. vi.
;
185,
inrb
C.
Th-cod.
xii., 63, p.
174
rov
irddovs
TOVTOV
elvai
T^V
of/re
a.ffxntJ-oavvT}v
6v6/j.a.Tos
;
Seiv^v ovSevbs
yap
oftre
a-jroffx^Qai
by Luzac, come
have
already
is
Aristoxenus,
whom we
;
Trpdy^aros and another of Cyril. 186, C. Thcod. 1. c.) that Socrates was in other ways
trpbs
temperate,
a<ppo5i<riu>v
5e
r^v
riav
come
;
:
mentioned in Porphyry
yty6voi rpaxvs
els
that us
^ yap rats
xpr\aQa.i
ya/j.era is
^ rdis
itoivais
opy-f)v,
fj.6vais,
HIS CHARACTER.
the stories
71
we have
CHAP.
IV.
we
2 cannot even with certainty infer that Socrates only a severe struggle 3 with his became what he was after
bigamy he
$t\a\.v
to illustrate the
avrbv
</>iA-
son over a
v TCUS 6/miXtais alvfas re airfX^IJi0va Kal \oi5opov Kal vfipiffFrom the same source, TiK.6v. as may be gathered from Pint.
power of rea defective natural disposition, as illustrated in Plato, Symp. 215, 221, B. If the story was current in the
;
29, p. 8 quotes
8e
aiirbv
from Porphyry,
irpbs
ou5e>
without
elvat
a<j>vrj,
naming Aristoxenus,
p.*v
so that he
to
besides what follows read, (Ibid. xii. 66, p. 174 ; conf. iv. 2, p. 56) eAe^iTO 5e irepl avrov us &pa TTcu.9 &v OVK eS ftKacreiev ovSe
:
time of Aristoxenus, he may have used it for his picture but it is also possible that his description produced the story, which in this case would have an apologetic meaning. The name of Zopyrus would lead us to think of the Syrian magi cian, who, according to Aris
totle
evraKrus irptaTov /J.GV yap fyaffiv avrbv rep Trmpl StareAe trot, aireiQOVVTO. Kal OTrdre /ceAeu<reiej/ avrbv
,
TO.
opyava
TO,
Trepi
T^]V
As may be already seen from the stories respecting the bigamy, the gross ignorance, the violent temper, and the
sensual
crates.
2
airavrav 6irov8r)TroT
oAt-
indulgences
of
So
5e
STI ets
Though
this
is
in
itself
possible,
we have no
certain
ras Siarptfias
rpairefais Kal
Herewith
is
connected
the
story of the physiognomist Zopyrus. (Cic. Tusc. vi. 37, 83 De Fat. iv. 10 Alex. Apli. De Fato, vi., Pers. Sat. IV. 24 Conf. Max. Tyr. xxxi. 3), who declared Socrates to be stupid
; ; ;
authority for such an assertion. The anecdote of Zopyrus is, as already remarked, very un certain, and where is the war rant that Aristoxenus followed a really credible tradition?
He
refers,
it
is
true,
to his
and profligate, and received from him the answer, that by nature he had been so, but had been changed by reason. This
account can hardly be true. It looks as if it had been devised
an actual acquaintance of Socrates. But the question arises whether this statement is more trust The worthy than the rest. chronology is against it, and still more so is the sub stance of what Spintharus
father Spintharus,
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
IV.
natural disposition. Our best authorities only know him as the perfect man, to whom they look up with respect, and whom they regard as the exemplar of
No
one,
says
Xenophon,
;
ever heard or saw anything wicked in Socrates pious was he that he never did anything without
consulting the Gods any one in the least
;
so
first
so just that so
he never injured
never preferred pleasure to goodness so sensible that he never erred in his choice between what was better
In a word, he was of
men
the
He
says.
It
may
also
be asked
whether Spintharus spoke the truth, when he professed to have witnessed outbursts of anger in Socrates, who must then have been in the last
years
of his
life.
and inferences. His overdrawn imagination makes Socrates as a boy dissatisfied with his father s business, and
sions
as a
man
Certainly reason to
his
son.
Aristoxenus does not his remarks to the youth of Socrates, but they are of a most general character,
or refer distinctly to his later
years.
been a man without culture, because of expressions such as that in the Apology, 17, B., or that in the Symp. 221, E. 199,
;
Luzac,
1.
c.
261,
would
ments. For Aristoxenus ap pears not only to have carried his warfare with the Socratic Schools against the person of Socrates, but also to have in dulged in the most capricious
violent in temper, in sup port of which he refers to Symp. 214:, D. and dissolute because of his supposed bigamy, and the words in Xen. Mem. i. ii. 2, 4, and p. 51, 2. 3, 14 1 Mem. i. 1, 11 iv. 8, 11. E. Lange s objections to the genuineness of the concluding chapters of the Memorabilia
A.
(De Xenoph. Apol. Berl. 1873) do not appear sufficiently strong to preclude their beingcited as an authority.
(iv. 8)
HIS CHARACTER.
of piety and love for his country, of unbending fidelity to his convictions, as a sensible and trust
73
CHAP.
worthy adviser both for the bodies and souls of his as an agreeable and affable companion, with a happy combination of cheerfulness and
friends
;
seriousness
above
all,
as
an untiring educator of
character, embracing every opportunity of bringing all with whom he came into contact to self-knowledge
He
just
teacher the best, the most sensible, and the most man of his age, and never tires of praising his
and
life
simplicity, his moderation, his control over the wants desires of the senses ; imbued with the deepest
religious feeling in all his doings, devoting his whole to the service of the (rods, and dying a martyr s
;
and
Xenophon, he describes this service as the exercise of a universal moral influence on others, and In his picture, too, the more particularly on youth.
like
by a
real kindness,
cheerfulness and a pleasing humour. Of his social virtues and his political courage Plato speaks in the same terms as Xenophon, and adds thereto an ad
mirable description of Socrates on military service. 2 Every trait which he mentions adds to the clearness
of that picture of moral greatness, so wonderful for
I
2.
74 CHAP.
IV.
its
SOCRATES.
very originality, for the absence of all that is studied and artificial about it, for its exclusion of
self-glorification
and
affectation.
B. Hi* character
refecting
to its being a native growth, the Socratic type of virtue bears, throughout, the peculiar impress
Owing
Greek pe-
Socrates
is
of virtue, which a superficial rationalism would make of him, but he is a thorough Greek and Athenian,
taken, as
it
marrow
of his nation,
possessed of flesh and blood, and not merely the uni versal moral standard for all time. His much- lauded
moderation
j
is
free
from the
ascetic element,
which
it
seems always to suggest in modern times. Socrates enjoys good company, although he avoids noisy
carousals
2
;
and
if
when
in excess.
s
Thus the
is
small cups in
Xenophon
1
bancjuet
not
made
Most
of
anecdotes
writers are in harmony with Some this view of Socrates. of them are certainly fictions.
Others
may be
pupils of Socrates, which have been since lost, or from other trustworthy sources. They may be found in the fol lowing places. Cic. Tusc. iii. Off. i. 26 and 90 15, 31 Seneca, De Const. 18, 5; De
tings of
Adulat. 32, p. 70 Coh. Ira, 4, p. 455 Tranqu. An. 10, p. 471 ; Garrulit. 20; Diog. ii. 21, 24, Gell. N. A. ii. 1 ; 27, 30 vi. 8 xix. 9, 9; Vol. Max. viii. 8; jElian, V. H. i. 16 ii. 11, 13, 36 iii. 28 ix. 7, 29 xii. 15 ; xiii. 27, 32 ; Athen. iv. 157 c. ; Stob. Flor. 17, 17 and 22.
;
; ; ; ;
Basil.
II.
c.,
Ira,
i.
15, 3
iii.
11, 2
;
ii. 7, 1
;
Tranqu. An. 5, 2 17, 4 Epist. Plin. H. Nat. vii. 18 104, 27 Pint. Educ. Pu. 14, p. 10 De
;
;
Plato, 174, A.
Symp. 220, A.
conf .
HIS CHARACTER.
too largely, but that exhilaration may not be too Plato describes him as boasting that he can rapid.
1
75
CHAP.
much
all in drinking, without ever being intoxicated him 2 self, and represents him at the close of the banquet as leaving all his companions under the table, and
pursuing his daily work, after a night spent over the Moderation here bowl, as if nothing had happened.
appears with him not _to consist in total abstinence from pleasure, but in perfect mfvptfiJ frpprJnm neither
3
requiring pleasure, noxJbeing ever overtaken^ by_its His abstemiousness in other seductive influence.
points
is
Numerous
4
passages, however, in
Xenophon
Memorabilia
prove that his morality was far below our strict standard of principles. The Grecian peculiarity of
boys marks, indeed, his relations to youth, but his character is above all suspicion of actual vice, 5 and he treats with irony a supposed
affection
for
1
Xan. Mem.
67TMJ/6/ccib;(7(i/,
2,
T)IJUI>
ol TrcuSes /juKpais
affection.
va
OUTCOS
oitvov
ov
f$ia-
virb
rov
[Medvew,
Not only is there no allusion to it in the judicial charge, but not even in Aristophanes, who would undoubtedly have magnified the smallest suspicion into the gravest charge. The other comic poets, according to Athen., v. 219,
Syrhp. 213, E.
3
176,
C.
220,
;
A.;
We
4
it.
Nor does
necessary
it
Aristoxenus and his followers cannot prove the contrary. i. 3, 14 ii. 1, 5 iii. 2, 4 11 iv. 5, 9. Conf. Conv. iv.
;
;
calumny, and
38.
*
crates
therefore the well-known story of Plato s banquet has for its object far more the glorirication than the justification of his teacher. On the other hand, the relations of Socrates to Alcibiades, in the verses
76
CHAP,
SOCRATES.
At the same time, what Greek in the presence of youthful beauty was proof agairst a certain element of aesthetic pleasure, which
1 love-affair of his own.
at least was the ground and origin, even though ( as in 2 The his case) an innocent one, of deeper affection ?
his severest censure
odious excrescences of Greek morality called forth yet at the same time, accord
;
3 ing to Xenophon, and ^Eschines, and Plato, So crates described his own relations to his younger
friends by the name of Eros, or a passionate attach ment grounded on aesthetic attractions. Not other
wise
may Grecian peculiarities be noticed in his ethical or political views, nor is his theology free from the trammels of the popular belief. How deeply
these lines had influenced his character
may
be seen
not only in his simple obedience 6 to the laws of his country throughout life, and his genuine respect for
the state religion, 7 but far more also in the trials of
purporting to be written by Aspasia, which Athenteus communieates on die authority of Herodicus, have a very suspicious look, and Tertullian Apol. c. 46 mistakenly applies
4 In his Alcibiades he speaks of the love of Socrates for Alcibiades. See Aristid. Or.
xlv.
5
irzpl prjTopiKTJs, p.
30, 34.
;
Prot.
;
beginning
;
Symp.
the words
to
tiicup&flpciv
rovs veovs
In Juvenal paederastia. (Sat. ii. 10) Socratici cintedi refer to the manners of his own time. 1 Xen. Mem. iv. 1, 2 Symp.
;
218, B. 177, D. 222, A. ; not to mention other expressions for which Plato is answerable.
4,
27; Pluto, Symp. 213, C. Charm. 155, 222, B. 216, D. D. 2 Xen. Mem. i. 2, 29 3, 8
; ; ; ; ;
Sym.
3
8,
19,
8,
32,
with
;
which
Plato agrees.
Symp.
and 24
Mem.
Plato, Apol. 28, E. Xetwplw-n, Mem. i. ], 2, assures us not only that Socrates took part in the public sacrifices, but that he was frequently in the habit of sacrificing at home. In Plato he invokes Helios, Symp. 220, D. and his last words, according to the Phasdo, HSj A., were an earnest commission to Crito to offer a
7
;
iv. 1, 2.
cock to JEsculapius.
Often
is
HIS CHARACTER.
his last days,
77
CHAP.
when
for fear
he scorned the ordinary practices of defence, and after his condemnation refused to escape from The epitaph which Simonides inscribed on prison.
1
the
tomb
of Leonidas
:
on that of Socrates
Deeply
as
He
thing decidedly unlike a Greek, presenting a foreign and even almost modern appearance. This it was
traits in ~ ***
cJlG>
eccentric
so
This,
unintelligible,
something, which
4
according to Plato
account,
in a
which
in oracles
good
he
harm
as
if
to to
pendants.
Plato, Apol. 21, B.) and the use of which he recommended to his friends (Xeti. Mem. ii.
6,
entreating- the judges were unworthy of the speaker and his country.
2
8;
iv.
7,
10; Anabas.
iii. 1,
Xen. says:
v6/j.ois
rjv.
TrpoeiAero p.a\Xov
T)
himself fully persuaded that he possessed an oracle in the truest sense, in the inward voice of his Sai/j.6viov, and he also believed in
5).
He was
rots
3
ffifievuv airoQave iv
irapa.vojj.iav
\a
.
.
fj.tv
221, C.
KO.\
/cat
IToA-
&\\a exot
eav^daia
avOpdairow
Tra\ai>v
Sw/cpdrTj
.
dreams and similar prognosti{Plato, Crito, 44, A. Phjedo, 60, D. Apol. 33, C.)
;
rb
8e
cations.
Sfjioiov
slvai,
1 This motive is represented by Xcnoplwti (Mem. iv. 4, 4) and Plato (Apol. 34, D. Phfedo,
;
^Tjre iravr^s
ovroa-l
ru>i>
....
98, C.) as the decisive one, although the Crito makes it appear that a flight from Athens would have done no
yeyove rV ctTOTruu/ &vQp<aTTOS /cal aurbs of ^0701 avrov oiS eyyvs &v evpoi TIS C^TWJ/, o&re ruv
vvv ovre
4
ru>v
-rraXawv.
:
Symp. 215, A.
221, E.
78
CHAP,
L_...
SOCRATES.
inward and real nature. In this respect he contrasts most strikingly with the mutual interpenetration of On both, which constitutes the usual classic ideal. the one hand we behold in Socrates indifference to
"
"
"
~-
ri
the outer world, originally foreign to the habits of on the other hand, a meditativehis countrymen
;
ness
unknown
is
before.
Owing
there
if
about him a something prosy and dry, and, the expression may be allowed, philistine-like,
sharply contrasting with the contained beauty and the artistic grace of life in Greece. Owing to the latter there is about him something .akin to the
revelation of a higher
in the
its
life,
having
its seat
within,
explained in
self
these two peculiarities both Plato and Xenophon Even from an outward point of view, are agreed.
the Silenus-like appearance of Socrates, which Plato s 1 2 de Alcibiades, and Xenophon s Socrates himself
scribe with so
cealed than exposed the presence of genius to the But more than this, a certain eye of a Greek.
amount of intellectual stiffness, and an indifference what is sensibly beautiful, is unmistakeable in his speech and behaviour. Take for instance the process
to
of catechising given in the Memorabilia, 3 by which a general of cavalry is brought to a knowledge of his
1
Symp. 215
conf. Threet.
2,
crates
14, 3, E.
2
but this
4, iv.
Symp.
19;
19; Epicte-
nable.
3
tus (Diss.
iii. 3.
HIS CHARACTER.
duties, or the
1 formality with which things, long familiar to his hearers, are proved, or the way in
70
CHAP.
__
which the idea of the beautiful is resolved into that 2 Or hear him, on grounds of expedi of the useful.
ency, advising conduct, which to us seems simply 4 3 abominable, or in the Phaedrus refusing to walk out because he can learn nothing from trees and the
5 country, and taking exception in the Apology to the works of poets and artists, because they are the re
sults of natural
reflection.
6
in Xenophon s Symposium, custom of the ancients, 8 dancing despite the universal alone at home, in order to gain healthful exercise, and justifying his conduct by the strangest of reflec unable even at table 9 to forget considerations tions of utility. Taking these and similar traits into
;
Or
him
account, there appears in him a certain want of imagination, a one-sided prominence of the criti
cal and intellectual faculties, in short a prosiness which clashes with the poetry of Grecian life, and the
Symp.
1.
iii.
10, 9
iii.
11.
iii. 8, 4.
3, 14.
M. Crasso, in foro, mihi crede, saltaret Pint. De vit. jud. 16, 533, also the expressions in
;
230, D.
Xenoplwn
J
OpxWo^cu
tyeXacrav
:
v$]
Afa.
EvravGa
5r;
airavTes.
dancing
K.
rb
pev ye
fen\dyr)v
T.
/ecu
eSettra,
Compare Menexenus,
<roi
C.
naivoio,
A.
Of the same
TToSuj/ra
6px^ ffa(r ^ ai
&v
Mur. 6:
brius,
Offic. iii.
Nemo
19
:
nisi
character was his instruction in music under Connus, if the story were only true of his having received lessons with the schoolboys. Plato, Euthyd. 272, C.
9
Xen. Symp.
3, 2.
80
CHAP,
SOCRATES.
refined taste of an Athenian.
discourses of Socrates
appear ridiculous and rude, dealing as they invari ably do with beasts of burden, smiths, tailors, and
and apparently saying the same thing in the same words. Was not this the very objection raised
tanners,
by Xenophon ?
How
common
sense
cotemI
common
any lack of
cient.
but of the profound originality of which customary figures were insuffi Yet again, sometimes the soul of the philo-
/^sopher, diving into its own recesses, so far lost itself in this labour as to be insensible to external
J impressions, and at other times gave utterance to /enigmatical sayings, which appeared strange to it in. I a wakeful state. Serious and fond of meditation 5
as
1
was Socrates,
Symp. 221, E.
it
Conf. Kal:
eQy,
<3
licles in
criria
avra \4yeis a
ffov tfKovffa.
Kal
.... arex^*
Kal larpovs
and the
E.
like
with in Plato
Conf. 497,
Gorgias, 490,
;
yeipovs
Travel,
2
\oywv
ws
irepl
ovfiev
C.
ffp.iKpa
Kal
rovrwv
37
:
ri(juv
ovra
ffreva epcar^fj-ara.
3 Accordingly in the Aristotelian problems, xxx. 1, 953, a,
rbv \6yov.
Mem.
r$>v
i.
2,
O 5e
Kpiriasru>v
dAAo
ety-r),
5e roi
<re
airexfo-Qai,
SeTjtrei,
ffKvreuv
Kal
Kal av-
TUV yaAKeoj^,
rovs
4, 6
^5rj
yap
olp.ai
KararerptyQai
SiaQpv-
26, he is reckoned amongst the melancholy, which is not at variance with the gentle firmness (rb araffLfjiov} which Aristotle (Ehet. ii. 15) assigns to him.
HIS CHARACTER.
deep in thought he remained,
for a longer or shorter
1
81
CHAP.
and stood there as one absent in mind. According to Plato, he once ^remained in this state, standing on the same spot, from one day to the next. 2 So energetically did he struggle with himself to attain an insight into his In doing this, he discovered a resi every motive. duum of feelings and impulses, which he watched
time, indifferent to the outer world,
with conscientious attention without being able to explain them from what he knew of his own inner
life.
Hence
And not only tions, which he thought to enjoy. was he generally convinced that he stood and acted
in the service of (rod,
but he also held that super natural suggestions were communicated to him, not 3 only through the medium of public oracles, but also 4 in dreams, and more particularly by a peculiar kind
of higher inspiration, which goes by the Socratic
1 Plato, Symp. 174, D. Volquardsen, D. Daemon, d. Socr. 25, 63 and Alberti, Socr. 148 have entirely mistaken the meaning of the text in supposing that it attributes to So-
name
of the
PMlop.
the
De
sion
3
during Delium.
4
the
occabattle of
crates
2
any ecstatic
states.
Symp. 220, C. The circumstances may indeed be regarded as a fact still we do not know from what source Plato derived his knowledge of it, nor whether the authority which he followed had not exaggerated the time during which Socrates stood there. Favorinus in Gell. N. A. ii. 1, makes the one occasion into many, and says
;
Conf. p. 76, 7, and 89. Conf. p. 60, 2. In the passage here quoted Socrates refers to dreams in which the deity had commanded him to devote himself to his philosophical activity. In the Crito 44, A., a dream tells him that his death will follow on the third day. 5 Volqvardsen, Das Dremonimn d. Socr. und seine Interpreten. Kiel, 1862. Rilling\ Ueber Socraf es Daimonion
82
SOCRATES.
IV.
CHAP.
ancients
many regarded
these
O)
The
tiaijjioviov
suggestions as derived from intercourse with a special and personally-existing genius. 1 of which Socrates
boasted
in
modern times
this view
It
cratis, c.
Ti/r. xiv.
with introducing- erepa Kaiva in the place of the Gods of the state; nor does Ribbing s (Socra^. Stud. II. 1) remark make against this, that Meletus (in Plato Apol. 26, B.) thus explained his language So crates not only denies the Gods of Athens but all and every God; the heavenly beings, whose introduction he attri butes to him not being regarded as Gods, just as at a later time
$ai/ji.6via
;
Apuleivf, De Deo Socratis, the Neoplatonists, and the Fathers. who, however, are not agreed whether his genius was a good one or a bad one. Plutarch, and after him Apuleius, men tion the view that by the 5cu-
must be imderstood a power of vague apprehension, by means of which he could guess the future from prognos
fj.6vLov
Christians were
called
#0eo/
though worshipping God and Christ. Afterwards this view appears to have been dropped,
thanks to the descriptions of Xenophon and Plato, and does not recur for some time, even
in spurious
der spekulat. Philosophic, ii. 1 6 Meiners, Ueber den Genius des Sokr. (Verm. Schriften, iii. 1): Gesch. d. Wissensch. II. 399, 538, Bulile. Gesch. d. Phil. 371, 388 Kmy, Gesch. d. alten Phil. p. 158, Lasaul<v, too (Socrates, Leben, 1858, p. 20)
; :
in his uncritical and unsatis factory treatise respecting the Sai/j-Sviov, believes it to be a real revelation of the deity, or even
works attributed to
these writers. Even Cicero, Divin. i. 54, 122, does not translate Sai/j.6viov by genius,
a real genius, and even Volqvardsen gathers as the con clusion of his careful, and in
by divinum quoddam, and doubtless Antipater, whose work he was quoting, took it in the same sense. But in
but
Christian times the belief in a genius became universal, be cause it fell in with the current For inbelief in daemons.
-stance,
many respects meritorious, dis quisition, that a real divine voice warned Socrates. The older literature inOlearius, 148, 185, Brucker, I. 543, which in cludes many supporters of the
opinion that the genius of Socrates was only his own rea
son.
Further
particulars
in
Plut.
De Genio
So-
Demon de
HIS CHARACTER.
humiliating in the eyes of rationalising admirers, that a man otherwise so sensible as Socrates should
CHAP.
IV.
have allowed himself to be ensnared by such a super Hence attempts were not wanting stitious delusion. either on the ground of the universal to excuse him,
of his superstition of his age and nation, or else 1 Some having a physical tendency to fanaticism.
even went so
far
as
to
assert
2 supernatural revelations were a shrewd invention, 3 Such a view, or a result of his celebrated irony.
The
first
-named excuse
is
Marsilins Ficinus universal. (Theol. Platon. xiii. 2, p. 287) had assumed in Socrates, as well as in other philosophers, a peculiar bodily disposition for ecstasy, referring-. their suscep tibility for supernatural reve lations to their melancholy
condition of the brain during rapture affects the nerves of the abdomen and irritates them. To exercise the intellect immediately after a meal or to
indulge in deep thought pro duces peculiar sensations in the hypochondriacaLy In the
same strain
is
Meiners, Verm.
Historische Untersuchung war Socrates ein Hypochondrist ? quoted by Krmj, Gesch. d. alten Phil. 2 A. p. 163.
:
crates,
So that
in a
5aifj.6viov.
Tiedemann,
ertion, which the analysis of ab stract conception requires, has, in some bodies, the effect of to mechanically
Socrates had bribed the Del phic oracle in order to produce a political revolution, and
So ecstasy and enthusiasm. crates was so cultivated that deep thought produced in him a dulness of sense, and came near to the sweet dreams of Those inclined the4/ariiTKi. to ecstasy mistake suddenly rising thoughts for inspira
-
predisposing
Frof/nier,
Sur
ironie
de
Socra^e in the Memoires de I ^cademie des Inscriptions, iv. 368, expresses the view that So crates understood by the Saifji6viov his own natural intelli
gence
and power
of
combi
tions.
The
extraordinary
G 2
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
IV.
however, is hard to reconcile with the tone in which y on the testimony of both Plato and Xenophon, So
crates
speaks of the suggestions of the Saipoviov, or with the value which he attaches to these sugges
tions on the
To explain the phenomenon by the irritability of a sickly body falls not far short of deriving it from the farscy of a
most important
occasions. 1
of
Re
ft//
<ix
garded
(tit
Socrates
oracle.
Schleiermacher having shown, 3 with the general ap 4 probation of the most competent judges, that by
guesses respecting- the future
;
iini drfl
ironically he had represented this as a matter of pure instinct, of Qeiov or 6fia jtoTpa, and employed for this purpose Sat^viov and simi He remarks, lar expressions.
somewhat
however, that Socrates had no thought of a genius familiaris, ^aifj.6viov here being used as an adjective and not as a
substantive. Similarly Rollin in his Histoire ancienne, ix. 4,
that Socrates not only be lieved in a real and personal genius, but in his hallucina tions believed that he audi
bly
heard
its
voice.
Those
who
and
Anacharsis, treats the expressions used respecting the Saifjidviov in Plato s Apology as plaisanterie, and considers it an open question whether So crates really believed in his On others sharing the genius. view, see Lelut. 1. c. p. 163.
jeune
2,
d.
432. Gri.
Rom.
a.
60.
Hitter,
Xen. Mem.
;
iv. 8, 4.
;
Plato, *
Apol. 81, C.
2
40, A.
41, D.
Many have spoken of the superstition and fanaticism of Socrates in a more modest way,
but
Lclut
comparatively
(Du Demon
cle
recently Socrate,
Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 40. Her mann, Gesch. u. Syst. d. Plato i. 236. Soclier, tiber Platen s Cousin in the Schriften p. 99. notes to his translation of Plato s Apology p. 335. Krisclie, Ribbing, Forschungen, 227. Conf. Hegel, Gesch. d. 16. Ast too (Platon s Phil. ii. 77.
HIS CHARACTER.
the
Saifjioviov in
CHAP
IV.
separate and
only
distinct person, can be understood, but indefinitely some heavenly voice or divine
No
We
only hear of a divine or heavenly sign, of a voice heard by Socrates, 3 of some supernatural guidance
4 by which many warnings were vouchsafed to him. All that these expressions imply is, that Socrates was conscious within of divine revelations, but how
Theast.
/-un
151,
Sr? o~v
A.: rb
takes Sat^oviov for a sub stantive meaning the deity, does not see therein a genius but only a Qsiov. The passage Mem. i. 4. 14
1 ;
who
Sc^uoVzoi/.
Eu-
thyphro
IJ.6viov
i.
B.
on
iv. 8, 5.
.
OTOCI/ Oi
Oeol
Trz/j.ircao ii
&aiTfp
ffo\
Symp.
"and
8, 5.
ings,
used as a
-
metonym
for
O-I//A-
fiov\ds.
Pluto, Phtedr. 242, B. TO KCU Tb elcadbs 0"77ju.e?oV 8ai/j.6vioif T fj.01 yiyveaQai e yej/eTO, /ecu Tiia e5oa auTaoe aKovffcu. Rep. Tb Scuju.oVtoi/ u,6?oi iv. 496, C. Euthy. 272, E. e^eWro TO et co:
with
all its
romance
<fwv^]v
o"rj
50
Tb
;J
e>ol
Se
throughout indefinitely, nor TOV Scuyu.oj iou p. need the 128, E. be taken for a person. The spuriousness of the Theages. notwithstanding Sochers de fence needs no further proof, especially after being exhaus-. tively shown by Hermann, p.
(f>uvr)
TOUT
(f)uvf)
]
ap|ayuej/oj/,
427.
5
Xeit. Apol.
2
1
0eou (pwf].
:
God or the
source.
A.
rj
clwdv ia.
fj.oi
/jiavriKr)
rj
TOV
8(5
SOCRATES.
1 very clear notion on the subject.
CHAP.
These revelations,
actions,
2
to particular
cure
e|ioj/ri
and
It is
much
whether rb
fwOef otnoQev T]vavri6eov (TTj/xeTof, ovre tvravQol eVl rb r\v iK.o. avtfiaivov ovr eV rq \6ycp Sutaffr-fipiov,
wdr)
rb rov
the case are, as Krische, Forsch. 221) remarks, that Xenophon uses it as a substantive = rb Qelov or o debs, whereas Plato uses it as an adjective, ex
peXXovri
Aeyot/ra
e petV
Kairoi
fMcra^v.
:
(4)
plaining
it
as
8ai/j.oviov
ffrjfj.e iGv,
if such Plato, Theset. 151, A. as ha\ e withdrawn from my again return, society, fjikv rb yiyv6)j.v6v fj.o
ii.
23,
Add
1398
a,
s
15.
Ast
Plato
as
cites
explanation of Saifdvia he probably commits a fjLerdfiao-is els aAAo The very difference be yevos. tween Xenophon and Plato proves how loosely Socrates spoke of the 8ai/j.6i iov. 2 This applies to all the in stances of its intervention
$ai/j.6via irpa.yij.ara,
in which Socrates himself more or less jokes about the ^ai^oviov, which deserve to be mentioned because it there appears in the same character as elsewhere.
(5) Xen. Symp. 8, 5, where Antisthenes throws in Socrates
teeth
rore
fjC^v
rb
Sai^ovioy
/JLOI
irpofyaffi^ofji.ei
os ovdiaXeyr)
<pi4/uLevos.
rare
S a\\ov rov
mentioned by Plato and Xeno phon. They are the following (1) Xen. Mem. iv. 8, 5, where Socrates, when urged to pre
pare a defence, replies v^j rbv Aia, ijS-r) fiov i
(ppovriffat rrjs
Trpbs
:
Phaadr. 242, B., when wished to depart rb Saifji.6i>i6v Te /cat eicaObs ff-n^^ov p.oi yiyveffdai
:
del
co
8e
^.e
eTrifr^ej
&j/
TTpdrrfiv
Kai
riva
<f)(avr)v
aAAa
robs
:
oTroAoytas yvavrKiidri rb
Why
:
did not Socrates busy himself with political matters ? The nov was the reason rovr 6 P.OI evavnovrai ra TTO\I:a Trpdrreiv.
avr69ev aKovffai, 7} /xe OVK irpiv av acpoo icoo wij.ai, rb Oe iov. (as ri TJyua^TTjKOT a els as (7) Ibid. Euthyd. 272, E. Socrates was about to leave the Lyceum, 7eVero rb tlwdbs ffrn*.eiov rb oai^viov, he therefore sat down again, and soon after
(5o|o
e^
crnei/at
his condemnation) a singular occurrence took place, rj yap el(i)6v id /mot fj.avriK^] rov fiai/j,oviov
-f]
ev fAev
irdvv
r(f
Trp6o~6ei>
\pbvu>
-navrl
eirl
TTVK.VTI
ael
$v Kal irdvv
et
(T/uLiKpoTs
evavriov/uevr},
ri jUe A8e,
.
Aot/xt
fjt-ri
HIS CHARACTER.
according to Plato assume the form of prohibitions. Sometimes the Saifjioviov stops him from saying or It only indirectly points out doing something.
1
87
CHAP
IV.
forbid.
what should be done, by approving what it does not In a similar way it indirectly enables
to
Socrates
advise
his
their
In a similar sense the passage in the Eepublic vi. 496, D. should be understood, when Socrates re marks that most of those who had the capacity for philosophy were diverted therefrom by other interests, unless peculiar
Apol. 31, D.
/CCU
Sri /*oi
e/c
Q<Tiov
Tl
fiaifJLOVlOV
yiyVCTUl
....
aodoVai/
$7
fj.ol
5e
TOUT
fffrlv
traiSbs
/j.fvov fy(avi]
TIS yiyvopivt],
circumstances kept them, such as sickness, which was a hin TO drance to political life. 8 ^ueTepor OVK a^iov \4yeiv TO
8aifj.oviov
yevriTai ad airorpfirei /we TOVTOV & bv yue AAo? irpdrreiv, TrpOTpeirei 5e ovTroTf. Phjedr. 242, C.
2
From
his
philosophical
Xenophon s statements differ, making it not only restraining but preventing, and not only
having reference to the actions of Socrates but to those of other
people. Mem. i. 1, 4 (Apol. 12) TO yap SatjuoVioy ffr}p.aiv^tv,
e(/>7j
else,
Consequently, not even this passage compels us to give another meaning to its utter ances than they bear according to Plato s express words, as conveying a judgment respect ing the admissibility of a
definite action, either
Kal TroAAoTs
T&V
%vv6vr<av
npofft][*})
y6pve TO
Troitiv,
yitev
jroie iv,
TO Se
&s rov
/cat
VOVTOS
ai>Tw
Tots
TreiOofjLevois
plated or
crates.
crol
S
e<p-ri
(Euthydemus),
&
f)
of the spurious Alcibiades, this is all that is disand in the Theages. 128, ciissed, D., the prophecies of the
ment
slyf
:al
eTrepwTajjixej/oi
inr6 ffov
Jrpo(rr)/j.aivov(ri ffoi
a Te ^p^ Trotea
/j.-f].
may
SOCRATES.
heavenly voice makes itself heard are in point of value and character very different. Besides a concern of
such deep personal interest to Socrates as his judicial condemnation, besides a question having such a far-
CHAP L_
reaching influence on his whole activity as that whether he should take part in public life or not, it
It expresses itself on occasions quite unimportant. is in fact a voice so familiar to Socrates and his
1
something enigma
mysterious, and unknown before, affording, too, a special proof of divine providence, it can neverthe
less
be discussed without awe and mystery in easy and even in flippant language. The facts of the
resolve themselves
phenomenon
\
unfrequently Socrates was kept back by a dim feeling based on no conscious consideration, in which hediscerned a heavenly sign and a divine hint, from carrying out some thought or intention. Were he
had been vouchsafed to him, from his point of view the reply would be, because that from which it deterred him would be harmful to
asked
why
this sign
himself or others. 3
text.
accurate.
Evidently Plato is more His language is far more definite than that of Xenophon, and is throughout consistent, witness the various
cases mentioned in the previous note. Xenophon, as is his wont, confined himself to what caught the eye, to the fact that the Socrates to 5aiin6viov enabled judge of actions whose conse-
Hid.
subsequently
2IIS
CHARACTER.
Safooviuv,
the
utterances
of the
and to give
its
CHAP,
IV.
which
it
approved
or
most
and advantageous. The Salfioviov appeared to him as an internal revelation from heaven respecting the result of his actions, in a word As such it is expressly as an internal oracle. both by Xenophon 2 and Plato, 3 under the included,
beneficial
therefore
general conception of divination, and placed on a par with divination by sacrifice and the flight of birds.
Of
it
is
therefore true
remarks respecting all divination, that it may only be resorted to for cases which man cannot discover
himself by reflection. 4
shown that Socrates was, on the one hand thoroughly con vinced of the care of God for man down to the smallest matters, and 011 the other
hand was accustomed to esti mate the value of every action It fol by its consequences. lowed herefrom that to his mind the only ground on which God could forbid an action was because of its ill-conse
quences. 1 See Xen. Mem. iv. 8, 5, where Socrates observes that the ^aLfj.6viov forbad him to pre pare a defence, and then pro ceeds to discuss the reasons why the deity found an inno cent death better for him than
2
i.
4, 14.
3
Xen. Mem.
1, 6:
ical
TO,
(J.GV
avayKaia. avvt@cv\fve
irpaTTtiv
us
Ivofjufav
Trel 6e
et
av
For this reason, therefore, divination was re quired: TtKToviKbv fjikv yap fy
TrotTjTea.
X<y.\KvriKbv
^ yewpyiKbi/
3) r)
$)
avdpco-
ircav
a.pxiKbv
e leracTTt/cbj
T&V TOLOVTW
TO.
roiavra
yvcc/jLp
/J.a9-l]/j.ara
a longer life. In Plato, Apol. 40, 3, he concludes, from the silence of the Scu^viov during
his defence, that the condemna tion to which it led would be for him a benefit.
aiperea ei>6/j.if TO 8e fj.4yuna rwv Iv rovTOIS TOVS 8eovs laurels /cara\fLTrea6ai uiv ovdkv STjAof ?/at rols avOpwirois. The greatest
e<prj
things, however, as is imme diately explained, are the con sequences of actions, the ques tion whether they are useful
SK)
SOCRATES.
Herewith the whole field of philosophical inquiry excluded from the province of the ^ai^oviov. This field Socrates, more than any one of his predecessors,
is
OHAP.
(c)
Li mi-
applied.
claimed for intelligent knowledge and a thorough understanding. As a matter of fact, no instance
occurs of a scientific principle or a general moral law being referred to the Sai^oviov. Nor must the sage s conviction of his own higher mission be confounded
with his belief in the heavenly sign, nor the deity by whom he considered himself commissioned t) sift
be identified with the Sai^ono^. The fact that Socrates thought to hear the heavenly voice
1
men
from the time when he was a boy, ought to be sufficient evidence to warn against such an error ; 2
time he cannot possibly have had any thought of a philosophic calling. That voice, more over, according to Plato, always deterring, never
for at that
prompting,
positive
command
or
detrimental to the doer. Accordingly Socrates observes that it is madness to think to be able to dispense with divination, and to do everything by means of one s own intelligence (and as he afterwards
adds,
5e
a6fjLiffra TroietV)
:
&PKTTO.
*
This was
;
former times
and
p.
still
more
113,
who
from
Scu/jiovav
TOI/S
avdpwirois
SiaKpivfiv,
Socrates derived his vocation a proof of his belief in a genius. The same mistake is committed by Volq-uardsett,
1.
whom
examples of which
iv.
3,
c.
p. 9, 12,
against
Socr.
p.
12,
where
/uoim/cr/,
and
also
the
Socratic /j-avriKT], is said to refer to consequences (TO o-v/j.poj/Ta, ra aTrojSijo-^ej a), and the appropriate means (?? av
4>e
e/c
Trcufios.
See
2.
above
87, 1.
3
See p. 87,
HIS CHARACTER.
Nor is it ever referred his activity as a teacher. deduced therefrom, either by Xenophon or by Plato.
1
91
CHAP.
Socrates indeed says that the deity had given him the task of sifting men, that the deity had forced him to 2 this line of life but he never says that he had To received this commission from the Saifjudviov. 3
;
this
he
is
Mm
meddling with
politics.
Lastly, the ^ai^oviov has been often regarded as the voice of conscience, 5 but this view is at once too wide and too narrow. Understanding by conscience
the moral consciousness in general, and more particu larly the moral sense as far as this finds expression
in the
its
moni
tions are not confined to future things as are the monitions of the Socratic Sai/jLoviov. Nay, more,
it
itself
felt
in
the
first
upon
p. GO, 2
82, 1.
;
2
:;::,
:i
28, D.
Griech. Phil. i. 243 is a modification of the above), lireitenback, Zeitschrift fiir das Gym-
not
true,
as
Vol-
nasialwesen,
1863,
p.
491)
mentions the
first
8aifj.6vioi
as the
and exclusive
ainoi/ of his
mode of life. He there only attributes to the Sai/j.6^Lov his iibstinence from politics, not his attention to philosophy.
4
:>
Ribbing, too, 1. c. 27, defends this view, however, that the observing, Saipovtov (1) only manifests itself as conscientia antecedens and concomitans, not as coiiscientia subsequens and (2) that its meaning is not exhausted with the conception of conscience, but that it figures as practical moral tact in respect of personal relations and particular actions.
;
See
xlii.
Socrate, p. 531 Brand-is, Gesch. d. Griecli. Kom. Phil, ii. a, 60 (Gesch. d. Entwick. d.
SOCRATES.
CHAP,
actions.
Again, conscience
value
or
the
A
Bioj^l
whereas the heavenly sign in Socrates always bears Therein reference to the consequences of actions.
Plato, no less than
Xenophon,
bees a peculiar
kind
Allowing that Socrates was occasion mistaken as to the character of the feelings and ally impulses which appeared to him revelations, that now and then he was of opinion that the deity had
of prophecy.
forbidden
dicial consequences
him something for the sake of its preju when the really forbidding power
saicl
of
Doubtless in
the real
deterring
politics,
motive lay in the feeling that a political career was incompatible with his conviction of an important higher calling, to which he had devoted his life. It
therefore, be said that in this case a scruple of conscience had assumed the form of a heavenly voice. But in forbidding to prepare a speech for judicial
may,
Here
the only explanation which can be given of the heavenly voice, is that such a taking in hand of his own personal ipterests did not commend itself to the sage s line of thought, and that it appeared unworthy of him to defend himself otherwise than by a plain
1 statement of the truth requiring no preparation.
Volquardsen
1.
c.
confounds
Apol. 17, A., as meaning that it was not a question of a simple defence, but of a defence in the usual legal style with all the tricks and manoeuvres of
HIS CHARACTER.
All this, however, has little to do with
<
judgments
CHAP.
_ ,.___
respecting what
has
much
suited or unsuited to the individual character of theStill less can the decision respecting philosopher. l who have once deserted the receiving back pupils him, be referred to conscience. The question here
really
was
to profit
by his instructions.
of character.
criticism
The
jokes,
too,
which
Socrates and his friends permitted themselves as to the Sai/Jioi iov* were wholly out of place, if the
.As far as they are founded they afford a proof that the Saipoviov must be distinguished from moral sense or conscience ;
on
and
quite in harmony herewith to hear Socrates that the heavenly voice often made itself heard say, on quite unimportant occasions. Kemembering fur
it is
3
bent on referring actions to clear conceptions, and accordingly excluded from the field of prophecy, and therefore from the province of the SapovLov, everyan orator. In Xenophon s account there is not a word of Had this been his meanthis. ing, it must somehow have been indicated in the sequel it would have been said that the 5ai/j.6viov kept him from clefending himself, because a defence in keeping with his principles would have been useless it is by no means a matter of course that he would not have been able to get up a speech
;
;
of himself. Eos. i. 175 observes what idea must we form to ourselves of Socrates, if he required the assistance of the ^ai^viov to keep him back from that which he clearly saw to be incompatible with
very
much worthy
Cron in
:
But
as
his principles
-
2,
No.
4.
94
CHAP.
SOCRATES.
thing that might be known by personal reflection, we shall see how little right we have to understand
1
the baifioviov as having principally or wholly to do with the moral value of an -action.
<VZ)
PJiilo-
explain^ai
6viov"
voice appears rather to be the form, which a vivid, but in its origin unexgeneral pl re d sense of the propriety of a particular action assumed for the personal consciousness of Socrates. 2
The heavenly
The
we
have seen, be most varied in content and importance. Quite as varied must the inward processes and
motives
./
have
been out
of
which
it
grew.
It
consequences of a step, such as sometimes rises as a first impression with all decidedness in the experi
enced observer of
is
even possible for him to account to himself for the reasons of his misgiving. It might be that an action
in itself neither
on Socrates
feelings, as not
It might his peculiar mode of being and conduct. all those unaccount be that on unimportant occasions
able influences and impulses came into play, which contribute so much to our mental attitude and dei
See
p. SO, 4.
of
The
last
remark
what
but
4,
it is
Socrates inconceivable that could have referred to a higher inspiration impulses the sources
that after the heavenly voice has made itself heard, he afterwards considers what can have led the Gods to thus reveal
their will.
HIS CHARACTER.
cisions
;
all
CHAJP.
.
inner voice of individual tact, understanding by tact a general sense of propriety in word and action as
exemplified in the most varied relations of life in small things as well as in great. 2 This sense Soc
rates early noticed in
and subsequently by his peculiarly keen and unwearied observation of himself and other men he developed
it
to such
it
was seldom
or as
cal
he believed never at
Its psychologi
origin was, however, concealed from his own It assumed for him from the begin consciousness.
Herein is seen the strength of the hold which the beliefs of his countrymen had over Socrates ; 5
1
Hermann,
:
Platonismus
i.
236
is not but an oracle, which, however, is not external, but subjective, his
by Volqnardsen, pp.
Alberti, Socr.
68,
and
oracle.
It
are
partly
answered by the argument which has preceded. Besides, they have more reference to words than to things. So far as this is the case, there is no
tact we understand not only social but
use in disputing.
By
cannot bear, and what is not naturally found in our impulses or our reflections, is
involuntary, or according to the notion of the ancients, heavenly to this category be:
moral tact, not only acquired but natural tact, and this word seems very appropriate to express the sense which Socrates described as the 8cu(j.6viov.
3
4
See
p. 88, 3.
ii.
mighty force
77
:
of feelings.
(5
SOCRATES.
TV
(in. vi.
self-knowledge. Feelings whose origin he has not discovered are seen to exercise over him an irresistible
power.
On the
SCLI.IJLOVIOV
when it does
speak, takes the place of the usual signs and por l tents. Hegel not without reason sees herein a proof
case of the
nal,
that the determining motives of action, which in the Greek oracles were things purely exter
man
himself.
To
misgivings incapable of being resolved into clear conceptions, a high importance was here attached ;
in
them a very
foreign to Greeks, had come to occupy itself with itself, and carefully to observe what transpired within.
Socrates, the devotion with which he even then listened for the voice within, affords an insight into
the depths of his emotional nature. In the boy we ^ see the embryo of the man, for whom self-knowledge
was the most pressing business of life, for whom un tiring observation of his moral and mental con ditions, analysis of notions and actions, reasoning as
to their character and testing of their value were
primary
necessities.
of
mind
peculiarities of Socrates, to his contemporaries appear ing so strange. At times he was seen lost in thought,
so as to be unconscious of
1
Hegel
1.
c.
and Recht
Philosophic,
279, p. 369.
See above,
HIS CHARACTER.
him
;
97
CHAP.
J
at times
a far-reaching indifference to external things, a one sided preference of the useful to the beautiful. What
these traits show if not the importance which he attached to the study of self, to the solitary work
do
all
of thought, to a free determination of self indepen dent of foreign judgments ? Eemarkable as it may
seem to find the dryness of the man of intellect and the enthusiasm of the man of feeling united in one and the same person, both features may be referred
to a
common
source.
What
distinguishes Socrates
an element, and
artistic
made in the
Greek
life.
What
may
be,
and what
the general importance of this peculiarity traces it has left in history, are
we must enquire
into the
SOCRATES.
CHAPTER
V.
To
give an accurate account of the philosophy of Socrates is a work of some difficulty, owing to the wellof the earliest accounts.
!
known divergence
Socrates
committed nothing to writing himself; of the works of his pupils, in which he is introduced as speaking, 2 only those of Xenophon and Plato are preserved. These are, however, so little alike, that we gather
from the one quite a different view of the teaching of Socrates to what the other gives us. Among
early historians of philosophy it was the fashion to construct a picture of the Athenian sage, without
principles and criticism, indiscriminately from the writings of Xenophon and Plato, no less than from
1
The unimportant
poetical
attempts of his last days (Plato, Phsedo, 60, C.) can hardly be counted as writings, even if they
were
extant.
They
appear,
which
TTiemist. (Or.
ii.
27, c.)
thing to writing is clear from the silence of Xenophon, Plato, and all antiquity, not to men tion the positive testimony of Cic. de Orat. iii. 16, 60 Diog. i. 16; Plut. De Alex. Virt, i. 4. A conclusive discussion on this point in refutation of the views of Leo Allatius is given by Olearius in Stanl. Hist.
:
ii.
42.
The
Phil. 198.
2 For instance, those of JfiBchines, Antisthenes, Phsedo.
the
Socratic
that
CHAP.
___
trusted for the philosophy of Socrates ; to all others, Plato included, at most only a supplementary value
Quite recently, however, Schleierinacher has lodged a protest against this preference of
was allowed.
1
Xenophon, he argues, not being a phi himself, was scarcely capable of under losopher standing a philosopher like Socrates. The object,
Xenophon.
moreover, of the Memorabilia was a limited one, to defend his teacher from definite charges. We are
therefore justified in assuming a priori that there was more in Socrates than Xenophon describes.
Indeed, there must have been more, or he could not have played the part he did in the history of philo sophy, nor have exerted so marvellous a power of
attraction on the most intellectual
men
gives
of his time.
The
the picture of
him would otherwise have too flatly contradicted him present to the mind of his reader.
Besides, Xenophon s dialogues create the impression that philosophic matter has, with detriment to its meaning, been put into the unphilosophic language
of every-day
life and that there are gaps left, to which we are obliged to go to Plato. Not that supply we can go so far as Meiners, 2 and say that only those
;
p.
-
50.
Conf.
Gesch. d. Phil.
o
in
SeMewrmaeka?)
293, first printed
p. 81.
Werke,
Abhandhmgen der
Philos.
Academic,
420.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
!__
parts of the dialogues of Plato can be considered historical, which are either to be found in Xenophon, or
says, or
which
are opposed to Plato s own views. This hypothesis would only give us the Socrates of Xenophon slightly
modified, whilst the deeper spring of Socratic thought The only safe course to would still be wanting.
pursue
is
What may
Xenophon reports, without gainsaying the character and maxims which Xenophon distinctly assigns to him ? and what must he have been to call for and to justify such a description as is given of him in the
Schleiermacher s estimate of dialogues of Plato ? been since adopted by several other Xenophon has writers ; and even previously to Schleiermachery
l
had declared that he could only see in the Xenophon a description of the outward pages appearance of Socrates. The like approval has been bestowed on Schleiermacher s canon for finding out
Dissen
of
1
_7??wwiZis,inRhein.
.
Mus. von
Niebu-hr nnd Brandls, i. b. 122. Conf Gesch. d. Gr.-Rom. Philos. ii. a. 20 Hitter, Gesch. d. Phil, ii. 44 Ribbing, Ueber d. Verhaltniss zwischen den Xenophont. uncl den Platon. richten iiber Socrates. Upsala Universitets Arskrift, 1870, Alberti, specially p. 1, 125. takes in the too (Socrates, 5), main the side of Schleiermacher, whilst allowing that Plato s account can only be used for history with extreme caution a caution which he
; ;
P>e-
has himself failed to observe in using the Phredo (see above, p. 59). In respect of the personality of Socrates rather than his
teaching-,
terismi principum philosophorum veterum, p. 54) gives a preference to Plato s picture as being truer to life than
in
]Q1
CHAP.
also
employed to determine
other
its
s
the
hand, Xenophon
warmly supported by
several critics. 2
difficulty,
however, presents itself. The authority of the one or the other of our accounts can only be ascertained by a reference to the true historical picture of Socrates,
.and
the true historical picture can only be known from these conflicting accounts. This difficulty would be insurmountable, if the two narratives had the same claim to be considered historical in points
Indeed, Aristotle s varyingly. scanty notices respecting the Socratic philosophy would have been insufficient to settle the question,
which
they
state
command
beside
the writings
of
an assumption for which there is not the least evidence. But if one thing is clearer than another, it is this, that Plato only claims to be
true to facts in those descriptions in which he agrees with Xenophon, as for instance, in the Apology and
the Symposium.
On
By
22.
Conf.
i.
Fries,
Gesch.
d.
Phil.
rature
Hurndall,
p. 7,
De
philosophia mo1.
and Bibbing,
c.
Oi>
SOCRATES.
which he puts into the month of Socrates. Of Xeno phon, on the contrary, it may be granted that, whether from his deficiency in philosophic sense, or from his exclusively practical tastes, not unfrequently
the scientific meaning and the inner connection of the principles of Socrates escape his notice. Nor must we ever forget that the Memorabilia are prima
rily
CHAP.
|
I
intended to be a defence of his teacher against the charges brought against him, which charges were the cause of his condemnation, and passed current
For
this
purpose a description
was requisite, not so much of his philosophy as of his morals and religion, setting forth his piety, his
integrity, his obedience to the laws, his services to Ids friends and fellow-citizens rather than his intel
lectual
convictions
Even the
command,
question, whether, with the means at his a life-like reproduction of the dialogues of
Socrates can be expected from Xenophon, cannot be answered affirmatively without some limitation. His treatise was not written until six years after the
death of Socrates, and we have not the least indica tion that it was based on notes made either by him
self or others in the
2
dialogues.
1
Mem.
It
i.
and 20;
;
2, 1
3,
1; iv. 4, 25;
2
5, 1
8, 11.
173, B. Plato, Symp. 172, C. Theret. 143, A., that Socrates friends (as Volquardsen, Dasmon d. Sokr. 6, says) took down his
103
own
or his friends
memory
has
CHAP.
not the claim to accuracy of a verbal report, but rather owes to himself its more definite form and
setting.
No
doubt
it
he writes from his own recollection. expressly observes in a few cases that he was present during the dialogue, but had heard similar things from
others,
He He
says that
If,
then,
many
Socratic discourse is
his
unknown
to
him
or has escaped
memory,
if
been thoroughly understood, or its philosophical importance misunderstood by him, it may neverthe less be assumed that a pupil of Socrates, accustomed
to consort with
him
for years,
and able to
commu
nicate
Xenophon actually communicates, neither repeats on the whole what is false, nor leaves any essential side of the Socratic teaching untouched.
all
that
From
torical or
Plato, indeed, so far as his description is his permits a reference to the Socrates of history,
many a trait supplementary of Xenophon s narra tive may be expected, and many an explanation of
the real meaning of sayings, which his fellow-pupil reports as understood only from the standpoint of
similar ones in Farm. 126, B. Neither does Mem. i. 4, 1 refer to writings of pupils of Socrates, but to the views of opponents. Mem. iv. 8, 2 appears to refer not even to writings, but to oral
....
TOVTWV
877
ypd^u
3,
6ir6(ra ttv
iv.
eyb
4
:
6re
Se
irpbs
/cal
EvdifS^^ov
roidSe
lir-
SteAcyero
Aeo>
irapeyev6/ji.T)v.
iv. 8,
communications.
1
Mem.
i.
<taei
3,
/not
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
V.
practical utility. Hence objection can hardly be taken Ne to the above-quoted canon of Schleiermacher. 1
is highly improbable that in essential there should be an irreconcilable difference points between Xenophon s description and that which we
vertheless, it
take for historically established as Plato s. 2 The real state of the case, however, can only be ascer
may
tained
by examining
the
statements
of various
authorities
and
their
agreement, and this enquiry naturally coincides with the exposition of the Socratic teaching, from which it could only be distinguished in point of form. It will
not, therefore, be separated
will
from
it
here.
Socrates
phon, Plato, and Aristotle. If the attempt to form a harmonious picture from these sources succeeds,
Xenophon
it will
will be vindicated.
Should
it
not succeed,
and fundamental principle of Socrates. Here the sketches of our main authorities seem to According give ground for the most opposite views,
jj
P. 100.
As
Hard
accuracy
scription.
3
of
Xenophon
de
guish in point of speculation what belongs to Socrates and what belongs to Plato. As regards morals, he hopes to gain a true general view oi Socrates by taking the maxims
The course here followed is also in the main that taken by Striimpell, Gesch. d. Prakt.
which are attributed to him by Xenophon. unanimously Plato, and Aristotle, following
CHAP
than as a
man
full of
s
piety
is
and common
Hence Xenophon
account
specially appealed to in support of the conception of Socrates as a popular moral man, holding aloof from
all speculative questions,
and in
philosopher than a teacher of morality and instructor of youth. It certainly cannot be denied that
1
Socrates
was
full
morality, and made it the business of his life to exercise a moral influence upon others. 2 Had he
only discharged this function after the unscientific manner of a popular teacher, by imparting and inculcating the received notions of duty and virtue,
the influence would be inexplicable which he exerted, not only over weaklings and hairbrains, but over the
most talented and cultivated of his cotemporaries. It would be a mystery what induced Plato to connect
the deepest philosophical enquiries with his person, or
what led
all later
How common this view was in past times, needs not to be proved by authorities which abound from Cicero down to Wiggers and Eeinhold. That
is not yet altogether exploded may be gathered not only from writers like Van Heusde, Characterismi, p. 53, but even Marbach, a disciple of the Hegelian philosophy, asserts in
it
speculative philosophy which aimed at general knowledge, as useless, vain, and foolish, and that he took the field not only against the Sophists as
sopher.
2
i.
174, 178,
38, A.,
0(5
SOCRATES.
regard him as the founder of a new epoch, and to own peculiar systems to the movement
CHAP.
trace their
set
on foot by him.
Even
feature
it
is
in himself
his doings more than one with this conception. Whereas at variance
and
value in as far as
is only of instrumental for action, so far was Socrates from sharing this belief that he consi-^
dered actions only then to have a value when they that he referred proceed from correct knowledge
;
moral action or virtue to knowledge, making its per fection depend on perfection of knowledge. Whereas,
according to the ordinary assumption, he would in his intercourse with others have before ali things
aimed at moral training, so far was it otherwise that it appears from his own words that love of knowledge
was the original motive for his
1
activity.
Accordingly
we observe him in his dialogues pursuing enquiries, which not only have no moral purpose, 2 but which,
1 Plato, Apol. 21, where Socrates deduces his whole activity from the fact that he pursued a real knowledge. 2 Examples are to be found in the conversations (Mem. iii. 10), in which Socrates conducts the painter Parrhasius, the
subordinate one; he was no doubt really actuated by the motive mentioned in the Apology, a praiseworthy curiosity
to learn
all classes,
from intercourse with whether they were clearly conscious of what their arts were for. Xenophon him-
sculptor Clito, and Pistias, the self attests this, Mem. iv. 6, 1 : avv rois awovcri, rt e/coforger of armour, to the conceptions of their respective i<rrov en) T&V UVTWV ouSeTranror This pursuit of the It is true Xenophon in- I eA^er. arts. troduces these conversations conceptions of things, aiming with the remark that Socrates not at the application of knowknew how to make himself ledge, but at knowledge itself, But the is quite enough to prove that useful to artisans. desire to make himself useful Socrates was not only a preacher can only have been a very of virtue, but a philosopher.
tf<r/co7ro>//
j
107
im-
CHAP,
These traits are not met with ex moral purposes. in one or other of our authorities, but they clusively are equally diffused through the accounts given by
the three main sources.
Socrates can therefore not
possibly have been the unscientific moral teacher for which he was formerly taken. Knowledge must have
had for him a very different value and importance from what it would have had on such a supposition. It may not even be assumed that the knowledge which he
sought was ultimately only pursued for the sake of 2 He action, and only valued as a means to morality.
meam;
end which
lies
pendent impulse and love of knowing, will neverstudy so carefully and so independently the problemand method of philosophic research as Socrates did-;
will never
>
mony with his practical view of things, as his words show from which it may be seen that Socrates made his friends more
critical.
1
able to
win
lovers.
Now,
al-
But
iii.
cr4tieisjlL_is__ihe
e.
1
contains a paragraph adapted more than any other to refute the idea that Socrates was only a popular teacher. Socrates hears one of his companions commending the beauty of Theodota, and at once goes with his company to
1
Mem.
though such a step would not give that offence to a Greek which it would to us, still there is not the least trace of a moral purpose in his conduct. Brandis (Gesch. d. Entw. i. 236) remarks are little to the
1
see her.
He
a painter
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
incapable of exerting the deep reforming influence over Ethics which, according to the testimony of history, he did exert, had he thus confined himself to practical interests*.
^
His importance for Ethics is derived not so much from the fact that he insisted on a re-establishment
jjf
moral
life
this Aristophanes
many
others did,
scientific
but from his recognising that a basis for moral convictions must be an
indispensable condition for any real reform of morals. Herewith it is presupposed that practical problems
are. determined
words, that knowledge not merely subserves action, but leads and governs it a view never as yet held
to
knowledge an
independent value of its own. It, therefore, Socrates, as we shall note, confined himself in principle to
enquiries having for man a practical value, it can only be inferred that he was not himself fully con
scious of the range of his thought. In practice he went beyond these limits, treating ethical questions
in such a
manner
as
fired
with an independent love of knowledge. The area is thus determined within which the fun
damental conception of the Socratic philosophy must be looked for. True knowledge is the treasure to
discover which Socrates goes forth in the service of the Delphic Grod; to gain the knowledge of the
essence of things, he, with his friends, unweariedly labours ; to true knowledge he ultimately refers all moral demands. The force with which he asserted
109?
demand
constitutes
him the
creator in Greece
CHAP.
V.
C.
For him it of an independent system of morality. is not enough that men should do what is right; they
also
His
that knowledge must a dark impulse, an undefined consist a they should not follow in concep enthusiasm or the aptitude of habit, hut should act tions*
it.
He demands
theory tliaf
from
clear consciousness
and because
it
was deficient
wisdom to
1 the art of his time, however high it otherwise stood. In a word, the idea of knowledge forms the central
2 point of the Socratic philosophy. All philosophy aim must be further circum ing at knowledge, this point
with
ii.
ing- of
to
in
unessential points,
Rhein.
the poets, but had soon found that they were usually not able to account for their own works.
"Eyfcov
Mus. von Niebulir und Brandis* i. 6, 130; Gr.-Rom. Phil. ii. a, 33. To him the origin of the
doctrine of Socrates appears to be a desire to vindicate against the Sophists the absolute worth of moral determinations and then he adds to secure this purpose the first aim of So crates was to gain a deeper
;
:
oSi/
....
xp n a J
l
8rt
ov
ffotyiq
iroioiev
iroto tev,
a\\a
<
<pvffi
nvl
Kai
evdov(ridoi>rfs,
fj.dvrfis
Kal
) (
avrol \eyovffi
tffaai 8e ou5ei/
jiiev
&v
Be
sides,
no one knows the limits of his knowledge, but thinks He to understand all things. had also observed the same
the the x fl P OT *X vaL presentatives of sculpture
in
)
insight into his own conscious ness, in order to be able to dis tinguish false and true know
re
and
art.
Schleiermacher, Werke, iii. The awakening of the 300: idea of knowledge, and its
2,
ledge with certainty. Similarly Braniss, Gesch. d. Phils. Kant, i. 155. The important feature in Socrates was this, that to
to
be
tirst
utterances,
a certain kind of knowledge, proceeding from the thought of the good inborn in the soul.
110
SOCRATES.
with earlier philosophers an immediate and instinc became conscious and
CHAr.
methodical.
By him
know
ledge was
first
brought out,
This statement, again, requires further explanation If the love of knowledge was shared also by previous
philosophers, why, it may be asked, did it not before develope into a conscious and critical pursuit ? The
reason which
may be
assigned
is
this
The knowledge
which
philosophers pursued, was, in itself, different from the knowledge which Socrates required. They were not compelled by their idea of knowledge
earlier
as Socrates
tellectual processes
by the principle which the most trustworthy accounts unanimously report as the soul of that all true knowledge must pro all his teaching ceed from correct conceptions, and that nothing can
be known, unless it can be referred to .its general 2 In this principle, conception, and judged thereby.
1
Schleiermaeker,
1.
c.
291)
i.e.,
as
text,
Xenoph.
ell]
Mem.
/j.ev
iv.
6,
1:
yap rovs
rois
&A.Aois
elS6ras, ri
rovs 5e
Qav^affr bv
l
flvat
points to universal conceptions, in order to settle them by means of these; iv. 5, 12: KCU TO 5ia\e*yeo #ai ovoecpv] 5e fjLaardTJvai CK rov (rvvtovras Kowfj Kara /3ouAeiW0ai, StaAeyoi/ras
y4vr) ra Trpdynara.
paffdai eaurbi/
a\\ovs
ru>v
5e?^ ovv
irpbs
irfi-
rots (rvvovffi
6ri /j.d\Lffra
erotyuoy
i.
TOVTO
ri
HKCUTTOV
fit]
.
ovrwv, ou5e-
irapacrKudfii>.
TTWTTOT
Z\nyf.
13
eVl
r^v
Comp.
1.
](!,
uir6dfffiv
7raj/7j7e
irdvra
r"bv
\6yov,
Ill
may
manded
in the intellectual
way is to take things as being what they appear to the senses to be or if contradictory experiences for bid doing so, to cling to those appearances which make
;
the strongest impression on the observer, declaring these to be the essence, and thence proceeding to
further conclusions.
one-sided observations, without being conscious of x the necessity of grounding every judgment on an
Arixfatle (Met. xiii. 4, 1078, b, 17, 27) ^(cKpdrovs 8e Trepl ras Tjflt/ca? operas irpay/j.aTvofji.vov Kal ro urwv 6piff6ai Kado\ov irepl farovvros Trpurov .... e/cew/oy v\6ycas e^Tjrei rb ri earn/ Svo yap etTTiv a ris av airoSoiir) Sco/cparei StKaius, rovs T eTra/cTiKal KOVS \6yovs rb fynfetrflcu Ka06\ov. Both are, however, at
:
poet. Phaedr.
262, B.
265,
D.
It
The
\6yoi
can, however, hardly be proved from Plato that Socrates really distinguished eTntrH^Tj from Brandis (Gr.-R6m. 8Ja, as Phil. ii. a, 36 ; Gesch. d. Entw. i. 235) would have it ; for we
like
are only the means for finding universal concep tions, and therefore Aristotle elsewhere (Met. i. 6, 987, b, 1 ;
xiii.
9,
view of
Plato.
Socrates or
that of
1086,
b,
3;
De
Part.
Anim., i. 1, 642, a, 28) justly observes that the seeking for universal conceptions or for the essence of things is the real service rendered to philosophy by Socrates. Accordingly, in the dialogues which Xenophon has preserved, we always see him making straight for the general conception, the ri eVrtv. Even in Plato s Apology, 22, B., he describes his sifting of men \4yoifv, that is to
wrote a treatise
firt<rT-f]/j.r)s,
irepl
SO^TJS Kal
this dis tinction to the Eleatics. Itcan hardly be found in Xen. Mem. iv. 2, 33. In point of substance, no doubt the dis
may owe
was implied in the whole conduct of Socrates, and in passages such as Xen. Mem.
tinction
Plato, Apol. 21, B. Conf. what has been said above, p. 39, and in Gesch. d.
;
iv. 6, 1
1
Phil.
i.
860.
ll
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
By means of subject. had been overthrown. It dogmatism was felt that all impressions derived from the senses were relative and personal, that they do not represent as they appear and, that, things as they are, but
exhaustive enquiry into
sophistry this
its
;
the opposite consequently, whatever we may assert, be asserted with equal justice. For, if for one may at this moment this is true, for another person
person at another
moment
that
is
true.
Similar
sentiments
of
are
expressed
by Socrates
He is opinions. that they cannot furnish us with knowledge,, aware but only involve us in contradictions. But he does
relative to the value
common
not hence draw the inference of the Sophists, that no knowledge is possible, but only that it is not possible
in that way.
The majority
of
knowledge, because they confine themselves to suppo sitions, the accuracy of which they have never
examined
; only taking into consideration one or another property of things, but not their essence.
Amend
this fault
conscious procedure a true, instead of an imaginary knowledge. In thus requiring knowledge of concep tions, Socrates not only broke away from the current
view,
but,
generally
philosophy.
A thorough
critical
113
own
basis,
was demanded
all
CHAP.
been regarded as knowledge was rejected, because it and at the same time fell short of these conditions
;
the conviction was expressed that, by observing these rules, real knowledge could be secured.
For Socrates this principle had not only an inbut a more immediate moral value. It is in fact one of the most striking things about him that he is unable to distinguish between morality
tellectual,
D. Moral
and knowledge, and can neither imagine knowledge nor virtue without knowledge. In ^without virtue, this respect also he is the child of his age, his great
1
ness consisting herein, that with great penetration and spirit he gave effect to its requirements and its
legitimate endeavours. Advancing civilisation having created the demand for a higher education amongst
the Greeks, and the course of intellectual develop ment having diverted attention from the study of nature and fixed
it
nection became necessary between philosophy and conduct. Only in man could philosophy find its
highest object
;
The Sophists
had endeavoured to meet this requirement with great skill and vigour; hence their extraordinary success. Nevertheless, their moral philosophy was
too
deficient
in
tenable
ground;
by doubting
it
;
had loosened
hence
1
it
degenerated with
terrific speed,
entering the
114
SOCRATES.
Instead impulse. the influence of philo by sophy, both conduct and philosophy had taken the
service of every
life
CHAP.
wicked and
selfish
of moral
being raised
course.
same downward
This
understood.
thoroughly Whilst, however, his contemporaries, either blind with admiration for the Sophistic teach
things
ing, were insensible to its dangers, or else through dread of these, and with a singular indifference to the
sad state
of
Socrates
wants of the times and the march of history, de nounced the innovators in the tone of Aristophanes,
he with keener penetration could distinguish between what was right and what was wrong in the spirit of
the age.
want
insufficiency of the older culture, the of basis in ordinary virtue, the obscurity of the
//
The
taught by him
by anyone of the Sophists. to this teaching he set other and higher ends, not seeking to destroy belief in truth, but rather to
as
much
But
show how truth might be acquired by a new intel His aim was not to minister to the lectual process. selfishness of the age, but rather to rescue the age
and sloth, by teaching it what was and useful not to undermine morality truly good and piety, but to build them on a new foundation of
from
selfishness
;
knowledge. Thus Socrates was at once a moral and an intellectual reformer. His one great thought was how to transform and restore moral conduct by means
of knowledge ; and these two elements were so closely associated together in his mind, that he could find
115
CHAP. no other object for knowledge save human conduct, V. and no guarantee for conduct save in knowledge. V How great the services were which he rendered to both morality and science by this -effort, how wholesome was the influence which he exercised on the intellec
tual condition of his people and of mankind generally, history attests. If in the sequel, the difference between
morality and intellect was recognised quite as fully as their unity, yet the tie by which he connected
and
if in
the last
centuries of the old world, philosophy took the place of the waning religion, giving a stay to morality, purifying and quickening the moral consciousness,
To revert to the question mooted above, as to whether
!
he primarily regarded know ledge as a means to moral action, or moral action as a result of knowledge, so much may be said that his pecu
:
other hand, Ribbing s (Socrat. Studien, i. 46) view does not seem to carry conviction, that, according to both Plato and Xenophon, Socrates took in the first place a practical view of life, and that the
<the
liarity
consisted
herein
that
him this dilemma did not exist, that for him know ledge as such was at once a moral need and a moral force,
for
and
that therefore virtue, as we shall find, was neither a simple consequence of knowledge, nor an end to be attained by means of knowledge, but was directly and in itself knowledge. If,
therefore, Labriola (Dottrina di Socrate, 40) describes the only inner motive of Socrates the moral need of action as certainty, and the conviction that this is only attainable by a clear and indubitably certain knowledge, his statement may be accepted as true. On the
ory of knowledge was only developed by him for the sake of a practical purpose. We have already seen that, accor ding to Socrates, true know ledge coincides with right in tention. But, for the reasons
set forth on p. 105, we cannot allow that knowledge with him
lias
is
only pursued as a means to a practical purpose which must be the view of Eibbing, in as far as he contradicts the one given above. Nor do the pas sages quoted b}- Ribbing (Plato, 29, E. ; 28, D. Apol. 22, D.
;
;
31,
A. view.
38,
A.)
suggest this
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
V.
this great
and beneficial
result, in as far as it
can be
assigned to any one individual, was due to the teach ing of Socrates.
philosophy being thus turned the outer world and directed towards man away from
interest of
The
and man only regarding things and binding of the truth of which he has convinced himself by intellectual research, there and
his moral nature,
as true
appears necessarilyfin Socrates a deeper importance attached to the personality of the thinker} In this modern writers have thought to discern the
1 peculiar character of his philosophy.
Very
different,
however, is the personal importance of the thinker with Socrates from the caprice of the Sophists, dif
ferent too from the extreme individualism of the
Socrates was aware, that post-Aristotelian schools. individual must seek the grounds of his own each
is not^something from without, but musfr tgjound lry~tfoe exejr given
He required
all
opinions
examined anew, no matter how old or how common they were, proofs only and not authorities Still, he was far from making man, claiming belief. as Protagoras did, the measure of all things. He did not even as the Stoics and Epicureans declare
to be
personal conviction and practical need to be the ultimate standard of truth, nor yet as the Sceptics,,
resolve all truth into probability ; but to him know ledge was an end in itself ; so too he was persuaded
ii.
40
117
CHAP.
nature of things and of moral relations. Instead too of making, with later philosophers, the self-con
1
man his highest end, he con himself to the point of view of old Greek morality, which could not conceive of the individual
tentment of the wise
fined
2 apart from the community, and which accordingly regarded activity for the state as the first duty of a
citizen,
of conduct, 4
Stoic apathy and indifference If it to country were entirely alien from Socrates. that in him commences an un -can be truly said
Hence the
bounded reference to the person, to the freedom of 5 it must also be added that this state life, ment by no means exhausts the theory of Socrates.
the inner
as to
on a purely personal or a really independent basis 6 will have to be settled, by allowing indeed that,
his teaching exhibits
1
Mem,
1-3
;
ii. 6,
1-7
iii.
8,
iv. 4, 20.
ii.
may be
Hegel,
1.
c.
A. seen
own
Compare the views of PJotscker, 1. c., and Brandts for the Ueber die opposite view.
vorgebliche Subjektivitat der Sokrat. Lehre, in Khein. Mus.
ii. 1,
activity under this point of view. See pp. 65, 68 ;Xen, Mem. i. 15 Plato, Apol. 30, A.
(>,
85.
Mem.
iv.
4,
12,
and
3, 15,
18
SOCRATES.
a deeper importance attaching to the personality of the thinker, without, however, by any means belonging It aims at gaining to those which are purely relative. a knowledge which shall do more than satisfy a personal want, and which shall be true and desirable for
CHAP.
;_
but the ground on which it sought is the personal thought of the individual. This theory is indeed not further expanded by
;
He has established the principle, that only the knowledge which has to do with conceptions is true knowledge. To the further inference that only the
Socrates.
true being, 2 and that there fore only conceptions are true, and to a systematic so exposition of conceptions true in themselves
being of conceptions
is
far
he never advanced.
Knowledge
is
here something
;
philo
sophy philosophic impulse, and philosophic method, a seeking for truth, not yet a possessing it and this
;
Hegel
says
nothing very
but
all
different,
when
which
universal element found running through individuals. With this view the
is
1.
Socrates from the Sophists he in Socrates the creation says of thought is at once clad with an independent existence of its
c. p.
246,
239.
own, and what is purely personal is externalised and made universal by him as the good. Socrates is said to have substitilted thinking man is the measure of all things, in place of the Sophistic doctrine man is the measure of all things.
In a word, his leading thought is not the individual as he knows himself experimentally,
The objections of Alberti, Sokr. 94, to the above vanish if the word only is properly
emphasised. He only asserts what is already well known, that Socrates did not develope his theory of conceptions to the theory of ideas, nor contrast the universal thought in the conception, as being the only thing truly real with individual
things.
119
the
CHAP.
aim of Socrates was always to discover and set forth that which is in itself true and good. Mankind is to be intellectually and morally educated, but the one and r only means thereto is to attain a knowledge of truth.y The primary aim of Socrates being to train men to think, rather than to construct a system, the main point with him was a philosophic method to deter mine the way which would lead to truth. The sub
j
partly
stance of his teaching thus appears to have been confined to questions having an immediate
bearing on human conduct ; partly it does not go beyond the general and theoretical demand, that all action should be determined by a knowledge of con
no systematic development of individual points of morality and no attempt to give a reason for them.
ceptions.
There
is
[20
SOCRATES.
CHAPTER VI
THE PHILOSOPHICAL METHOD OF SOCRATES.
CHAP.
!___
THE
peculiarity of the
"
consists, generally speaking, in deducing conceptions) from the common opinions of men. Beyond the formation of conceptions, however, and the intellec
nor
there any systematic treatment of the concep The theory of a knowledge of concep tions gained.
is
tions appearing here as a claim, the consciousness of its necessity must be presupposed as existing, and an insight into the essence of things be sought. At
thought does not advance further than this seeking. It has not the power to develope to a system of absolute knowledge, nor has it a
method sufficiently matured to form a system. For the same reason, the process of induction is not
reduced
within
clearly
defined
rules.
All
that
Socrates has clearly expressed is the general postu late, that every thing must be reduced to its concep
tion.
this reduction
and
him
into a
science, but
were
applied practically by dint of individual skill. The only thing about him at all resembling a logical
by him
KNOWLEDGE OF
rule, the
SELF.
2l
maxim
1
CHAP.
.
must always
admitted,
assertion.
confine
to
what
is
first is
This process involves three particular steps. The the Socratic knowledge of self. Holding as he ^umle^e * did that only the knowledge of conceptions constitutes J i J nutting true knowledge, Socrates was fain to look at all sup- n know^>
>
nothing more obstructive to true from the very outset, than the belief that knowledge 2 Nothing is so you know what you do not know. to show what we really necessary as self-examination,
more
perverse,
Nothing,
relations
is
more indispensable
iv.
6,
for
practical
Mem.
rt
T<
15:
onore Se
Sict
TWI>
euro s
\6yw
5<e|iot,,
speaking in Plato, Apol. 21, B., says that according to the oracle he had interrogated all with whom he was brought
into contact, to discover whether they had any kind of knowledge and that in all cases he
;
\6yov.
2
Xen. Mem.
iii. 9,
6:
/j.aviav
evavriov p.ev e|)7j eli/cu croou jueVroi ye T^\V ctveTrmTTjyUoTO Se ffvviiv naviav tv6fj.iev. ayvotiv eavrbv KUI a /t^ olSe dodeiv T /cat (Hta8a.iyiyvuaK.tiv,
>e
/j.rjv
<ta,
fyyvrdrca ^.avias
called mad who are mistaken about what is commonly known, not those who are mistaken about things of which most men
had found along with some kind of knowledge an ignorance, which he would not take in exchange for any kind of knowledge an opinion that they knew what they did not know,
considered be his vocation, (pi^oaocfiovvra ^yv nal f^rd^ovra f/j-avrbv rovs &\\ovs (28, E.) and he says elsewhere (38, A.) that there could be no higher good, than to converse every day as he did 6 8e av e^eraaros fiios ov
it to
/ecu"
ofeadai
3
et SeVat
In
this
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VI.
than to become acquainted with the state of our inner of our knowledge and capacities, self, with the extent
One result of with our defects and requirements. the discovery that the this self-examination being
1
actual knowledge of the philosopher does not corre spond with his idea of knowledge, there follows
further that consciousness of
knowing nothing, which For any 2 other knowledge he denied possessing, and therefore
Socrates declared to be his only knowledge.
3 refused to be the teacher of his friends, only wishing,
iv.
2, 24,
Delphic
yv&Qi.
creauToV.
is
Q bv et SeVai, aA\ ovros pev oterai fiSevai OVK etScos, tyca 8e o&cTTrep
attended with the greatest advantages, want of it with the greatest disad 01 ^ei/ yap ei Sores vantages eavrovs rd re eTriTirjSeia eavrols
knowledge
ovv OVK oT5a, ou5e oio/j.ai. 23, B. : ovros 3) avdpcairoi, o~ocf)(t>rar6s (Tris, &o~irep ^oaKpdr rjs^ oTi ovSfvbs aios fffri rf)
vp.<av,
irpbs
ffocpiav.
And a
&
b
frruo"i
Kal
iayiyv(i)(TKov(Tiv
a re
a
/xei>
little
avfipfs aoty bs
if ivt]
before
etVat,
rb 5e
/cot
/ctvSuj/ewet,
fivvavrai
Kal
{JLT}
Kal
AOrjvaloL,
r$ ovn
eV
r<
Oebs
eirio~ravrai
irpdrrovres
(self-
XP^I^V
T)
a.vQp<a-
examinatioii always refers in the first place to knowledge, because with knowledge right action is given) iropi^ovrai re
Seovrai Kal eu Trpdrrovffiv. See also Plato, Phasdrus, 229, E. he had not time to give to the explanation of myths of which others were so fond, not being even able to know him self according to the Delphic
<bv
on
6\iyov
rivbs
a|ia
fffrl
Kal
ouSevos.
Symp. 216,
dyvoel itdvra Kal ouScj/ olSei , Theeetet. cr^rj/xa avrov. 150, C. ayov6s el/ja ffotytas, Kal
:
D.
oos
rb
oirep ^5rj TroAAoi fjiOi uveidicrav, ws roiis /^ev a\\ovs tpwrca, avrbs 8e oi5ej/ curo/CfHj/0jU.cu Trept ovozvbs 8t^
oracle
Symp. 216, A.
complains
ofj.o\oyeiv,
&j/
:
when
dvay-
p.aiVffOai
/j,e
dtbs
a.vayKO.^1,
Alcibiades
Kafei ydp
|Ue
Aou
rov
2
eV5er/s
fjLtv
avrbs
cm TroAen e/iauA.6r]vai(av
a/xeAa),
rd
yap
Plato, Apol. 21, B. 8$) ovre (teya obre avvoida e yuauT^ &v. 21, D. rovrov /m.fv TOV disBpuirou 6700
:
<To$l>s
ytvvav Se aTrsKuXvfftv. Comp. Hep. i. 337, E. Men. 98, B. That this trait in Plato has been taken from the Socrates of history, ma}7 be gathered from the Platonic dialogues, in which his teacher is by no means represented as so igno
;
rant.
3
[j&v
ydp
KNOWLEDGE OF
in
SELF.
1
123
CHAP.
VI>
confession of his
being a sceptical
This and enquire. was certainly far from ignorance denial of knowledge, 2 with which
to learn
the whole philosophic career of Socrates would be irreconcilable. On the contrary, it contains a simple
avowal as to his own personal state, and collaterally as to the state of those whose knowledge he had had
the opportunity of testing. 3
it
be
regarded as
Socrates really
wise,
knew nothing,
or to express it other-|
v
dogmatic principles. The demand for a knowledge of conceptions having once dawned upon him in all its fulness, he missed the marks of true knowledge in all that hitherto passed for wisdom and knowledge.
Being, however, also the first to make this demand, he had as yet attained no definite content for know
The idea of knowledge was to him an unfathomable problem, in the face of which he could not but be conscious of his ignorance. 5 And in so far a certain affinity between his view and the sophistic
ledge.
1
irrtffOat,
Scc.
ffvfaTeiv,
5,
Xen.,
;
Mem.
iv.
12
;
6,
Prot. Crat.
the limited cJiaracto of human knowledge being asserted in comparison with the divine. 4 As Grate remarks (Plato, i.
270,
323), referring to Arist. eVei Soph. El. 34, 183, b, 7 KOI 5ia TOVTO ^uKpdrrjs f/ptiro,
:
44
ii.
23, 74.
of
knowledge
the not
a\\ OVK aireKpivtTo- upoXoyfiyap OVK etSeVeu. Conf. Plato, Hep. 337. 5 Compare Hegel, Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 54 Hermann, Plato, 326.
;
24
SOCRATES.
In as far as it denied scepticism may be observed. the possibility of all knowledge, Socrates opposed this
scepticism, whilst agreeing with it in as far as it re ferred to previous philosophy. Natural philosophers,! he believed, transcended in their enquiries the limits]
CHAP.
A clear proof of this fact is of human knowledge. that they are at variance with one another respecting Some hold being to the most important questions. be one, others make of it a boundless variety ; some
teach that everything, others that nothing, is subject some that all things, others that nothing to motion
;
Just as the Sophists destroyed the conflicting statements of the natural philosophers by means of each other, so Socrates
perishes.
infers
them
ference
in possession of the truth. Their great dif consists herein, the Sophists making Not-
knowing into a principle, and considering the highest wisdom to consist in doubting everything Socrates
;
TJw
Such being the importance of the Socratic Notknowing, it involves in itself a demand for enlighten
ment
1
Xeu. Mem. i. 1, 13, says that Socrates did not busy with questions himself of natural science, but on the contrary he held those who
did to be foolish
et
fj.Tj
;
T&V
\eyeiv
ov
ravrb.
TO?S
is
5ode:/
aAArjAous-
ctAATjAots,
o>oieos
dAAa
^lati/o/iej/ots
5ia/ceto-0cu irp bs
e0aujuae 5
eo~Tiv,
TOAJTO.
tyavepbv OV SfVCCTOJ/
avrols
ori
quoted in
125
The
consciousness of our
own
CHAP..
Not-knowing continuing, and the philosopher having an idea of knowledge without finding it realised in
himself, the searcli for knowledge naturally assumes the form of an application to others, with a view of ascertaining whether the knowledge wanting at home
is
Hence the
necessity of
enquiry in
Socrates,
common by means of the dialogue. 2 For this mode of intercourse has not merely an
more mind
educational value, procuring easier access and a fruitful effect for his ideas, but it is to his
an indispensable condition of the development of thought, and one from which the Socrates of history
never departs. 3 Speaking more accurately, its nature consists in a sifting of men such as it is described in
the Apology, 4 or in a bringing to the birth, as it is called in the Thea3tetus 5 in other words, the philo
;
him
6
:
The connection is very apparent in the Apol. 21, B., if only the inner thought of the philosophy of Socrates is put in the place of the oracular response.
1
and the
nature
into
human
in
meaning
Mem.
is
iii.
iv.
not
its origi-
Compare
p. 123, 2.
C.
1
Similarly Xen. Mem. iv. ird.VTd)! (jiev yap &v eyco o!8a
en? Tc5i/
TIS
tTTio-T fiiJ.toi
avvovruv
it
nal object. 5 See p. 149 122, 2. 6 lie Plato, Lach. 187, E who enters into conversation with Socrates iraveaBaL fork TOVTOV irepia.y6iJ.evov \6yif, e/jurtcrr) tls rb SiSoWi Trepl irplv avrov \6yov, ovriva. rp6irov vvv re nor is there any escape 77, from the most thorough /So;
r<p
tu>
avrcf).
<r
to prove
aindpKfis ev TCUS
26
HAP.
SOCRATES.
opinions, after the reasons of their beliefs and actions,
way attempts by an interrogatory analysis of their notions to bring out the thought latent therein, of which they are themselves unconscious.
this
1
and in
In as
know
ledge which the questioner lacks may be found in others, it resembles an impulse to supplement one s own defects by their help. Tins intercourse with
others
is,
for a philosopher
with
whom knowing
coin
cides with purposing, not only an intellectual but also a moral and personal need. To enquire in common
is
at once to live in
common.
Love of knowledge
is/
at once impulse to friendship, and in the blending 1 of these two sides consists the together peculiarity of] the Socratic Eros. 2
In as far as others do not possess the knowledge sought for, and the questions of Socrates only serve to
-expose their ignorance, the process bears
also
the
of irony. Irony, however, must not be understood to be merely a conversational trick 3 still
character
It is assumed as a matter of course, that every one can give an account of what he
1
Pluto, 158, E.
p.
ii.
1.
c. 1
90, C.
See above,
a,
75.
Besides
P.randis
64,
reminds us
with justice that treatises on epws are mentioned not only by Plato and Xenophon, but also by Euclid, Crito, Simmias, and
.Vntisthenes, which shows the importance of it for the Socratic schools. The chief passage is in Xenophon, Symp. c.
S,
53,
Hegel, Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 57*: Conf. Arist. Kt-h. iv. 13; 1127, b, 22.
sim
CHAT.
VI.
plicity,
which as
it
order to laugh at their falls or that absolute refer ence to the person and destruction of all general truth, which, for a time bore this name in the
romantic school.
herein, that
consists rather
rut/
prompted only by a desire for knowledge. Socrates addresses himself to others, in the hope of learning from them what they know, but that in the attempt
to discover
*
it,
upon a
critical analysis
of their no
This
Plato
etcofluTa
elpwveia
2<aKpdrovs,
Kal
ravr
fyoo $877
re
Kal
TOVTOIS
Te aTropeTs Kal rovs a\\ous iroie is aTropeTz/, and also in the Apol. 23, E., in which, after the Socratic sifting of others has been described, it goes on to
say:
.
.
<=*
eTaVea>s
7roAA.ot
.
yey6va<ri
.
cpwra.
iva
Tjrat,
And
a^ain,
/z^
337,
E.
ovojj.a
5e rovro
ffocpbs
SwKpcxTTjs rb
et ojflbs
5ta7rpa|-
olovrai
cs
yap
/ue
e/catTTOre ol
e?j/ai
aurbs
Kal
^ei/
aTTOKpivrjTai,
a\\ov
\6yov
8e airoKpivofJiSvov Aa/x/3aVr7
e Ae 7Xt?
:
&i/
(rotybv
Likewise
4,
to
which So. . .
XenopJwn, Mem.
10
#TI
crates replies
TTWS
7ap a^
&c.
T&V
et Scbs
&\\(av
KarayeXas,
^Se
216,
(pdffKcav et SeVat,
Symp.
Se
/cal
\6yov
Ibid. 11.
rot
ai>
oi>5e
E.
etpaiyeurfuefos
Conf.
i.
2,
36:
dAAa
the context shows, refers partly to the fact that Socrates pre
ye, & S^Kparey, tfaOas eidws TTWS exf t TO. irAeTtTTa epwrav. Hence Quintilian, ix. 2, 46,
words
oTSev.
071/06?
irdvTa
is
Kal ouSej/
observes that the whole life of Socrates seemed an irony, be cause he always played the part of an admirer of the
wisdom
Socrates
of others.
is
Connected
use which irony as a
word
passage of the
with this
the
of
made
li>S
SOCRATES.
irony is, therefore, speaking generally, the dialectical or the critical factor in the Socratic method, assum
CHAP.
it
posed ignorance of
C.
The
might be of
no real knowledge, he must at least have cflwwep- possessing twn* and Believed that he possessed the notion and the method the wietlwd Without this conviction he ofjmwflni of true knowledge. rniK-cpbeen able to confess his own ignoW ould neither have twnx. ranee, nor to expose that of others, both being only
<
rendered possible by comparing the knowledge he found with the idea of knowledge residing within The fact that this idea was no where to be himself.
itself
a challenge to
him
to set
in his philosophic course the attempt to create real knowledge. For real knowledge he could only allow
that to pass which emanated from the conception of a thing, hence the first step here is the formation of 1 For even if Socrates does conceptions or induction.
not always
make
for
always seeks
some universal quality applicable to the and to the essence of the object, in order conception
to settle the question
the-
The
class-
Xen.
Mem.
iv.
2.
Only
its
nrnst not be limited to this. Compare also Herwann, Plat. 242, 326, and par-
meaning
word also Leoj). Schmidt in Ind. Lection, Marburg, 1873.. l Compare the remarks of Aristotle already mentioned,
the
p.
1
vir66effiv
firavrjye
2..
Gesch. use of
TTO.V
ra rbv \6yov,
Seep. 110,
FORMATION OF CONCEPTIONS.
quality
**-
129
is
therefore to
him
<^HAP.
vi
ance.
life,
every disputed point he goes back to such instances, and hopes in this way to
All previous science
On
being doubtful, nothing remains but to begin anew with the simplest experiences. On the other hand, induction has not as yet so far advanced as to mean the
tested series of observations.
ment due partly to Aristotle, and partly to more modern philosophy. The wider basis of a compre
hensive knowledge of facts being as yet wanting, nay, even being despised, and Socrates being in the
habit of expanding his thoughts in personal conversation with distinct reference to the case before him
v
and
he
is
to the capacity and needs of his fellow-speakers, confined to the assumptions which the circum
must take
can
follow.
isolated
notions
and admissions
as his
most cases he relies more on par ticular instances than on an exhaustive analysis of
in
1
Hence
Compare what
;
has
been
quoted, pp. 80, 2 121, 1, and the whole of the Memorabilia. Plato, too, gives instances of this procedure. See Xen. CEc. i) 19, 15 (pcarya-is 5i5o<r/caAia &rrlv yap JJL* 5i wv e -yi
:
& OVK
8eis, oljucu
us KO! ravra
eVto-ra/tat.
As
&ya>v
to the principle that from the less you proceed to an understanding of the more important, see Plato, Gorg. 947, C.
130
SOCRATES.
This chance element in his principles he, however, endeavours to eliminate by collecting1
CHAP.
VI.
experience.
opposite instances, so as to correct and supplement varying experiences by one another. The question,
for instance, before
him being
like.
the conception of in
lies,
justice
He
is
unjust, says
Euthydemus, who
Yet, rejoins Socrates,, it is right to lie, to deceive, and to rob an enemy. Accordingly the conception must be more accurately
deceives, robs,
and such
defined thus
He
is
unjust
who
action
to his friends.
Even such
when he encourages his army by a lie, nor a father who gives his son medicine by deception, nor a friend who robs his friend of the weapon with which he
would have committed suicide.
We
must, there
fore, introduce a further limitation. Unjust is he who deceives or robs his friends in order to do them*
harm. 2
covered.
Or the conception of a
who
has the power to give orders. But this power, Socrates shows, is conceded only to the steersman on
board
ness,
in case of sick
Only he,
therefore, is a
ruling.
Or
it
The smith
2
3
says, it
must be
1 As for example in the com parison of the politician with the physician, pilot, &c.
Mem.
Ibid.
iv. 2, 11.
iii. 9,
10.
METHOD OF INDUCTION.
of a proper
size.
131
to
CHAP.
wear
it is
deformed.
Why
is, it
size for
his deformity.
it fits.
It
therefore has the proper size when supposing a man wishes to move,
fit
exactly
Not
is
so,
or he
would be hampered in
therefore, understand
his
movements.
We must,
fitting
what
way we
mon
see Socrates analysing thoroughly the com He reminds them of the notions of his friends.
various sides to every question ; he brings out the opposition which every notion contains either within itself or in relation to some other and he aims at
:
correcting, by additional observations, assumptions resting on a one-sided experience, at completing them, and giving to them a more careful definition.
By this process you arrive at what belongs to the essence of every object, and what does not ; thus con
ceptions are formed from notions. For the purpose of proof, too, the class-qualitiesj of conceptions are also the most important things.)
given
1
case. 3
iii.
Mem.
1. c.
2
3
iv. 6,
B.
For instance, in order to reprove Lamprocles for his conduct to Xanthippe, he first (Mem. ii. 1) lets him give a definition of ingratitude, and
then shows that his conduct falls under this conception in order to put his duties before
;
a commander of cavalry, he
begins
stating
2
and enumerating
132
SOCRATES.
progresses from
1
CHAP.
mitted, so, too, 2 prdbf takes the most varied turns, according as it He starts from one or another point of departure. allows a general principle to be taken for granted,
he refutes by bringing home to them contra dictions with themselves or with other undoubted
it
4 he builds up the premisses assumptions or facts ; from which he deduces his conclusions by means of
"
induction, or concludes straight off by an apparent 5 theory of this method 8f proof he has analogy.
not given, nor distinguished the various kinds of The essential point about it is only this, that proof. everything is measured and decided by conceptions. To find the turns by which this end is reached is a matter of personal critical dexterity. Aristotle, therefore, in making the chief merit of Socrates from
this side consist in the formation of conceptions
in induction, 6
right.
Asking further as to the objects on which Socrates practised his method, we encounter in the Memora
bilia of
;
in-
in order to prove the parts being of the Gods, he begins with the general principle that all that serves an end must have an intelligent cause
See above, pp. 131; 121, 1. Conf. ScJiwegler, Gesch. d. Griech. Phil., 2 Ann., p. 121. 3 As in the cases quoted on
2
p. 131, 3.
4 For instance, Mem. and 36 iv. 2, 31 4, 7.
;
;
in order to determine which of two is the better citizen, he first enquires into the peculiar features of a
(Mem.
i.
4,
4)
i.
2,
34
;
5
i.
Mem.
See
iv.
2,
22
iv. 4,
14
2, 32.
good
p. 110, 2.
133
CHAP.
man, the existence of (rods, disputes with Sophists, advice of the most varied kind given to friends and
acquaintances, conversations with generals as to the responsibilities of their office, with artificers and
tradesmen
"to
afe
women
as
their
mode
of
life.
Nothing
is
the curiosity of the philosophy and to call for a thorough and methodical examination. As Plato at
a later time found in all things without exception essential conceptions, so,, too, Socrates, purely in the
interest
#v
or other good was apparent, referred everything to 1 its conception. He looked upon the life and pur
man as the real object of his enquiries, and other things only in as far as they affected the con ditions and problems* of human life. Hence his
suits of
philosophy, which in point of scientific form was a criticism of what ^s (ia\KTifcrj), became in its actual
application a science of
1
human
^
1
actions
See p
Oi)
SOCRATES.
CHAPTER
VII.
:
ETHICS.
1 SOCRATES, says Xenophon, did not discourse concerning the nature of the All, like most other philosophers Funda- before him ; he did not enquire into the essence of A.
VIL
mental
re-
of natural
phenomena
on
the contrary, he declared it folly to search into such subjects ; for it is unreasonable to quiz things divine
before fully understanding things human ; besides, the conflicting opinions of natural philosophers prove
that the object of their research transcends the capa After all, these enquiries city of human knowledge. are of no practical use. Quite in keeping with this
Xenophon
tests
even geometry
and astronomy
as
surveying and navigation. To carry them further than this he considers to be a useless waste of time,
or even impious
;
for
man
track of the mighty works of the Gods, nor do the Gods desire that he should attempt such knowledge.
1
Mem.
i.
1, 11.
Conf. p. 124,
1.
Ibid. iv. 7.
I;
Hence
CHAP.
The accuracy of this description of Socrates has, 2 however, not passed unchallenged by modern writers. Granting, it is said, that Socrates really expressed
these and
fully so
similar sentiments, can they be right understood as though he would altogether deprecate speculative enquiry into nature ? Would
not such an assertion too manifestly contradict his own fundamental view, the idea of the oneness of all
knowledge
Would
it
not lead,
if
propounded as
Xenophon has done, to consequences manifestly un Even Plato 3 bears testimony to the reasonable ?
fact that Socrates did not attack natural science in
itself,
but only the ordinary treatment of it nor can fact that he did devote
;
Mem.
iv. 7, 6
77
o\as Se rwv
6
cvpavtuv,
EKourra
6ebs
/j.rj-
(ppovTtffr^v
yiyvevdai
ovre
avra
&
0eo7s
rjyeiro
rbv
e /cemn
ffo^ivlffou OVK
*fiov\T)Qr}crai>.
Such subtleties
might have been expected to go further after what has been said, p. 49, 2.
it
vii.
/j-eyunov
eirl
<ppovf)<ra-s
T^
TO.S
6euv jUT/xai/as er)yeia6ai xvhich is then supported by various remarks proving the extravagance of the notion that
TSiv
Phasdo, 96, A. 97, B. Kep. Phileb. 28, D. 529, A. Leg. xil. 966, E. 4 Mem. i. 4 iv. 3. No argu; ; ; ;
6,
14:
TOVS
6r)(ravpovs
ruv
the sun
2
is
a
;
fiery stone.
Schleiermaclier,
;
Werke,
iii.
TrcUcu ffofy&v avSp&v, ovs ^/cet/oi /careAiTroV *v jSijSAtots ypdtyavrfs, av^Xirrfav KOIVT) avv TOLS <pi\ois
5;e/>xo,u<",
Gesch. d. Phil., p. 83 JSrandis, Rhein. Mus. i. 2, 130 Gr.-B6m. Phil. ii. a, 34 Hitter, Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 48,
2,
;
305-307
for these
ffotyol
need
not necessarily be the earlier natural philosophers. in also used of poets, chroniclers,
2o</>o!
3(>
SOCRATES.
relations of
CHAP.
means
Allowing,, sight into its reasonable arrangement. therefore, that Socrates, as was the fact, had no
special talent for natural science, and hence did not study it to any great extent, at least the germ of a new
form of
this science
may be
relation
discovered in him.
of
In
means
to
ends in
the theory of an absolute harmony of man and nature, and of man s occupying such a position
nature,
in nature as to
If heto-
^ cording
;
own opinion, only as a preliminary step* have only intended that man ought not to reach into the distance until a critical foundation
to his
He must
own
inner
life ; or else it must have reference to popular and not to philosophical study. 2 Unfortunately this view of modern writers rests
on assumptions which cannot be supported. first place, not only Xenophon, but Aristotle
to
In the
3
also,
not
mention
and
later writers,
it is expressly stated Socrates perused their works, in order to rind in them what was morally useful for himself and his friends.
fcc.,
Met.
i.
(987,
(j.ev
b,
TO.
1)
that
Sco/cparovs 5e nepl
^dina-
Sclileiennaclier
and
Ritter.
as though Krische, 208, Socrates made any distinction between training for a philosopher and training for a good man.
Anim. i. 1 (642, a, 28) ^uKpdrovs 8e rovro ^v [rk opiVaaflcu T^V ova-lav ] tivtfO n, Se far civ ra -rrepl eAr?|6. Conf. Eth. End. i. 5 1216, b, 2.
Part.
:
De
lir\
T!>
4>u<reo>s
Cic.
Tus. v.
iv. 29,
4,
10;
;
Acad.
Fin.
i.
4,
15
123
De
137
CHAP.
declares against Plato ? Even Plato, however, indi admits in the Timseus that natural science rectly
mouth sayings
no evidence that these utterances are historically true. Not even in the passage in the Phsedo can such evidence be found, unless what follows that Socrates had fallen back on the theory of Ideas can be taken to be historical. In one respect Xeno1
phon fully agrees with Plato, in saying that Socrates demanded a consideration of the relation of means to
ends in nature.
If it is further required that the relation of means to ends should not be understood
Lastly, if an appeal is made to the logical consequences of the Socratic theory, do they not prove that Socrates must have been quite in earnest in disparaging a specula
tive study of nature, and in his popular notion of the Had he indeed placed relation of means to ends ?
head of his system, in this explicit form, the idea of the mutual dependence of all knowledge, it
at the
Senee. v. 29, 87 Hep. i. 10 Ep. 71, 7; Sext. Math. vii. 8; (fell. N. A. xiv. 6, 5, and, ac; ;
Phsedo, 100, B.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VII.
would be impossible to account for his low estimate of physics. If, on the contrary, he was concerned, not about knowledge in general, but about the edu cation and training of men by means of knowledge,
is it
not very natural that his enquiries should be exclusively directed to the conditions and activities
of
into account in as
far as it
was useful to
man ?
the relation of means to ends was, for natural and scientific enquiries, like a seed sown broadcast, which sprang up and bore fruit in the systems of Plato and
Aristotle
;
ment
of natural science presented itself only as a subsidiary branch of ethical enquiry, without his
1 In this respect Socrates is like Kant, Kant s position in history being also not unlike As Kant, after destroying his.
the older Metaphysics, only retained Ethics, so Socrates, aside natural after setting science, turned his attention exclusively to morals. In the one case, as in the other, the one-sidedness with which the founder begins has been sup plemented by the disciples, and the treatment at first adopted for Ethics has been extended to the whole of philosophy. Just as it may be said of
Socrates, that, despite his so definitely attested declining of all cosmical and theological speculation on principle, he nevertheless, whilst actually
necessary consequence, in his intellectual principles with the same justice may it be said of Kant, that, notwithstanding his critic of pure reason, he must, whilst disputing the
;
Metaphysics of Wolff, have necessarily seen that his prin ciples would lead him consis tently to the Idealism of Fichte and the natural philosophy of
Schelling both of whom, and the first-named even against
;
protests, appealed For all to these consequences. it is a dangerous business. that, from a consideration of logical consequences and the historical results of a principle, to correct the clearest statements as to the doctrine of its originator,
Kant
own
the
question
really
being,
refraining from such enquiries, could not conceal from himself that they were involved, as a
range.
CHAP,
Even the study of the rela applies only to Ethics. tion of means to ends in nature was, according to his
view, subservient to a moral purpose
that of urging
his friends to piety. 1 It cannot be altogether neg lected in considering his teaching ; nor yet can wo
allow
it,
by Socrates,
an independent
Ethics.
applies to theology, which here coincides with natural science. The motives
which deterred him from the one must have deterred the other also. 2 If, notwithstanding, he expressed definite views as to the Grods and the worship of the (rods, these views were the outcome
him from
of a practical love of piety. Theology then can only be treated by him as an appendix to Ethics. Even then, there are comparatively very few
definite opinions in theology
home
could
to
it
Socrates
with
certainty.
be
otherwise,
considering
is
impossible without a it to
upon ?
and
17.
The
i.
Xen. Mem.
4,
iv. 3, 2
2 Xen. Mem. i. 1,11 nothing impious was ever heard from Socrates ouSe yap Trepl rrjs
;
r<av
they had fully mastered human things, as having advanced to such enquiries, t) ra /iev av6 pea5e TTIVO. ai/j.6via irapevres ra cntoirovvres fjyovvrai ra
irpoa"fj-
iravruv
.
. .
.
<pv<reus
8i\tyero
avrbs
ot
said,15
fj.u>paivovras
&c.
aire5et/c^ve.
He
asked whether
140
SOCRATES.
rendered was a formal one
that of generally refer
:
CHAP.
vir.
is it
ring moral action to knowledge no sooner, however, a question of deducing particular moral acts and
from knowledge, than he contents himself with falling back upon prevailing custom, or partly else there intervenes an accidental reference to pur
relations
poses, the defects of which are corrected in the sequel.
B. TJie
certainly partially
may be
expressed in
1
the
sentence
All
virtue
is
EtMcs
This assertion is most closely connected knowledge. with his whole view of things. His efforts aim from
the
first
more
him
on custom and authority, cannot hold its ground. His sifting of men discovered, even in the most cele
brated of his contemporaries, 2 a pretended in place
1
1),
17, 28
.
o~fis
.
Arist. Eth. N. vi. 13; ScaKparys $ero eTj/ai TrctToy ras aperds Sa-KpdVTjs fjLev ovv Amyous
: .
.
<f>povh-
rovs ayada eTj/ai* KO! otir ravra el56ras a\\o avrl rovruv
aj>
ouSej/
fTTiffra/jLei/ovs
rovs
/AT;
irparrew,
yap
:
flvai
-jraaas,
Ibid.
iii.
11
ruv
#<T0
a^ta
iii. 1
riyelro
ai/
rfy
a rovs /xei/ el56ras Ka\ovs Kal ayaOovs el^at, rovs 8e ayvoovvras aj/8pa7roSc68et$
aAAwi/,
5!/ccuoj>.
Conf. Ibid.
;
1182, a, 15
;
iv. 2, 22.
a,
10
Xen.
Kal
Mem.
iii.
9,
e^nj flvai
Se
TTJV
SiKcuotrywjv
Si /ccua
Kal
ao<$>6s,
The latter Plato, Lach. 194, D. : TToAAaKis aKTJKoa o~ov \4yovros ori ravra ayaQbs Kao~ros i]fji.uv aVep a Se a/j.ad^s ravra Se /COK^S.
oiKaius K6KAr}0-0at.
~
Euthyd. 278, E.
rd re yap
al
irdvra
Kal
29,
E.
KaAa re
141
CHAI-.
knowledge.
upon him is, and exclusive spirit. Knowledge is for him not only an indispensable condition and a means to true
morality, but
is
The
is
absolutely no
after
virtue at
all.
and
virtue.
In support of his position, Socrates established the point that without right knowledge right action is impossible, and conversely, that where knowledge
exists, right action follows as a
matter of course
the former, because no action or possession is of any use, unless it be directed by intelligence to a proper 2 the latter, because everyone only does what object ;
See p. 113. It is only in Plato (Buth. 280, B. ; Meno, 87, C.), that
1
this
expedient and successful action. Nor is it opposed hereto that immediately afterwards it is refused that wisdom is an aj/ajuayaQov, ^iff^T^Tcas many aone, like Dtedalus and Palamasdes, having been ruined for the sake of wisdom. For this is clearly said by way of argument, and ffoQia is taken in its
ground.
Magna
35;
1198,
;
a,
10)
derived the appear corresponding view but it not only sounds very like Socrates, but it is also implied in Xenophon Socrates there (Mem. iv.
;
to have
26) explaining more immediately in connection with selfknowledge, that it alone can tell us what we need and what we can do, placing us so in a position to judge others correctly, and qualifying us for
2,
knowledge. Of knowledge, in his own sense of the term, Socrates would certainly never have said that it was not good
because it brought men sometimes into peril, as the virtue,
SOCRATES.
CHAP
he believes he must do, what is of use to himself * no one intentionally does wrong for this would be
:
making
oneself intentionally
un
happy knowledge is, therefore, always the strongest 3 power in man, and cannot be overcome by passion.
identical therewith, also does. is said, iii. 9, 14, respect ing evirpaj-la in contrast to
3,
What
4/CWJ/
OV8
&KWV
evrvxia,
that
it
is
Kpdriffrov
ledge.
fj.aQ6vra
Troietj/,
Kal
/jie^er^ffavra
ev
or as Plato s
Euthydemus
:
77, B.
goods, and as
Karopdovffa
;
and
11
:
Trpaiv it produces einrpayia evrvxia-. Xenoplwn, i. 1, 7 6, 4, expresses this view more ^Eschines, too, in definitely. Demetriits de Elocu. 297, Pthet. Gr. ix. 122, puts the question into the mouth of Socrates when speaking of the rich in Did heritance of Alcibiades he inherit the knowledge how to use it ? 1 Xen. Mem. iii. 9, 4 ; see above, p. 140, 1 iv. 6, 6 floras 5e a Sel Tfoieiv otei rivas ofe(r6ai
and
rovro TO 25, E. roffovrov KOLK^V 4/ccW TTOIW, &s (TV Tavra eyw ffot ov Trei00)Uat t & MeATjTe . . . 6t Se HKWV Sto. . .
and by 7^ 5e
Plato, Apol.
<>}r
(pdeipw
SfjAoi/
6ri
caj/ fj.&ddr
irav<ro/ji.ai
ye &Kcav
iroiS).
Conf.
Dial, de justo, Schl. Diog. JLaert. ii. 31. 3 Plato, Prot. 352, C. 5p ovv Kal crol T0ivv r6v ri ire pi OUTTJS 8oc6?, % Ka\6v re e7ri<rr7/xT7s
:
Srvjs Vat
7]
7Ti(TT77jLC7J,
Kttl
rov avBpdvTTOv
TIS
Kparri6rivai
n
TO.
KO.KO.
p.^j
"air
Taya6a Kal
virb
Seiv
<pT).
ju.^
TTOIGIV
ravra
SeTi/
; ;
OT5a<-
5e rivas
ras
fy
otovra.i
jurjSe^s,
;
Stxrre
&\\
arra Trpdrreiv
<pp6i/i}ffii
2)
a &
97
Ibid. 3, 11 Plato, Prot. &J*7. 858, C. 2 Arist. M. Mor. i. 9 2coOVK rj/juv yfvfff6ai Kparrjs
:
<
The
latter is
then
e<^)7j
rb
i
ffTrovSaiovs
elvat
(pyfrlv,
</>ouA.ous*
yap
Tts,
epwrrjcretei/
ing is probably only Platonic.) firiffrdArist. Eth. Nic. vii. 3 jj-fvov [Ji.(v ovv off (paffi rives oT6v re
:
elvai [aKparetfeo-Oai ].
Seivbv ydp,
TV
aStKiav.
More in
eirto-T^Tjs
,
tvovffys,
us rb
are the remarks in Eth. Nic. iii. 7; 1113, b, 14; conf. Eth. Eud. ii. 7 1223, b,
definite
;
vii.
&\\o 13
:
n Kparetv.
qera
Eth..
op85>s
2<0Kpari-
ovdev
than he who has not such knowledge. Hence he concludes that virtue is entirely dependent upon
1
knowledge
all
the par
sist in knowledge of some kind, their difference being determined by the difference of their objects. He is
pious
just
V(t)S
who knows what is right towards Grod he who knows what is right towards men. 2 He
;
is
is
CtAA
#T
<TTI
Kal OVK OVK op66v, apT$i yap eVjo-TTJAiTj. If, therefore, any one seems to act contrary to his better judgment, Socrates
O&TOI
TOVS yt
e-rt
ofyucu,
ws
oi
Kal
Plato,
proved
divers,
01
by various
examples
that
/JLT)
does not allow that is really the case. He rather infers the His conduct being contrary. opposed to right reason, he concludes that he is wanting
in this quality
TTpO(TpWTU/J.VOS
(JLC.VOVS
fjiev
;
knights, peltastEe
T(av
eifftv.
&rt-
eiriCTTOjUei/wi/
Nic.
Se
iii.
11;
al
TJ
ifj.ireipta
irepl
e/cairro
Mem.
iii. 9,
ris elvai
$T)Qt)
v.
5e, ft
TOVS
67rt(TTO-
eTTio-TTj^urjj/
.
r^v
1
;
a 5e?
eli/cu
irpaTTfiit, iroiovv-
iii.
ras
5e
Tarawa,
<pi]
ffotyovs
zyKpaTfls
]u.a\\ov,
VO^ I^OL
a<r6<povs
fy
1229,
-
a, 14.
flScas
fvffef&is
vo/j.i/j.a
aKpareis.
In Xenophon, indeed,
jrepl
TOVS
ai>6pc0irovs
Mem.
a case of knowing right and The real mean doing wrong. ing of the answer, however, can only be the one given
above.
The eia, the definition of which is here given, is the same as the OO-IOTTJS, the conception of which is
iv. 6,
6.
eu<re
4 and
sought in Plato
If,
Euthyphro.
therefore,
Grote,
Xen. Mem. iii. 9, 2 ; Symp. 12 Socrates remarks, in re ference to a dancing girl who
1
latter,
2,
crates
is
deliberating
about
sword
SOCRATES.
brave who knows
how
he
is
evil.
In a word,
ledge,
all
wisdom
3
many
kinds of virtue
incor
Virtue
is
pose it, his observation is contradicted by appearances. It does not, however, follow herefrom that Socrates wished the Gods to be honoured vo\*.y TrdAcws. Why could lie not have said, piety or holiness consists in the knowledge of that which is right towards the
Gods, and to this belongs, in respect of the honouring- of God, that each one pray to them after the custom of his country. A pious mind is not the same thing as worship. That may remain the same when the forms of worship are different.
1
Seos
2
Trape xct.
iii.
Plat. Stud.
Mem.
iii.
5e
ffwfypoirvvr]v ov Sicapifev,
a\\a TOV
*yiyvu>-
TO
/j.V
ffKovra. xp7j(r0ai
rbi/ TO,
ffofyov
Mem.
iv. 6,
ffocpia
early
E^uot-ye
No
,
& &pa
aoo
1
4 Plato de velopes this thougl 1 in his earlier writings, Prot. 329, B. ; 349, B. 360, E.
;
Xeji.
Mem.
iv.
fi,
11
ol p.*v
however,
;
apa
Kal
brnrrdfjityoi
eiriKivfivi/ois
rots
5eti/o?s
re
of Socrates
it is
also evidently
Ka\u>s
\prjff6ai
D.
jtt$?
f]
ffocpia
apa TWV
SeTvcoj/
KOI
8fiv>v
by the Laches, 194, E. (which is not much imperilled by the objections raised thereto from a Socratic point of view).
definition in
same
The
from Mem. iii. 9, 4, is certainly not some one may possess the knowledge in which one virtue
:
consists,
whilst
;
lacking
the
Courage
is
fj
ruv
;
8eivu>v
xal
bold (as Sc7iaarschmidl,B&ram].. It d. plat. Schr. 409, does). means rather, according to 198, B., as it so often does,
Protagoras, that where one virtue is, all must be there, all depending on the knowledge of the good. From this doctrine of Socrates the Cynic and Megarian notions of the oneness of virtue arose.
145
CHAP.
and another, one sex and another, affect the For in all cases it is one and the same/ question.
of
life
makes the conduct virtuous, and in all! persons the same natural capacity for virtue must bej assumed to exist. 2 The main point then invariably
thing, which
1
Some to cultivate this disposition by education. with them more, others fewer gifts for any may bring
is
particular activity ; yet all alike require exercise and training ; the most talented require it most, would 3 There being no they not be lost in ruinous errors.
greater obstacle to true knowledge than imaginary knowledge, nothing can in a moral point of view be
more urgently necessary than self-knowledge, to dispel the unfounded semblance of knowledge and to show
to
man
his wants
and needs.
to Socratic principles invariably follows upon know ledge, just as wrong action follows from absence of
1
Plato,
Meno,
i.
71,
D.,
and
Sen-cu.
Conf.
iii.
Plato,
9,
Kep.
iv.
1,
v.
Aristotle, Pol.
13, probably,
452, E.
3
Mem.
which he must in some way have harmonised with the Socratic teaching
1216, a, 20,
:
&<TT
iv. 2, 2. virtue is
(pavtpbv,
6n
<rrlv
ydiKTj
aperr)
TUV
etprj^eVcoj/ Trdvrcav,
ffaifypoffvvfi
Kal
ou%
f)
avr))
yvvaiKbs
.
.
in the
devoted a thorough discussion Meno and Protagoras appears to have become a favourite topic
of discussion,
Ka6direp faro
^,<aKpart]s
yap
a/j-eij/ov
Xeyovffiv
:
ot
2o>-
2>
TTOIS
iroe?,
l
3rt
y ywaKeia
"
ouSei/
p (*
>v
T ^ s T0
"fy>bs
thanks to the appearance of the Sophistic teachers of virtue. Such at least it seems in Xonophon, iii. 9, 1, and in the Meno. Pindar had previously drawn the contrast between natural and acquired gifts. See above,
p. 23.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VII.
knowledge he who knows himself will, without fail, do what is healthful, just as he who is ignorant of him
;
self will,
without
fail,
do what
is
harmful. 1
Only the
man
is
of knowledge can do anything fitting ; he alone 2 In short, knowledge is the useful and esteemed.
;
want of knowledge
is
the
cause of every vice ; and were it possible wittingly to do wrong, that were better than doing wrong unwit
tingly
;
action, the moral sentiment, is wanting, whilst in the former case it would be there, the doer being only faith
less to it for
1
the moment. 3
For exam
Mem.
iv. 2, 24.
K(t)V
\}/V<$6/J.VOS
;
KO.I
ples of conversations, in which Socrates endeavoured to bring his friends to a knowledge of themselves, see Mem. iii. 6
:
TOV
tTriffraiJisvov
;
ra
8 iKata
rov
fjti)
.
eTri(rrd/j.vov
4>ati/o^ai.
iv. 2.
52 the accuser charged Socrates with inducing his followers to despise their for he friends and relations had declared, those only deserve to be honoured who can make themselves useful by means of
i.
Mem.
2,
Conf Plato, Eep. ii. 382; iii. iv. 459, C. vii. 535, 389, B. E. ; Hipp. Min. 371, E. It is only an imaginary case to sup
; ;
knowledge. Xenophon that he showed how useless and ignorant little people were esteemed by their own friends and relatives but lie says that Socrates did not thereby intend to teach them but to despise dependants, only to show that understand ing must be aimed at, on TO
allows
;
their
pose that any one can know ingly and intentionally do what is wrong for according to the principles of Socrates, it is impossible to conceive that the man who possesses knowledge as such should, by
;
3 5e Mem. iv. 2, 19 TOVS (piAovs QairaT&VTuiv eV rorepos adiK&repos fffnv, 6 The question is after 3) 6 &KWV TO Sinaia wards thus settled
:
ru>v
virtue of his knowledge, do anything but what is right, or that air^ one should spontane ously choose what is wrong. an untruth is If, therefore, told knowingly and intention ally, it can only be an apparent and seeming untruth, which Plato allows as a means to higher ends (Rep. ii. 382 iii. iv. 459, C.), whereas 389, B. want of knowledge is the only proper lie, a proper lie being
;
147
in
which virtue
consists,
whether experimenis
CHAP.
tal or speculative,
question upon
In
he places learning and exercise, naturally together, although Plato had distin quite 2 guished them, and to prove that virtue consists in knowledge, that it requires knowledge, and can be ac quired by instruction, he chooses by preference, even
Xenophon
at least
in the pages of Plato, examples of practical acquire ments and of mechanical dexterity. 3
*^As yet,
however,
all
monism. ledge, but of what is it the knowledge ? crates gives the general answer, knowledge of the good. (*) Vir^ ie
C.
The
%?**
who knows ned Even this addition is as what is good and right. wide and indefinite as those before. Knowledge which
is
He
and
so forth,
theo-
retloall>
and
iraf&eto
are
of
the
iii. 9, 1, Socrates anthe question whether bravery is a SiSo/crbj/ or tyvaMov the disposition thereto is quite as various as is bodily power,
Mem.
generally required, but even here no difference is made between theoretical and practical
swers
Mem.
are
and 11
&px<>vres
those
ture,
fTTiard/j-evot.
px etI/
^ }C
>
vopi^u
Kal
/j.e\err]
in proof may be noted that no nation with weapons to which it is unaccustomed ventures to encounter those who are familiar with them. So, too, in everything else, it is the iri/j.\ia,
A.eTui
,
at>e<r0cu,
and
athletics,
those
See p. 143.
where-
48
SOCRATES.
makes
virtue,
is
CHAP.
but what
is
the good?
viewed as an end.
to the conception of the corresponding action, in The short, knowledge in its practical application.
is
however,
Socrates
Just as his speculative philosophy his philosophy. stopped short with the general requirement that
postulate
of conduct
From
ite
such a theory
moral actions.
If such
no other
in
them
some
other way, either by adopting the necessary princi ples from the prevailing morality without further
them or, in as far as principles according to the theory of knowledge must be vindicated before thought, by a reference to experience and to the well-known consequences of actions.
testing
;
Prac-
As a matter of
-
were followed
1
odisde
On the one liand he explained the by Socrates of the right by that of the lawful. The conception
1
Mem.
(77,
iv.
6,
ol<r6a,
oiro ia
AiKcua 5e 6 Ka\e?rcu *A
:
v6fj,ifj,ov
SIKCUOV elvai,
and when
is
ot v6/jioi
K6\evovcrii/,
(77.
Oi apa
mation as to what
v6jJ.lfJ.OV
.
meant by
7TOloD/T6S
&
01
v6p.0l
Ke\VOV(Tl
v6fJLOVS
;
Se
TT
6\to)S, 6077,
yap ov; In
Mem.
0?;^*
jLyvtiffKeis
crates says:
7p
e ycb
^b
077 OVKOVV, [Socrates], vo^i^os jitej/ &i/ e^ 6 Kara ravra [^ 01 TroAtrai fjpdtyavTol iro-
14
CHAP.
with custom
and he
will not
from an unjust sentence, lest he should violate the laws. -On the other hand, as a necessary conse quence of this view of things, he could not be con
tent with existing moral sanctions, but was fain to This he seek an intellectual basis for morality.
and in
ficially,
so
argument, which taken by itself differs in results more than in principles, from the moral philosophy
of the Sophists. 3 (When asked whether there could be a good, which is not good for a definite purpose,
to
he distinctly stated that he neither knew, nor desired know of such a one 4 everything is good and beau:
,
&VO/J.QS Se 6
ravra
ira-
QVKOVV ^ Tofoois
TOVTOIS
1
Hav
aSwa
Mem.
aTTi6S>v
Udw
16
:
p.kv olv.
said,
e?
Euthydemus doubts whether anyone can worthily honour the gods, Socrates tries to convince him.
3,
Mem.
iv.
t>
ayaObv olSa, y ^Sei/^s ayaOov etmv, ofo o!5o, ofrre 5eo/^at ecprj, Atyeis av,
epcaras
/xe,
. .
e? ri
e^Tj
1
[ Ap/o-TiTTTros]
/caAa
re
i>}]
KOI
opas yap,
OTOI/ Tis
on
eV
AeA^oTs 6ebs
al^xpo-
Ta
e</>rj
Af
avT-^v
TO?S
vS/jLcp
0eo?^
tywy
Kal KaKd.
TroAews.
3, 1.
2
3
See
p. 77, 1.
As
sequel shows (not as Ribbing, 1. c. p. 105, translates it good and evil are the same), but the same thing is good and evil, in as far as for one purpose it is useful, that is good,
and
yap
irpbs
Tratra
ayaQa
a by
/j.ev
Kal
/coAa
5e
eVn,
ev
exy, KUKO.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VII.
the special needs which it sub and therefore one and the same tiling may be serves, He declared in good for one and bad for another. a manner most pronounced, that the good is nothing
tiful in relation to
but the advantageous, the beautiful nothing else but the useful everything therefore is good and beautiful in relation to the objects for which it is
else
;
advantageous and useful confirming his doctrine of the involuntary nature of evil one of the leading
l ;
principles of his ethics by the remark that everyone does that which he thinks advantageous for himself. 2 ^/ There is, therefore, according to his view no abso
lute,
but only a relative good advantage and disad 3 Hence vantage are the measures of good and evil.
;
in the dialogues of Xenophon he almost always bases his moral precepts on the motive of utility.
We
we
should aim at abstinence, because the abstinent lias a more pleasant life than the incontinent
:
man
4
should inure ouselves to hardships, because the hardy man is more healthy, and because he can more easily
avoid dangers, and gain
1
5
:
we
s
Xen. Mem.
:
iv.
6,
8,
con.
.
oi tiding
r~b &i/
OT(I)
K0.\6v
;
eVn
irpbs &
5, 6
Symp.
5,
the
irois,
statement
ravr
importance can be attached to the treatment of happiness as the highest end of life in Mem. iii. 2, 4. All Greek philoso phers do the same, including Plato, Aristotle, and even the
Stoics.
4
Mem.
Mem.
i.
i.
5,
ii. 1, 1
conf.
18;.
iv. 5, 9.
5
iii.
Xen. Mem.
12;
ii.
1,
iii. 9,
some
conf.
6.
15
CHAP.
We
our relatives, because it is absurd to use for harm what has been given us for our good 2 we should
;
try to secure good friends, since a good friend is the most useful possession 3 we should not withdraw from public affairs, since the well-being of the com
:
munity
the well-being of the individual; 4 we should obey the laws, since obedience is productive of
is
;
and
we should
abstain from wrong, since wrong is always in the end. 5 should live virtuously, punished because virtue carries off the greatest rewards both
We
To argue
expressions do not contain the personal conviction of the philosopher, but are intended to bring those
by meeting them on their own ground, who cannot be got at by higher motives, is evidently
to virtue
laboured, considering the definiteness with which Socrates expresses himself. 7 Unless, therefore, Xenoi)hon is misleading on essential points, we must
allow that Socrates was in earnest in explaining the good as the useful, and consequently in the corre
True
it
is
utterances are
1
that in the mouth of Socrates other met with, leading us beyond this super6
(3) Ia-
Socratic
^f
(>
Mem.
Ibid. Ibid.
Ibid.
i.
7.
ii. 3,
ii.
19.
;
tract
ii.
4, 5
6,
and
ii. i, 27, gives an exMorality. from a writing of Prodicus, the substance of which
Mem.
10.
4
iii. 7,
Ibid. iv. 4,
iii.
12.
>,
Socrates appropriates. Conf. i. 18 iv. 3, 17. 7 This point will be subsequently discussed.
4,
;
52
SOCRATES.
ground of moral duties, by placing the essential advantage of virtue, the purpose which it serves and because of which it is good and beautiful in its in Most un fluence on the intellectual life of man.
ficial
1
CHAP.
doubtedly and decidedly would this be the view of Socrates could we attribute to him the maxim so
2 familiar to the Socrates of Plato, that righteousness is health, unrighteousness disease of the soul, and
consequently that all wrong-doing invariably injures him who does it. whereas the right is necessarily and
always useful. Language of this kind occurring in the Republic and Grorgias does not justify our be
lieving
mouth
have
it. In these dialogues much is put into the of Socrates, which he never said and never can
Nor can it be pleaded that Plato would said. never have held such pure moral conceptions, unless he had had them from his teacher. Otherwise the
theory of ideas and much besides which is found in Plato would have to be attributed to Socrates. We
for it that everything contained in the Crito comes from Socrates, its author not having been present at the conversation which it describes.
Having apparently, however, been committed to writing no long time after the death of Socrates, and not going beyond his point of view, it is noteworthy that this dialogue contains the same principles 3 a
:
On what follows compare Ribbing, p. 83, 91, 105, whose researches are here thankfully acknowledged, whilst all his conclusions are not accepted. 2 See Zeller s Phil. d. Griech. p. 561 of second edition.
1
treatment
Crito 47, of
as
the advice
him
<
et
p/t]
a.Ko\o
/cal
SiatyOepov/jiev
e/ceu/o
CHAP.
VII.
soul
he knows not, but that injustice is, he knows Similar language is found in Xenophon.
well. 2
In his
pages too Socrates declares the soul to be the mosii valuable thing in man, the divine part of his beingj
because
able
first
is
it is
of value. 3
the seat of reason and only the Reason-j He requires, therefore, that the
He
is
convinced
Se
<pav\6-
fc
fji.lv
SiKaica
fieXnov
Troielrai, TO.
5e aSiK(a cVrrcoAAuTO.
e/ceii/ou
(j)
repa
2
Trepl TrXsiovos.
If,
Ibid. 29, B.
^uer
aoa jStcorbj/ TJ/JUV Sie<f)6app.evov, vb afiiKov AcojSaTcu rb 8e St /ccuoi/ oi/Lvrjtfiv, provided this is not
3 Mem. i. 4, 13: God has not only taken care of the human body, ctAA ftirep /j.eyiffr6v
ecTTi
K(>ari(TTf]v
rep
poj/ than that 49, A wrong doing always injures and dis
:
(pavXtirepov but
TTO\V
Ti/j.iu)Te-
graces him who commits it. 1 Apol. 29, D. as long as he lived, he would not cease
:
eveQvffe, i. 2, 53 and 55, where the statement 6n rb tfKppov &TiiJ.6v fern- is proved by the fact that you bury the body as soon as the soul eV ^
avdpda-n-ca
(j>i\o-
iv.
S>
3,
14
av0pa>irov
has left ye
it,
apurre
juei/ ou/c
.
.
Mem.
i.
2,
/cat
<f>povf]-
recommends
yap
T$IV
e|tj/
bodily
vyieivffv
Socrates exercise
:
<760)s
5e
Kai
a\-n9etas
Kai
TTJS
ra-ur^v
^vx^s, STTCOS ws /SeAricTTrj etrrat, OVK eTTfiueAeT ou5e typovrifcis ; he would rather blame a man in every case where il was neces
re iKavcas
(which
the
care
sary
ort
TCI TrAeitTTOu
&ia
Trepl
54
SOCRATES.
that conduct
is
__
CHAP.
1
better, the
at
the
education of the soul, and more enjoyable, the more 1 The intellectual perfec you are conscious thereof.
tion of
ledge,
man depending
wisdom
is
in the first place on his know the highest good, without compare
more valuable than ought besides. 2 Learning is recommended not only on account of its utility, but far more because of the enjoyment which it directly confers. 3 These expressions fully agree with what
has been quoted from Plato consistent in a philosopher
;
What
Socrates recommends moral duties entirely on grounds of outward adaptation to a purpose, such as we fre quently find in Xenophon ? Are we to assume that
all
were too unripe to understand the sage s real mean ing, to show that even on the hypothesis of the ordi
nary unsatisfactory definition of purpose, virtuous
1
Mem.
o1/j.ai
yap
tii<rra
8, 6 /*/ &pi<rra robs &piara eTrt/xeTOV cos /3eATi<rrous 7175e ruvs ftaAi<rra
iv.
T?J/
mended by Socrates for preferring treasures of wisdom to treasures of gold and silver ; for the latter do not make
s,
tin jSeATiovs
717airb
men
rovs
3
vovrai.
i.
6,
ofei
ovv
avfipiov
/ce/CTjj/xeVoi S.
Mem.
rou
. .
10
ri
aAAa
/caAbi/
jitV
airb
fJiaOelv
.
KCU
ayadov
ov fj.6vov ax^eAeiCti
aAAa
rat.
4
Kal ?)5oval
^yiffrai yiyvov.
/j.eyiffTov
aya6bv
K. r.
A.
iv. 2,
Conf
ii. 1
19.
9,
where Euthydernus
is
com-
155-
the best
that
Xenophon took
these
CHAP.
preliminary and introductory discussions for the whole of the Socratic philosophy of life, and hence drew a picture of the latter, representing, it is true, his own but not the platform of the real So This view has no doubt its truth, but it is crates ?
l
hardly the whole truth. We can readily believe that Xenophon found the more tangible foundation for
moral precepts which judges them by their conse quences both clearer and more intelligible than the deeper one which regards their working on the inner
condition of man.
his
We
description
to
give
to
him more
intelligible
;
and to throw the other more into the background than the actual state of the case
cost of the other
warrants.
must, therefore, allow double value to such Socratic utterances as he reports implying*
We
a deeper moral life. We cannot, however, consider him so bad a guide as to report utterances which
utterances a
Socrates never expressed, nor can we give to these meaning by means of which they can
full
be brought into
description
Take
with Aristippus, 2
where Socrates
1
Daemon
d.
Sokr.
s
4,
who
does
reproduces Xenophon
as incorrectly Zeller s.
2
sayings
as
he
d.
Entwickl.
i.
iSokrat. Stud.
i.
Mem.
iii. 8.
156
CHAP.
SOCRATES.
and afterwards a thing beautiful, and both times answers that goodness and beauty consist in nothing What else save a subserviency to certain, purposes.
1
his
own
opinion? Aristippus one of the unripe unphilosophic heads, not in a condition to understand his views ? Was he not rather in addition to Plato
Was
intel
educated
thinkers in the
:
Socratic
everything say to him is good and beautiful for that to which it bears a good relation, and hence the same thing may in rela
tion to one be a good, to another an evil ? one thing there is which is always
:
Why
and unconditionally good, that which improves the soul? Or did he add it, and Xenophon omit it 2 although the main point ? and was this so in other We could only be justified in such an cases? 3 assumption, were it shown that Socrates could not possibly have spoken as Xenophon makes him speak, or that his utterances cannot possibly have had the meaning, which they have according to Xenophon s account 4 to prove which it is not sufficient to appeal to the contradiction with which Socrates is otherwise
;
It is certainly a contradiction to call charged. virtue the highest end of life, and at the same time to recommend it because of the advantages it brings 5
: 1
See p. 149,
4.
What Brandis
has
else-
2
8
As Mem.
iv. 6, 8.
1.
Brandis, 1. c. As Brandis,
c.
asserts.
where asserted appears to be less open to objection, viz. that Socrates distinguishes mere good fortune from really faring well, and that he only
157
CHAP.
the question really is, whether and to what extent Socrates has avoided it, and nothing can
Still
rejecting most decidedly for the of our actions every standard based on moral estimate
diction in
happiness in its ordi a place among The things relatively good. former statement is in Mem.
allows
Kant
stances,
be
disadvantageous,
:
nary
sense
Euthydemus says
e?
KivSvvevei
iii.
but this distinction 9, 14 even by a decided advocate of Eudremonism, such as Aristippus, could be admitted, as
;
ye
jurj
TIS
aiirb
a/j.(()L\6ycav
ayaQiav erwrtflenj, or
as it is
e<f
immediately explained,
irpoffd fia Ofj.ev avrip /cctAAos
2)
76
/J.TJ
^
TI
ta"%uf
irXovTOv
?)
86av
fy
Kai
dependent
circumstances,
rising superior to himself and his surroundings. If Brandis (Bntw. i. 237) declares this
since among all these things there is none which is not the source of much evil. Far from deny ing, this proceeds on the dis tinct understanding that hap piness is the highest good which Greek ethics invariably presuppose neither is it called
roiovrwv,
;
&\\o
rwv
com
impossible, he need simply be referred to the fact that in the Cyrenaic and Epicurean schools such views are actually met with. See below, ch. xiv. B, and Zeller s Stoics, Epi 5, cureans, &c., p. 44. For the lat ter statement Brandis appeals to Mem. iv. 2, 34. Here Euthydemus has to be convinced of his ignorance in respect of good and evil. After it has been proved that all things considered by Euthydemus to
pounded
aya8a, i.e. of such things as under certain circumstances lead to evil, and are not simply ayaBa, but some times KaKa,. Still less is this statement at variance with
diJ.(f)i\oya
of
passages which estimate the value of every thing and of every action by its conse quences, a standard being the very thing which Socrates is here laying down. As Plato has already re marked. Kep. ii. 362, E. Phsedo, 68 D.
1 ;
158
SOCRATES.
experience, and afterwards deciding the question as to what maxims are suited to the principle of uni versal legislation, having regard to the consequences
CHAP.
which would follow were they universally adopted ? Is there not a contradiction in the same writer,, at
one time waging war a outrance against Eudsemonism, at another founding the belief in the existence
of Grod on
to
the
Is
worth?
asserting the independent existence of a thing and at the same time unconditionally denying that it can
be known, entangled in a contradiction so blatant, that Fichte was of the opinion that if it really
assumed the independent existence of a thing, he would rather regard it as the work of a strange coin Can the historian cidence, than of human brains ?
therefore
make
Can he
instead
of explaining
And would it be
sopher wishes to build moral conduct upon knowledge. In point of form his conception of knowledge is
so indefinite, that it includes besides philosophical convictions, every kind of skill derived from ex
In point of matter it suffers from a perience. similar indefiniteness. The subject matter of prac
1
tical
ful, or
1
knowledge is the good, and the good is the use what is the same thing the expedient. 2 But in
1
and
2.
]59
what
CHAP.
from which we can gather the views of the Socrates of history, with some certainty, he does not even go
beyond saying that intellectual culture, care for the Still soul, must be the most important end for man.
to refer
all
human
actions
to
this
as their ulti
mate and final purpose is impossible for his unsyste matic and casual ethical theories, unsupported by any comprehensive psychological research. Hence other
ends having to do with
man s
well-being in the
most varied ways come apparently independently to support that highest moral purpose, and moral
activity itself appears as a means towards attaining If therefore Xenophon reports a number these ends. 1
of Socratic dialogues in which things are so repre sented, we may still maintain that they do not ex
but we have no
right to question the accuracy of his description, supported as it is by many traces in Plato, nor yet to twist it inta its opposite by assuming that we have
here only the beginnings of dialogues the real object of which must be a very different one. Their accu
racy on the contrary
is
vouched
for
by the circum-
in the passages quoted from Plato on p. 152, although the conception of the useful is somewhat extended there.
distinction in kind in the conception of the ayaQbv, as to regard the ayadbv belonging to virtues as moral good, all other good as good for the understanding only, and consequently as only useful and
expedient.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VII.
1
stance,
that
among
with the morals of the Cynics and the criticism of the Megarians, a place was found too for the Cyrenaic doctrine of pleasure and that the founders of these
;
schools to all appearance were firmly persuaded that they reproduced the true spirit of the Socratic teach
ing.
that teaching afforded them no foothold, In this phenomenon would be hard to understand.
essence
Had
its
the
Socratic morality
is
anything but
selfish.
That
fact does
We
actions was
His views
257,
(Ibid. p. 254 Ges. Abh. 232) or as he prefers to call it in the predominence of relative value not merely a weak point in the philosophy of Socrates, but at the same time an in stance of Socratic modesty, one feels inclined to ask, wherein does this modesty consist ? And when he connects here with the more general doctrine, constituting in his view the main difference between the So cratic dialectic and the Sophis tic, and also the foundation of the Socratic teaching on the truth of universal conceptions, he appears to advocate a doc
the Memorabilia (iii. 8, 4-7 ; iv. 6, 9 10, 12 2, 13), nor in the Hippias Major of Plato (p. 288) the latter by the way a very doubtful authority. It is indeed stated in these passages, that the good and the beauti ful are only good and beautiful for certain purposes by virtue of their use, but not that every application of these attributes to a subject has only a relative
; ;
validity.
Under no circum
stances would the passage authorise a distinction between So the Socratic and the phistic philosophy one of the characteristics of the Sophists consisting in their allowing only a relative value to all
;
scientific
and moral
principles.
MENTAL INDEPENDENCE.
were from time to time expanded as occasion required. Chance has, to a certain extent, decided which of his Still it may be dialogues should come down to us.
161
CHAP.
assumed that Socrates kept those objects more espe cially in view, to which he is constantly reverting by
Here in addi preference according to Xenophon. tion to the general demand for moral knowledge, and for knowledge of self, three points are particularly,
prominent
as secured
2.
1. The independence of the individual by the control of his wants and desires
;
The nobler side of social life, as seen in friend ship; 3. The furtherance of the public weal by a To these may be added regulated commonwealth. 4. Whether, and In how far, Socrates the question,
exceeded the range of the ordinary morality of the Greeks by requiring love for enemies ?
self-
(l)Indivi^^ndj^w"
denial and abstemiousness, but he endeavoured to foster the same virtues in his friends. What other
often the topic of conversation than abstemiousness in the dialogues of Xenophon ?
subject was
more
And
did not Socrates distinctly call moderation the corner-stone of all virtue ? 2 On this point the ground
he occupied was nearly the same as that which after wards gained such importance for the schools of
1
4,5.
2
Mem.
i.
5,
S.pd
ye ov xp^l
If Socrates had at all reflected, he would have explained mode ration as a kind of knowledge. The above quoted passage might then be taken to mean,
Kara-
This does not con tradict the assertion that all virtue consists in knowledge,
that the conviction of the worthlessness of sensual enjoy ments must precede every other
moral knowledge.
162
SOCRATES.
the Cynics and Stoics
;
CHAP.
man
of himself by being independent of wants, and by the exercise of his powers while depending on the con
;
and pleasures of the body, he resembles a A philosopher who considers knowledge to slave. be the highest good, will naturally insist upon the mind s devoting itself, uninterrupted by the desires and appetites of the senses, 2 to the pursuit of truth in preference to every other thing; and the less value
ditions
1
he attaches to external things as such and the more exclusively he conceives happiness to be bound up with the intellectual condition of man, 3 the more
will he feel the call to carry these principles into
practice,
served as a standard for moralists of a later epoch, He was not only an were unknown to Socrates.
.ascetic in relation to
pated, neither shrinking from enjoyment, nor yet To continue master of himself feeling it needful.
in the midst of enjoyment,
Xen. Mem.
11
;
i.
;
5,
iii.
i.
;
6,
5e
ffoi
rb ineyunov cuyaQ^v ov
aireipyovffa
ii. 1,
i.
2,
29
13, 3
;
and,
TWV avOpcaircav j] ds rovvavriov avrovs e/upd\\eiv for how can any one recognise and choose what is
aKpcuria
;
When clearly Mem. iv. 5, 6. Socrates had shown that want of moderation makes man a
slave, whilst
good and
useful,
if
he
is is
him
free,
ruled by the desire of what pleasant ? 3 See pp. 141, 2; 151. 4 See p. 74.
FRIENDSHIP.
Strongest appears this character of the Socratic abstinence in the language he uses in reference to
VI[
K
CHAP.
However exemplary his own con sensual impulses. duct in this respect may have been, yet, in theory, he
does not object to the gratification of these impulses out of wedlock, only requiring that it be not carried so far as to exceed the requirements of the body,
nor prove a hindrance to higher ends. Th^ thought of his moral teaching- is not so much strict
1
mo-
(2)
positive supplement when the individual places himself in connection with others. The simplest form of this connection is friendship.
Socrates, as we have already remarked, can only de fend this relation on the ground of its advantages still there can be no mistaking the fact that it
;
possessed both for himself and for his philosophy a deeper meaning. For this, if for no other reason,
it
was cultivated by preference, and discussed in all When knowledge and morality
do from Socrates point of
individuals
is
Mem.
i.
3,
14:
O#TO>
5r?
KOL
the
a(/>poSi<naeu/
TOVS
p.}]
a.<r<pa\us
X.ovTas
irpbs
a<t>pofiiffia
^ero
irdvv
b.v
&p
The last irpa.yp.ar a irap^oi remark applies partly to the prejudicial workings of passion, which makes a slave of man, and deters him from what is good, and partly to
.
does to property, honour, and personal security. Socrates considers it ridiculous to incur danger and trouble for the sake of an enjoyment, which could be procured in a so much simpler manner from
it
harm
164
SOCRATES.
inconceivable without a more extended
of
life.
CHAP.
VII>
community
all
the more necessary in proportion ate the thinker fails to be satisfied with his own thinking, and feels a
need for investigation in common with others and Just as in the case for mutual interchange of ideas. of the Pythagorean league, from a common pursuit
of morality and religion, a lively feeling of clan ship, a fondness for friendship and brotherhood was developed, as in other cases, too, like causes produced
like results, so, in the Socratic school the blending of moral and intellectual interests was the ground of
more intimate connection of the pupils with the teacher, and amongst themselves, than could have
a
resulted from an association of a purely intellectual The question can hardly be asked, which character.
came first with him, which afterwards whether the need of friendship determined Socrates to a con tinuous dialogue, or the need of a common enquiry
;
drew him towards all having a natural turn this way. His peculiarity rather consists in this and this it is which makes him the philosophic lover drawn by
that he could neither in his research dispense i with association with others, nor in his intercourse]
Plato
with research.
cussions as to the value
# In
these he always comes back to the point, that true friendship can only exist amongst virtuous men,
being for them altogether natural and necessary Mem. ii. 4-6.
1
FRIENDSHIP.
true friends, he says, will do everything for one anVirtue and active benevolence l are the only other. means for securing friends^ From this platform the
Socrates not prevailing custom is then criticised. only allows friendship to assume the Greek form of
affection for boys
~\7TT
16
CHAP.
himself, hardly only out of mere deference to In applying, however, his own moral prin others. 2
of
it
opposes the prevailing errors, and demands a reformation, in order that the sensual conception cf Eros may be transformed into
ciples to this
relation, he
True
love,
he
of the loved object is sought disinterestedly ; not when, with reckless selfishness, aims are pursued and
means employed by which both persons become con Only by an unselfish love temptible to one another. can fidelity and constancy be secured. The plea that
the complaisance of the one buys the kindly offices of another for its complete training is wholly a mis taken one ; for immorality and immodesty can never
(3)
e
Civil
e
^ ^f
Similar
explanations
are
ii. 6,
3
31.
8,
Lysis,
Symp.
27
ov jap olov re
but probably in too free a manner for us to be able to gain from them any information
respecting Socrates.
2 Xen. Symp. 8, 12, the leading tho.ught of which at least is Socratic. Mem. i. 2, 29 ; 3,
-novnpa avrbv TTOIOVVTO. ayadbv rbv avvovra a7ro8er|o, ou5e -ye avai-
See
p. 75.
66
SOCRATES.
at least recalling to their
1
CHAP.
forgotten. of marriage he agreed with his fellow-countrymen. This was no doubt partly the cause of the Greek
affection for boys
;
On
favoured thereby. 2
moral disposition similar to that of men, 3 whilst even maintaining with intellectual women an instructive
interchange of opinions, he still speaks of married life in terms more in keeping with the husband of
Xanthippe, than with the friend of Aspasia. He allows that a clever woman is as useful for the house
hold as a man, and he reproaches men for not caring about the education of their wives, 4 but he considers
the procreation of children the end of marriage, 5 and his own conduct shows little love for domestic life. 6
His social and his personal instincts are satisfied by friendly intercourse with men in their society he
;
sees a
means of fulfilling his peculiar mission as an educator of mankind apart herefrom, with the pecu liarity of a Grreek, he considers the state, and not thel
;
180, C.
2
3
4
Conf. Plato, Symp. 178, C. 217, E. Conf. Plato, Symp. 192, A. See p. 145, 2. Xen. (Ec. 3, 10 but the
; ;
;
question may be raised, in how far the substance of these remarks applies to Socrates himself.
5
Symp.
2, 9.
Mem.
ii. 2, 4.
great tenderness) be considered the joking character of the conversation in Xen. Symp. 2, into the 10, being thrown scale against the passages in Plato, Apol. 34, D., the balance of probability is, that Socrates lived almost entirely in public,
at
home,
THE
STATE.
II
Of the importance of the state, and the obligations towards the same, a very high notion indeed is entertained by Socrates : he who would live amongst
men, he
says,
CHAP.
must
as ruled. 1
dH
the conception of justice is reduced to that of obedience to law, 2 but he desires every competent man
to take part in the administration of the state, the well-being of all individuals depending on the well-
him throughout
life.
With devoted
were
fulfilled,
citizen
even death being endured in order that he might not violate the laws. 4 Even his philosophic labours were regarded as the fulfilment of a duty to
and in Xenophon s Memorabilia we see him using every opportunity of impressing able
the state
;
awakening officials to a sense of their and of giving them help in the administra
offices.
6
tion
He himself expresses the character of these efforts most tellingly, by political 7 all virtues under the conception of the including
of their
8 ruling art.
1
Mem.
Mem.
ii. 1,
12.
1.
291,
8
B.,
iio\irtK^
stands
for
2
3 4 5 6
7
See p. 148,
|8a<n\ci/.
iii. 7, 9.
68, 2.
2-7. /SacnAiKTj re xir? in Mem. ii. 1, 17; iv. 2, 11. Plato, Euthyd.
iii.
Mem.
Cicero, Tusc. v. 37, 108, and Phit. de Exil. c. 5, p. 600, Epict. Diss. i. 9, 1 (Conf. Muson. in Stob. Floril. 40, 9), that
by
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VII.
the more so in proportion as the conception of Hence everyone political virtue is the higher one. who aspires to the position of a statesman is required
to prepare himself for this calling 1 by a thorough and self-sifting and a course of intellectual labour
;
conversely, Socrates only recognises capacity or right to political position where this condition is fulfilled. Neither the possession of power, nor the good fortune
of acquiring
popular election, but only 2 As regards the rule of knowledge makes the ruler.
it
by
lot or
cannot
command
itself
then illustrated by the ex ample of physicians, pilots, and others. Similarly in Mem.
is
iii. iv. 2, 2 iii. 1, 4 5, 21 Ibid. 4, 6 eywye, cos OTOV &v TIS irpoo~TaTvr) eav re &v 8e? Kal TavTa &y e b~vj>7]TCU a.ya.Q bs Similar views are advo T7j9.
; ;
:
:
credit,
sounds strange as addressed to Socrates in Athens. In Plato s Crito and Apol. 37, C., he uses language very different from 1he later cosmopolitan philoso Probably one of these phers. attributed to him the above
story.
1
\4y<a
Mem.
6,
;
particularly
;
generally held
of Socrates.
in the school
Accordingly the
accuser
Xen.
Mem.
into
fls
i.
2,
9,
Mem.
iii. 9,
10
pounds
oe
KCU &PXOVTO.S 0V TOVS TO. ffK^TTTpa fX OJ/Tas ffyri eli/cu, ouSe TOVS
t>7rb
contempt
TOVS
Se
/iei/
\yu)V &s
TroAecos
io~Tao~6ai,
/juapcav
TTJS
TWV TVXOVTWI/
robs
K\"fjpc>}
cupeflei/Ta?,
ou5e
&pxovTas
KvfiepyfjTr)
Pia<ra/j,evovs,
TOVS e|a7raTrje-TTiffTafj-fvovs
cravTas,
aAAa TOVS
in all other cases obedi ence is given to men of proi essional which knowledge
&PX^tv
;
ToiavTa, and Xenophon does not deny the accuracy of this statement, but only attempts
THE STATE.
the majority, his judgment
his
else
is,
16S>
that
it is
impossible
CHAP.
and justice to hold own against it hence, where it prevails, what can an upright man do but withdraw to private
political principle
life?
was here advocated, which Socrates not only into collision with the brought Athenian democracy, but with the whole political
administration of Greece.
of
all,
or
wealth, he
demanded an
in place of citizen-rulers, a race of intellectually edu cated officials; in place of a government of tribes
and people, a government by professional adepts, which Plato, consistently developing the principles
of Socrates, attempted to realise in his philosophic 1 community. ^ Socrates is here observed following
in
first
struck out,
being themselves the first to offer and to declare necessary a preparatory intellectual training for a
statesman
s
career.
Still
what he aimed
at was in
point of substance very different from what they aimed at. *- For him the aim of politics was not the power of the individual, but the well-being of the
"^
^-^^
personal dexterity, but to attain truth ; the means of culture was not the art of persuasion, but the science
of what really is. Socrates aimed at a knowledge by means of which the state might be reformed, the
to prove the harmlessness of such principles.
l
Hep.
conf
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
VII.
Sophists
at
it
might be
governed, xx
The
appears to be contradicted by the ease with which Socrates rose above the social prejudices of his
nation, meeting the ruling contempt for trade by the maxim that no useful activity, be it what it may,
but only idleness and activity need call forth shame. For just as Still both come from a common source. Socrates will have the position of the individual in
the state settled according to his achievements, so conversely he will have every action appreciated
result. 1
Here, as elsewhere,
the conception of good is his highest standard. One consequence of the political character of
Greek morality was that the problem proposed to the virtuous man was customarily summed up as doing
good to friends and harm to
tion
is
who
foes. This very defini into the mouth of Socrates 2 by Xenophon, put likewise considers it most natural to feel pain at
the other hand, in one of the earliest and most historical of Plato s diaIn keeping as the son of a poor labourer. 2, 56. he urges a friend Xenophon and Plato as men of rank and property. (ii. 7) to employ the maids of 2 his house in wool work, and Mem. ii. 6, 35 nal 6n fyvcaanother (ii. 8) to seek for occu iperajy elvai vtKav rovs eu TrotoOfTa rovs Se pation as a steward, refuting in both cases the objection, 3 that such an occupation was Mem. iii. 9, 8: $Q6vov 8e oncav O,TL fir], \vTrt]v juei/ rua, unbecoming for free men.
i.
1
On
Mem.
with
this,
Xenophon
"it
held
different
T
i>piffKev
V eni
fy
x9pu>v
Socrates declares
CHAP.
VII.
another
injury
is
fered.
The
is
for
assuming
is
it
to be granted
Xenophon
a popular point of view, still the fact would remain that Xenophon cannot have been conversant with
explanations such as those given by Plato. No doubt Plato s account even in the Crito cannot be regarded
as strictly
conformable to truth
still it
may well be
questioned whether he can be credited with such a 3 flagrant deviation from his master s teaching as this would be. That there is such a possibility cannot be
denied
to leave it in
Also Kep.
i.
principle
If
The remark of
Meiners
(Gesch. der Wissenschaft, ii. 456) will not pass muster that Socrates considered it allow able to do harm (bodily) to enemies, but not to injure them in respect of their true
well-being, Xenophon express ly allowing KK<S iroislv while Plato as expressly forbids it.
3
4
opposed to slavery. he held many things which according to Greek prejudices belonged to slaves not to be unworthy of a free-man, it by no means follows that he dis approved of slavery; and the
See
we
justified
in
crates, to
between
and
We
v6^.if
is
SOCRATES.
CHAPTER
CONTINUATION.
CHAP.
VIII.
VIII.
ON NATURE.
ENQUIRIES into nature, we have seen, did not form Nevertheless, the part of the scheme of Socrates.
line of his speculations led
design. thoughtfully turned over the problem of human life from all sides as he did, could not leave unnoticed its countless re
lations to the outer world
;
nature and
its
peculiar view of
so
standard which was his highest type the standard of utility for man could not but come to the co
viction that the whole arrangement of nature was subservient to the well-being of the human race, in
short that it was adapted to a purpose and good. 1 To his mind, however, all that is good and expedient
appears of necessity to be the work of reason ; for just as man cannot do what is useful without intelli
exist
1
gence, no more is it possible for what is useful to without intelligence. 2 His view of nature,!
is desirous of convincing a friend of the existence of the Gods, and hence proposes the
For Socrates, as has been already shown, understands by the good what is useful for
crates
man.
2
See
Mem.
i.
4, 2,
in
which
question: Whether more intel ligence is not required to pro duce living beings than to pro duce paintings like those of
VIEWS OF NATURE.
was essentially that of a relation of means) and that not a deeper relation going into the inner bearings of the several parts, and the purpose of its existence and growth inherent in every natural
therefore,
\\
CHAP.
to ends,
being.
their
On
the contrary,
all
man
asj
is
purpose
simply as a matter of fact, and as due to a reason which, like an artificer, has endued them As in the with this accidental reference to purpose.
Socratic ethics, the
becomes a
superficial.
wisdom which formed the world in a manner equally He shows what care has been taken to
l
provide for man, in that he has light, water, fire, and air, in that not only the sun shines by day, but also the moon and the stars by night ; in that the heavenly
bodies serve for divisions of seasons, that the earth brings forth food and other necessaries, and that the
change of seasons prevents excessive heat or cold. He reminds of the advantages which are derived
from
cattle,
pigs, horses,
and other
Polycletus and Zeuxis ? Aristodemus will only allow this conditionally, and in one special
case, efaep 76
he
epya.
-Compare
also
Plato,
Phasdo,
cording
p. 59,
is
sage
e are/CjUaprajy
e^imoj/ ftrov
eVe/ca
we have not in. this pasa strictly historical account, and Arist. M. Mor. i. 1 ;
1183, b,
1
e(W
Kal
T<av
(pavepcas CTT
a><J>eA.eia
9.
i.
Kal TT^repa
Mem.
iv. 3.
74
SOCRATES.
animals.
CHAP.
__
To prove the wisdom of the Craftsman who made man, he refers to the organism of the hum^n
1
body, to the structure of the organs of sense, to the erect posture of man, to the priceless dexterity of his
hands.
He
Providence in
the natural impulse for propagation and self-preser vation, in the love for children, in the fear of death.
He
memory,
his intelli
He
and in
Providence should be naturally inborn in all men, and have maintained itself from time immemorial, clinging not to individuals only in the ripest years
of their age, but to whole nations unless
it
and communities,
also
to
were true.
He
appeals
special
revelations vouchsafed to
men
Unscientific, doubtless, by prophecy or portent. these arguments may appear, still they became in the
ing
of
all their
means
to
ends,
notwithstanding
its
popular
character, he is the founder of that ideal view of nature which ever after reigned supreme in the
natural philosophy of the Greeks, and which with ail its abuses has proved itself of so much value
is
ySovas rols i^v a<po8i<nW aAAots fyois Sovvai irepiypd$cu>Tas rov erovs xpwov, yfiv 5e
TU>V
jue%
CONCEPTION OF GOD.
True, he was not himself aware that he was ^engaged on natural -science, having only considered the relation of means
for the empirical study of nature.
Still
175
CHAP.
Yni>
to ends in the world, in the moral interest of piety. from our previous remarks it follows how closely
his view of nature
was connected with the theory of the knowledge of conceptions, how even its defects were due to the universal imperfection of his intel
lectual method.
Asking further what idea we should form to ourselves of creative reason, the reply
is,
B.
God
O
that Socrates
1
God mostly speaks of Gods in a popular way as many, no doubt thinking, in the first place, of the (rods of the iar use
-
^J^
of
2 Out of this multiplicity the idea of the popular faith. oneness oLGod, 3 an idea not unknown to the Greek
^J*
him into prominence, as is not met with at that time. 4 In one passage infrequently
religion, rises with
and ruler of the universe and the rest of the Gods. 5 Have we not here that union of polytheism and
1
Mem.
Mem.
i.
1,
19
3,
4,
11
eV
$
/cat
iravra
iv. 3, 3.
2 3
ayaOd
iv. 3, 16.
xpwpevois
/cat
arpifiri
re
Compare
ayhparov
ovros
Trape^ccy,
vyia Qarrov
uirrjpe-
Se z/o^uaros ava/jLapT-firus
p, 3.
4
Mem.
i.
4,
7,
17
e|
ap^fjs rivos
TTOLoav
avOpcairovs,
ffo(pov
n&v a6paros
f]fjuv effriv.
JErische 8
8-rj/ji.Lovpyov
Kal
<pi\o(i>ov
o<p6a\/j.bif,
rr)v
rov
spurious,
although on his
13.
oL
own showing
Mem.
ra
/cat
iv. 3,
;
The Gods
&\\OL
ouSei/
it
are invisible
T}fjuv
re yap
StSSvres
ayaQa
ToiiToav els
trti/,
rov(jL<pavs
iovres SiSoa-
176
SOCRATES.
monotheism, so readily suggested to a Greek by his mythology, which consisted in reducing the many
(rods to be the
CHAP.
VIII.
many instruments
of the
One Supreme
God?
In as far as Socrates was led to the notion of One Supreme Being by the reasonable arrangement of the
world, the idea which he formed to himself of this Being (herein resembling Heraclitus and Anaxagoras)
was
which he conceives
of as holding the same relation to the world that the Herewith are most closely soul does to the body. 1
As the
soul,
without being
visible,
produces visible
As body, so does Grod in the world. the soul exercises unlimited dominion over the small
effects in the
portion of the world which belongs to it, its indivi dual body, so Grod exercises dominion over the whole
world.
As the soul
so Grod is present
its
body,
if
it
And
what
distant,
Mem.
i.
4,
ffv
Se
T<j3
TTOI/T!
(f)p6vr]ffiv
ra irdvra
kv
Se
ctfet
<pp6vi/uiov
fiT]
Kal avrf) rj5v y, ovrta TiQeffdai rb ffbv /j.ev op.p.a fivvaffdai eirl
ffTo^ia.
TO
7ro\A.a
eiKve7(rdai,
rbv Se
ff^v
elements, or generally, the parts of the world) St afypovvvriv nva ovrws 17 ofei eura/CTCos
e%e>
;
TOU Oeov
6(p6a\fji.bv
afivvarov elvot
^Se, r^v
TU>V
Ka\ irfl
eV0a8e Kal
V
5e
6n
Kal 6
ffbs
vovs
tvuv rb
Oeov
typoi/ycnis
rov
(T(t)/j.a
foots
j8ouA.6Ta
elvat a/j.a
WORSHIP OF GOD.
and more.
in the
1
r
all
177
CHAP.
Besides had not a belief in the provi2 dential care of (rod been already taken for granted,
__
VIII.
argument for His existence from the relation means to ends ? Was not the best explanation of this care to be found in the analogous care which
of
the
human
:
special proof
thought to discern in oracles 3 by them the most important things, which could not otherwise be known, are revealed to man. It must then be equally foolish to despise oracles, or
our
to consult
own
them
as a
sacrifices,
As to the form and manner of worship, Socrates, L 6 as we already know, wished every one to follow the custom of his people. At the same time he propounds
purer
worship God.
of
his
own
idea of
pray for particular, least of all for external goods, but only to ask for what is good for who but God knows what is ad
:
God.
He would
not have
men
vantageous
1
for
man,
or
knows
it so fully ?
And, with
i.
Compare the words in Mem. 18: If you apply to the Gods for prophecy, yvcacry rb 6e1ov 6n TOCTOVTOV KCU roiovr6v
i.
r&v Oewv
2
3
flfys
also
1, 19.
4,
Mem.
Ibid.
iv.
3;
i.
Ibid. iv. 3, 12
i.
14.
4
foriv,
TTctj/ra
Staff
ojua
irdvra 6pav
ical
1, 6.
Conf. p. 77, 3
iv.
3,
aKoveiv KCU TTavrcixov TrapeTvai, Kal dfj.a TTOLVTUV e7n,xe\er<r0ai and the words, Ibid. iv. 3, 12:
65, 5.
5
Compare Mem.
2, 14.
14
ii.
6
. .
yvcixrr),
See
p. 149, 1
76, 7.
rots
poptyas
178
SOCRATES.
regard to sacrifices, he declared that the greatness of the sacrifice is unimportant compared with the spirit
of the
sacrifice!*,
CHAP.
the more acceptable will the offering be, so that it correspond with his means. Abstaining on principle
from theological speculations, 2 and not seeking to explore the nature of Grod, but to lead his fellow men
to piety, he never felt the need of combining the various elements of his religious belief into one
united conception, or of forming a perfectly consist ent picture, and so avoiding the contradictions which that belief may easily be shown to contain. 3
A certain divine element Socrates, like others) before him, thought to discern within the soul of1
Perhaps with this thought is connected his belief in immediate revelations of Grod to the human
soul, such as
man. 4
Welcome
as this theory
pher paying so close an attention to the moral and spiritual nature of man, it does not appear that
Just as
Socrates ever attempted to support it by argument. little do we find in him a scientific proof of
the immortality of the soul, although he was inclined to this belief partly by his high opinion of the dignity
1
Mem.
i.
3,
iv. 3, 17.
2 3
We
See p. 139,
2.
have
all
believing in only one God. This assumption would belie not only the definite and re-
for supposing with Denis (Histoire des Theories et des Idees morales dans 1 Antiquite, Paris et Strasb. 1856, i. 79), that Socrates, like Antisthenes, spared polytheism from regard to the needs of the masses, whilst
Mem.
rS>v
iv.
3,
14
a\\a
^v
ital
&\\o
179
1
of
man,
CHAP
VIII.
witholding of a conviction can least be supposed, he expressed himself on this question with much doubt
and caution. 3
The language, too, used by the dyingin Xenophon 4 agrees so well herewith, that we Cyrus are driven to assume that Socrates considered the
bable, without, however,
existence of the soul after death to be indeed pro 5 pretending to any certain
It was accepted by him as the intellectual grounds for which faith, belonged no doubt to those problems which surpass the powers of man. 6
1
Compare Hermann
after his
is
in Mar-
condemna
tion.
3
Death
either an external
sleep, or
life,
new
it
rity of Xenophon, Plato, and Aristotle. What later writers say is for the most part taken
an
evil.
4 Cyrop. viii. 7, 10. Several reasons are first adduced in fa vour of immortality, but they need to be greatly strengthened to be anything like rigid proofs. 19 (Compare particularly with Plato s Phsedo, 105, C.) In conclusion, the possibility of the soul s dying with the body
from these sources, and when ever it goes beyond them, there is no guarantee for its accu
It is, however, just pos racy. sible that some genuine utter ances of Socrates may have been preserved in the writings of J^schines and others, which
are omitted by our authorities. In that category place the statement of Cleanthes quoted
is left
by Clement (Strom, ii. 417, D.), and repeated by Cicero (Off. iii.
3, 11),
either case death is stated to be the end of all evils. 5 He actually says in Plato, Conf. 37, B. Apol. 29, A. death is feared as the greatest
:
identity of justice and happi ness, cursing the man who first made a distinction between them the statements in Cic.
:
evil,
whilst
it
:
may be
ty&
T
8^
the
OVK
Off.
ii.
12,
ii.
;
greatest
i8i>s
good
...
Mem.
6,
6,
iKavias
Trepl
22)
180
SOCRATES.
to fools); 71, 16 (truth and virtue are identical); in Plut. Ed. Pu. c. 7, p. 4, on education (the passage in c. 9 is an inac curate reference to Plato, Gorg. intelligence is the only good, ignorance the only evil, and that riches and noble birth do more harm than good in Diog. ii. 32, that to marry or to ab stain from marriage is equally bad in Gell. xix. 2, 7 (Athen. iv. 158 Plut. And. Poet. 4,
;
; ;
CHAP.
VIII.
Cons, ad Apoll. c. 9, 470, D.) p. 106, that if all sufferings had to be equally divided,
;
serve
his
own
men
Stob. Ekl.
i.
54,
;
giving a defini
Ibid.
(conf.
ii.
tion of
Floril.
i.
God
48,
26
356, Plato,
the looking glass Ser. Num. Vind. c. 5, p. 550, deprecating anger in Demet. Byz. quoted by Diog. ii. 2l,(6rdl. N. A. xiv. Exc. e 6, 5), Muson. in the
; ;
government
in Teles, apud Stob. Floril. 40, 8, blaming the Athenians for banishing their best, and honouring their worst
;
Jo. Dam. ii. 13, 126, 221, Mein, that philosophy ought to confine itself to ft,
Floril.
p.
n A
roi fv
fji.eydpoi(n,
;
KO.KOV r
aya96v
re TeVuicTat (others attribute the words to Diogenes or Aristippus) Cic. de Orat. i. 47, 204 Socrates said that his only wish was to stimulate to virtue where this succeeded, the rest followed of itself (a statement
:
Max. vii. 2, Ext. 1. number of sayings purporting to come from So crates are quoted by Plutarch in his treatises and by Stobaaus
in Valer.
large
thoroughly agreeing with the views of the Stoic Aristo, and probably coming from him. Conf Zeller, Stoics, Epicureans,
.
in his Florilegium some, too, of them, how ever, are colourless, or else they aim at being epigram matic, which is a poor substi tute for being genuine. Alto gether their number makes
;
by Seneca. Most
ii.
30, blaming
;
the sophistry of Euclid in Diog. ii. 31 (undoubtedly from some Cynic or Stoic treatise) that
them very suspicious. Probably they were taken from a collec tion of proverbs which some later writer published under
the
name
of Socratic proverbs.
181
CHAPTER
RETROSPECT.
IX.
SOCRATES
LOOKING back from the point now reached to the question raised before, as to which of his biographers we must look to for a historically accurate account of Socrates and his teaching, we must indeed admit, that no one of them is so satisfactory an authority as
any original writings or verbal reports of the utter ances of the great teacher would have been. So
1
CHAP.
IX.
A. Truth
fulness of
Xenoscription.
much, however,
and Plato,
is
is
Xenophon
few points, contradicting each other in none. Nay more, the supplementary portions may be easily in
serted in the general picture, present before the eyes (1) Xenoof both. Moreover the philosophy of Socrates is not plwn.s
in the
main represented by Plato and Aristotle in a a different light from what it is by Xenophon, pro
view in
vided those parts only in the writings of Plato be and Aristaken into account which undoubtedly belong to So- tatle.
Conf. p. 98.
32
SOCRATES.
crates,
CHAP.
and
in the Socrates of
Xenophon a
distinction
opinion that true knowledge is the highest thing, and that this knowledge consists in a knowledge of con
ceptions only. In Xenophon, too, may be observed all the characteristics of that method by means of which Socrates strove to produce knowledge. In his pages virtue is reduced to knowledge, and this likewise,
position is supported by the same arguments, and therefrom are deduced the same conclusions, as in
and Plato. Sin short, all the leading features of the philosophy of Socrates are preserved by Xeno phon ; granting as we always must that he did not
Aristotle
understand the deeper meaning of many a saying, and therefore failed to give it the prominence it deserved. Now and then for the same reason he used a com
All virtue
is
is
know
All virtue
knowledge.
Nor need we
feel surprise
Socratic philosophy, its popular and prosaic way of treating things, the want of system in its method, the utilitarian basis of its moral teaching should
appear more prominently in Xenophon than in Plato and Aristotle, considering the brevity with which
Aristotle speaks of Socrates, and the liberty with which Plato expands the Socratic teaching both in On the other hand, point of substance and form.
Xenophon
description
is
XENOPHON VINDICATED.
of Plato, 1 partly by its inward truth and conformity to that picture which we must make to ourselves of the first appearance of Socrates
vidual admissions
183
CHAP.
newly discovered principle. All then that can be con ceded to the detractors of Xenophon is, that not fully
understanding the philosophical importance of his teacher, he kept it in the background in his descrip
tion, and that in so far Plato and Aristotle are most welcome as supplementary authorities. But it can
moment
that
Xenophon has
in any respect given a false account of Socrates, or that it is impossible to gather from his description the true character and importance of the doctrine of
his master.
It
may indeed
is
(2) Schlei.-
phon
is
known
at variance with the position which Socrates As Schleiermacher answered, to have held in history.
2
;
Had Socrates done nothing but discourse on subjects beyond which the Memorabilia of Xeno phon never go, albeit in finer and more brilliant
observes
language,
in so
it is
it
was, that
years he did not empty the marketplace and the workshop, the public walks and the schools,
many
by the
an Alcibiades and a
so long satisfied a Plato, and a Euclid ; Critias, how he played the part assigned to him in the dia logues of Plato ; in short, how he became the founder
-fear
;
of his presence
how he
in Plato himself
and type of the philosophy of Athens. Fortunately we have a valuable testimony to the
1
150,
1.
Werke,
iii. 2,
259, 287.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
IX.
To what does accuracy of Xenophon s description. his Alcibiades appeal when anxious to disclose the
divine
element
concealed
under the
Silenus-like
appearance of the Socratic discourses ? To what does his admirable description of the impression
What is it produced on him by Socrates go back ? which to his mind has been the cause of the revolu What tion and change in the inner life of Greece ?
l
Symp.
vovv
Xov %
KopvfiavTKavrwv % re KapSia TT^Sa KOI Sdltpva eK^eTrai inrb T&V \6ywv T&V rovrov. 6pu
TO. Kal &\\ovs Tra/j.Tr6\\ovs aura irdtrxovras this was not the case with other speakers,
TV
exoi/ras
Se
Kal
4irl
Xov 5e
/teAAoj Tt
/caA^
/ca-
ouSe Te9opv$Tjr6
/JLOV f)
(similarly
Euthydemus
2,
in Xen.
virb
8^?
fj.r)
.
.
Mem.
clVou
iv.
39) aAA
7roAA.a/cis
jjioi
8o|at
e^oj/rt
fj.
us
aitrbs
ex
ert
avayKa^ei yap
a/j.f\(H>
bu-oXoytlv
ABrivaiojv iv.
Srt iroA-A-Ou
e/xai/ToD fjLV
evSerjs &V ra 8
irpdrTw
iii.
(conf. 6) TretrovOa 8e
.
.
Mem.
Trptos
fji6vov
avOpdoTrcov,
/j.
&
ou/c
TOVTOV av TIS
Alberti s (p. 78) objections to the above use of these passages resolve them selves into this, that those ele ments of conversation which rivet the soul, which are not altogether wanting in Xeno phon, are more frequent and noticeable in Plato, that there fore the spirit of the Socratic philosophy comes out more Far from clearly in Plato.
f(recr6ai.
denying
readily.
this,
we
grant
it
otono 4v
j/6(rdat
tyevyct),
Kal
orav
avrbv /J.TJ ovra v ai>6pct)irois i 8 av rovro yfvoiro, eu oTS ori TTO\V /m-f^ov Uv axOoip.i]v, axrre OVK ex^,
6 TI
xpT](roiJi.at
rovrca
T<y
avQpfairq).
Ib. 221,
D.
KOI
ol
\6yoi avrov
fieri
deeper insight than Xenophon into the spirit of the Socratic teaching, but against Schleiermacher s statement that the discourses of Socrates were essentially different in sub stance and subject matter from those reported by Xenophon.
185
CHAP.
to his country
;
it
is
his
business to exhort
others to virtue
and
if
calling.
B Imywtproduced by the discourses of Socrates ance the of need not surprise us, were they only of the kind re- Socratic
The
.
effect
..
ported by Xenophon.
as
The investigations of
often
Socrates
and appear tedious and looking at the result with reference to the particular case, they may really be so. That
he gives them,
;
may
trivial
f]^^ which
in
the forger of armour must suit the armour to him who has to wear it 3 that the care of the body is attended with many advantages 4 that friends must
:
5
;
these and
such-like maxims, which are often lengthily discussed by Socrates, neither contain for us, nor can they have
The contained for his cotemporaries, anything new. important element in these inquiries, however, does
not consist in their substance, but in their method,
1
29, B.
rois ol veoi
ols
fjidXiffra
pot
ax
Qer&fav.
Conf. 33, B.
An
ex-
irpbs
ample of such sifting is to be found in the conversation of Alcibiades with Pericles, Mem.
i.
1,
3
4
40.
Mem.
Ibid. Ibid.
iii. iii.
ii.
10, 9. 12, 4.
10, 6, 9.
86
SOCRATES.
what was formerly unexplored hypothesis and unconscious guesswork, was now arrived at, by a process of thinking. In making a too minute
in the fact that
CHAP.
.
pedantic application of this method, Socrates would not give the same offence to his cotemporaries as to us, who have not as they to learn for the first
or
time the art of conscious thinking and emancipa tion from the authority of blind custom. Nay, did
1
not the enquiries of the Sophists for the most part contain very much less, which notwithstanding their
empty
cavils,
imparted an almost electrical shock to and solely because even in its par
a power,
new
to the
reflection
therefore Socrates only dealt with those unimportant topics, upon which so many of his dia
Had
still
be
intelligi
Even in ordinate position in Xenophon s dialogues. these dialogues the main thing seems to be real in
vestigations into
the nature of morality, into the conceptions of the various virtues, into moral and intellectual selfanalysis
;
the formation
of
conceptions
to consider
what their notions implied, and at what their actions aimed. Can we wonder that such inves1
ii.
59.
18
CHAP.
IX
nimously tell us ? or, that a keener vision should have anticipated behind those apparently common
1
and unimportant expressions of Socrates, which his biographers unanimously record, a newly dis covered world ? For Plato and Aristotle it was re served to conquer this new world, but Socrates was
place
the
first
to discover
as
it,
Plainly
we may
the
shortcomings of his
achievements, and the limits which his individual nature imposed on him, still enough remains to
stamp him as the originator of the philosophy of con ceptions, as the reformer of method, and as the first
founder of a scientific doctrine of morals.
The
c.
H^
"
Sophistry will only become clear by considering the ^^f one-sided and unsatisfactory element in its method Sophia*.
as well as
tion as
This rela greatness and importance. known has, during the last thirty years, been examined in various directions. There being
-its
is
well
a general agreement previously in accepting Plato s view, and looking on Socrates as the opponent of
the Sophists, Hegel first obtained currency for the contrary opinion, that Socrates shared with the
Sophists the same ground in attaching importance In a some the person and to introspection. 2 what different sense, Grote 3 has still more recently
to
1
Conf. p. 80, 1 and 2; 129; 122, 2. Hist, of Greece, viii. 479, 606.
See
p. 116.
88
SOCRATES.
contradicted the traditional notion of the antithesis
CHAP.
T\T
_J
between the Socratic philosophy and Sophistry. If Sophist means what the word from its history alone
can
for
himself the true type of a practical life, If on the other hand it denotes the cha Sophist.
racter of certain individuals
is
it
an abuse to appropriate the term Sophistry to this purpose, or to group together under one class
all
as
Sophists were not a sect or a but a profession, men of the most varied school, views, for the most part highly deserving and meri
Sophists.
The
torious
least
people, at whose views we have not the reason to take offence. If then, Hegel and
common
notion of the re
lation of Socrates to the Sophists, because Socrates, in one respect, agreed with the Sophists, Grrote
attacks
it for
Our previous enquiries will have shown, that both views have their justification, but that neither is
It is indeed a false view of his altogether right. to contrast Socrates with the Sophists, in the tory
false
:
this respect it deserves notice that in Xenophon, the contrast be tween Socrates and the Sophists is not so great as in
and in
Plato,
1
it is
drawn
p. 873,
besides p.
I.,
writers. 1
2
Still
CHAP.
will
men who are grouped to under the name of Sophists, and who really gether in their whole tone and method bear so much resem The scepticism of a Protagoras and blance to him.
a connection with
moment be placed on the same with the Socratic philosophy of conceptions, nor the Sophistic art of controversy with the Socratic
Grorgias cannot for a
level
sifting of
men
the
maxim
that
man
is
the measure
of all things, cannot be compared with the Socratic demand for action based on personal conviction, 3
Proofs in Protagoras and Gorgias, Thaeetet. 151, D. 162, D. 164, D. 165, E. Kep. i. vi. 498, C. 354, A.
1
; ; ; ;
;
2 3
Zeller,
Part
I.
882, 938.
As
is
I.
305.
explanation in Plato s Crito 49, D., that he was convinced that under no circumstances is wrong-doing allowed, it is there observed here we have the Protagorean dogma Homo
;
cism, whereas Protagoras, Prodicus and Hippias used pre vious authorities as they found them leaving untouched the moral notions current. II. 410 and 428 he observes respect ing Plato s statement (Soph. 232, B.) that the Sophists talk themselves and teach others to talk of things which they do not know, which Socrates did
all his life long.
In so saying,
Mensura
will
which
.
. .
Socrates
by Socrates himself. How un like the two are will however be seen at once by a moment s reflection on Protagoras saying,
Gonf. Part I. 899 ... p. 259, 535 iii. 479. Grote even as serts that not the Sophists but Socrates was the chief quibbler in Greece he was the first to destroy the beliefs of ordinary
;
gets, also, that in tire case of the Sophists, owing to their want
minds by
his negative
criti
of earnest intellectual feeling, owing to the shallowness of their method, owing to their denial of any absolute truth,
00
SOCRATES.
nor can the rhetorical display of the older Sophists, the dangerous and unscientific character of their later As regards the Hegelian ethics be lost sight of.
CHAP.
grouping of Socrates among the Sophists, this has called forth a greater opposition than it deserves.
Socratic
reference of truth to the person differed essentially from that of the Sophists. 1 Neither they nor their
opponents can deny that the Sophists were the first to divert philosophy away from nature to morals and
the
required a basis for a sifting of existing practical conduct in knowledge, customs and laws, that they first referred to personal
first
human mind,
that they
conviction the settling of truth and falsehood, right and wrong. Hence the dispute with them resolves
Shall we say that Socrates the question. and the Sophists resembled one another, both taking
itself into
personal truth as their ground, but differing in their views of personal truth? or that they differed, the
Or to whilst they agreed in making it relative ? the question in another shape There being put both points of agreement and difference between
:
is
the
more impor
Here
2 explained, only one reply can be given, that the difference between the Socratic and Sophistic philo-
together with an incapacity for positive intellectual achievements, those practical consequences were sure to result which soon enough came to
view. See Part I. 920. * See p. 118, 1. 2 See p. 110, and Part 938.
I.
135,
15)1
exceeds their
The Sophists
CHAP.
the quest of an absolutely true and universally valid knowledge, and a method for attaining it.
They had previously passed for truth, but they could not strike out a new and surer road to truth. Agreeing as they do with Socrates in
could question
all
that
concerning themselves not so much with the study of nature, as with training for practical life, with them
this culture has a different character,
and a different
importance from what it bears with Socrates. The ultimate end of their instruction is a formal dexterity,
the use of which to be consistent must be
left to
individual caprice, since absolute truth is despaired of; whereas with Socrates, on the contrary, the ac-t
quisition of truth is the ultimate end, wherein alone the rule for the conduct of the individual is to be
found.
Hence
in its further course, the Sophistic fail to break away from the phi
it,
Had
succeeded in gaining
undisputed sway,
to
self
Greek philosophy.
the
him
alone
germ
of a
new
thought.
He
by
was qualified to be
personal contrast to the Sophists than from his general resemblance to them. Sophistry differed from the wisdom of Socrates only in the want of a
192
SOCRATES.
fruit-bearing germ. But how is this admission consistent with making the second period of philosophy commence with the Sophists instead of with So crates ? On the other hand, the latest treatise on the ques tion before us (Siebeck, Untersuchung zur Philos. d. Griech. p. 1, Ueber Socr.Verhultniss zur Sophistik) is decidedly of the
CHAP.
IX.
though his
phists differs
treatment,
whereas
the
So
and opinion here expressed likewise most of the later edi tors of the history of Greek phi losophy. Striimpell, too (Gesch. d.Pralit, Phil. d. Griech. p. 26), writes to the same effect, al
;
phists aspiring indeed to be teachers of virtue, accommo dated themselves in their in struction without independent inquiry to the tendencies and notions of the time.
193
GHAPTEE
X.
WE
spent in labours at Athens, during which Socrates had been often attacked, but never judicially im1
fence
seft ~
>
peached,
when
B.C.,
an accusation
death.
was
preferred against him, unfaithfulness to the religion of his country, with introducing new Grods, and with exercising a harmful
6
influence on youth. 4
tus,
1
with
whom
The
ddvaros.
It is clearly
an oversight on the
* 4
See p. 53,
1.
to
avTCi>(j.6(TaTO
Metros MeA^rou
aSi/m
SwKparrjs, Qeovs ov
riiT0eus
Sco/cparet
AAwTre/cTjflev
ovs
>J.V
y iroAis
vo/J.iei
voij.ifav,
erepa 5e
/ccui/a
Saipovia
Kal rovs
5e
part of Grate, Plato i. 283, to consider the parody of the indictment which Socrates puts into the mouth of his first accusers, as another version of the judicial ypaty-f]. 5 See Plato, Apol. 19, B. 24, B. 28, A. Euthyphro, 2, B. Max. Tyr. ix. 2, proves nothing against this, as Hermann has shown, De Socratis Accusatoribus. For the way in which this name is written, instead of
;
194
SOCRATES.
leaders
1
and re-introducers of the Athenian demo and Lyco, 2 an orator otherwise unknown. The
3
;
condemnation impossible
the
still
he was himself
s, as was formerly custom, see Hermann. It pears by a comparison various passages, that the cuser of Socrates is neither
ap
of
ac the
politician,
makes him
ponent
with of Andocides, others have identified him, nor yet the poet men tioned by Aristophanes (Frogs, 1302), but some younger man, perhaps the son of the poet.
whom
s mistake for See Hermann, p. 14. But the words as they stand must be incorrect. The celebrated orator Polycrates is said to have composed the of Anytus, Diog. 1. c. speech to according Hermippus ;
transcriber
noAv/c/xxTTjs.
Or. xxiii. 296, 6 ; Quintil. ii. 17, 4 Hypoth. in Isoc. Busir. JEsch. Socrat. Epist. 14, p. 84 Or. Suidas, knows of two Tlo\vKpdTf]s
; ;
Themist.
him
79
;
and Hermann,
;
9.
They
are gathered from Plato, Meno, Schol. in Plat. Apol. 18, 90, A. adv. B. Lysias adv. Dard. 8 Isoc. adv. Callim, Agorat. ,78 23 Pint. Herod, malign. 26, 6. in p. 862 Coriol. c.14 Aristotle Haiyiohrates v. Seitdfav Schol.in 87 Diod. ^schin. adv. Tim.
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
and it is proved speeches beyond doubt by Isocr. Bus. 4 ; JElian, V. H. xi. 10, that he drew up an indictment against Socrates. But it is also clear from Favorinus, that this in dictment was not used at the trial. Indeed it would appear from Favorinus that it was not written till some time after
;
xiii.
64.
He
is
mentioned by
3,
Xenoph. Hell.
ii.
42, 44, as
well as by Iterates, 1. c., as a leader of the Democratic party, together with Thrasybulus. 2 For the various conjectures about him consult Hermann, D. 12. Besides the above-named persons a certain Polyeuctus, according to Favorinus in Diog. ii. 38, took part in assisting the accuser. Probably "kwros ought to be written in this passage instead of Tlo\vevKTos, and in the following passage TIO\V*VKTOS instead of "AJ/UTOS, being here probably
the death of Socrates. Conf. Ueberweg, Gesch. d. Phil. i. 94. 3 This is proved by the Euthyphro, allowing, as ScMeiermacher, PI. Werke, i. a, 52, and Steinhart, Plato s Werke, ii. 191 and 199 do., that this dialogue was hastily penned after the be ginning of the trial, its object being to prove that Socrates, though accused of impiety, had a deeper piety and a keener appreciation of the nature of
than one who had in curred ridicule by his extrava gances, but had nevertheless brought himself into the odour of sanctity a view which, notpiety,
;
THE ACCUSATION.
under no misapprehension as to the danger which threatened him. To get up a defence, however, went
1
196
CHAP. X.
Partly considering
it
except
wrong by
simple truth partly finding it impossible to move out of his accustomed groove, and to wear a form of
artificial
convinced that
and
with the thought that death would probably bring him more good than harm, and that an unjust con demnation would only save him the pressure of the
fair
name
unsullied. 3
(Un250)
some
d.
Platon.
s
Schrift,
i.
and Grote
(Plato
316) ob
jections, appears most probable. The treatment of the question is too light and satirical for the
of his friends spoke for as little claim to truth in face of Plato s description as that in Diog. ii. 41. 3 As to the motives of So crates, the above seems to fol
him has
was
felt.
iv. 8,
Plato, 28, A.
2
24,
A.;
Cousin
give
In Xen.
Mem.
iv. 8, 5,
So
crates says that when he wished to think about his defence, the
and ac ^a.L^.6viov opposed him cording to Diog. ii. 40 Cic. de Orat. i. 54 Quintil. Inst. ii. 15, 30; xi. 1, 11; Vol. Max. vi. 4, 2 Stob. Floril. 7, 56, he de clined a speech which Lysias offered him. It is asserted by Plato, Apol. 17, B., that he without spoke preparation.
; ;
;
more calculation than can be reconciled with the testimony of history, or with the rest of his character. Cousin (CEuvres
de Platon, i. 58), seems to think that Socrates was aware that he must perish in the con flict with his age, but he forgets that the explanation given in
Plato s Apology, 29, B., is only a conditional one, and that the passage in that treatise 37, C., was written after the judicial
sentence.
Apo
that
to
the effect
Similarly Volquard-
o 2
196
SOCRATES.
Such was the tone of mind which dictated
defence.
1
CHAP. X.
(2) Socra
tes
his
The language
is
de
fence of
himself.
sen (Damon, d. Sokr. 15), in attempting to prove from Mem. iv. 4, 4 Apol. 19, A., that So crates had predicted his con demnation, forgets that in these passages the question is only as Even to probable guesses. Grote goes too far in asserting, in his excellent description of the trial (Hist, of Greece, viii. 654), that Socrates was hardly
;
give a lesson to youth the most impressive which it was in the power of man to give. To pre suppose such calculation on the part of Socrates is not only contradictory to the statement that he uttered his defence without preparation, but it appears to be opposed to the picture which we are accus
tomed
anxious to be acquitted, and As far as we can judge, his con that his speech was addressed duct does not appear to be a far more to posterity than to work of calculation, but a his judges. History only war thing of immediate conviction, a consequence of that upright rants the belief, that with mag nanimous devotion to his cause ness of character which would Socrates was indifferent to the not allow him to go one step His result of his words, and en beyond his principles. deavoured from the first to principles, however, did not reconcile himself to a probably allow him to consider results, It does since he could not know what unfavourable result. not, however, follow that he result would be beneficial to him. It was his concern to was anxious to be condemned nor have we reason to suppose speak only the truth, and to despise anything like corrupt so, since he could have wished for nothing which he considered ing the judges by eloquence. to be wrong, and his modesty This may appear a narrowkept him uncertain as to what minded view, but no other was the best for himself. See course of conduct would so Plato, Apol. 19, A.; 29, A.; well have corresponded with We cannot, the bearing and character of 35, D. 30, D. and herein consists Socrates therefore, believe with Grote, had well his greatness, that he chose p. 668, that Socrates considered his line of defence, what was in harmony with himself in the face of extreme and chosen it with a full con that danger, with classic composure sciousness of the result in his conduct before the court and unruffled brow. We possess two accounts of lie was actuated only by a wish the speech of Socrates before to display his personal great ness and the greatness of his his judges, a shorter one in mission in the most emphatic Xenophon and a longer one in
;
;
manner
Plato
Apology.
Xenophon
HIS DEFENCE.
wishing to save his
biter,
life,
197
who would
by a simple
CHAP. X.
ing to the testimony of Herwhom the compiler, imitating the Mem. iv. 8, 4, professes to be indebted for his information, is lost. Touch ing Plato s, the current view seems well established, that this Apology is not a mere creation of his own, but that it in all substantial points r faithfully records w hat Socrates said and the attempt of Georgii, introduction to his in the of the Apology translation
mogenes, to
tation of prejudices, which lasted undeniably (according to the testimony of Xenoplwn, Mem. i. 1, 11 (Ec. 12, 3 Symp. 6, 6) till after his own
; ;
death, and perhaps contributed much to his condemnation. He misses, with Steinhart in
(conf Steinhart, Platon.Werke, 235) to prove the contrary will not stand. Georgii com plains that in the Socrates of Plato that /jiya\r) yopia is want
.
ii.
things which So might have said in his defence, and did actually say according to the Apology of Xenophon. But to this state ment no importance can be attached, and it is probable that in an unprepared speech Socrates omitted much which might have told in his favour.
Plato, crates
many
ing, which
in
him
few will agree, not even the writer of the Apology attri buted to Xenophon. He also the sophism with considers which the charge of atheism was met, improbable in the mouth of Socrates, though it may just as likely have come from him as from one of his He doubts whether disciples. Socrates could have maintained a composure so perfect al though all that we know of Socrates shows unruffled calm
;
can hardly be convinced that Socrates cross-questioned Miletus so searchingly as Plato but this passage describes agrees with the usual character of the discourse of Socrates, and the sophism by which So crates proved that he did not
;
He
a main trait in his character. sees in the prominent fea tures of that character a diplo matic calculation, which others will look for in vain. He con siders it incredible that So crates should have begun with a studied quotation from the Clouds of Aristophanes, aiming at nothing else than the refu
as
He
corrupt youth is quite his own. That Socrates See p. 141. should have met the charge of atheism by quibbles, instead of appealing to the fact of his reverence for the Gods of the state, he can only understand, by supposing that we have here an expression of Plato s reli gious views although Plato would have had no reason for suppressing the fact, supposing Socrates had really made such an appeal he even describes the devotion of his master to the Gods of his country, and is himself anxious to continue that service. Touching the sophisms, even Aristotle, Rhet.
:
:
198
SOCRATES.
setting forth of the truth, or of a patriot warningHe seeks to against wrong-doing and overhaste.
CHAP.
convince the accuser of his ignorance, to refute the accusation by criticism. At the same time dignity
the judges in terms of entreaty. Their sentence is not feared, whatever it may be. He stands in the service of (rod, and is determined to keep his post in the face of every danger. No commands shall make
him
(3)
faithless to his
His
r
tion.
from obeying (rod rather than the Athenians. The result of his speech was what might have nave been expected. The majority of the judges
would most unmistakeably have been disposed to pronounce him innocent, had not the proud bearing
1
of the accused brought him into collision with the members of a popular tribunal, accustomed to a very different deportment from the most eminent states
men. 2
ii.
23
18
contrary, the difference in style between the Apology and Plato s usual writings, seems to prove that this
Plato
intention
to
record
literally the
words of Socrates, and we may be satisfied with comparing his Apology with the
speeches in Thucydides, Steinhart does, bearing
as in
22,
i.
Phaedo appears altogether inconceivable considering the great difference between the two in regard to their philosophical contents and their artisIt certainly was not tic form.
says of himself, that he had kept as close as possible to the sense and substance of what and applying it was said equally to Plato. Conf Ueberweg, Unters. d. Plat. Schr. 237.
.
Xen. Mem. iv. 4. 4. Let the attitude of Pericles be remembered on the occasion
*
HIS SENTENCE
side were set against
AND DEATH.
l
him, and by a small majority the sentence of Gruilty was pronounced. 2 According
Indeed it a well-known fact that judg ing was a special hobby of the Athenian people (conf. Aristophanes in the Wasps,
the Apology, 34, C.
is
CHAP.
X.
Clouds, 87, that a number of the judges had abstained from voting, a course which may be
possible.
Out
of 600 Heliasts,
281
may have
voted
against
Clouds,
this
,207),
and
of
that
its
it
sove
reignty.
How
Volquardsen,
Damon, d. Sokr. 15, can con clude from the above words that Hegel s judgment respect ing Socrates rebellion against the people s power is shared here, is inconceivable.
According to Plato, Apol. he would have been ac quitted if 3, or as another reading has it, if 30 of his judges had been of a different mind. But how can this be reconciled with the statement
36, A.,
1
for him. It is, however, possible, as Bockh suggests, that in Diogenes, 251 may have originally stood in stead of 281. In this case
there might have been 251 against and 245 or 246 for the accused, making together and some few, nearly 500 supposing the board to have
;
been complete at first, may have absented themselves dur ing the proceedings, or have
refrained from voting. Or, if the reading rpidKovra, which has many of the best MSS. in its favour, is established in Plato, we may suppose that the original text in Diogenes was nar f Suidff Or) Sm/coas follows
:
of
Diog.
ii.
41
/coTe5iKa<r07j
SiaKoffiais
i^7j<>0is
oySo^vovra
/jua.
Tr\eioffi
ruv o.tro\vova)v ? Either the text here must be corrupt, or a true statement of Diogenes must have been strangely per verted. Which is really the
case
it is difficult
ffais
to say.
It is
generally
believed
that
the
whole number of judges who condemned him was 281. But since the Heliasa always con
sisted of
against 220, together 500, and if 30 more declared for the accused, had he would have been acquitted, the votes being equal. 2 This course of events is not
We
should
hundreds, most probably with the addi tion of one deciding voice
(400, 500, 600, or 401, 501, 601),
so
many
only in itself probable, taking into account the character of the speech of Socrates and the nature of the circumstances,
on this hypothesis no propor tion of votes can be made out which is compatible with Plato s whichever assertion, reading is adopted. We should have then to suppose with Bock, in Suvern on Aristoph.
iv. 4, 4) distinctly asserts that he would certainly have been acquitted if he had in any way conde scended to the usual attitude of deference to his judges. See also Plato, Apol. 38, D.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
X.
to the Athenian
mode
was to treat of the measure of the penalty. Socrates, however, spoke out with undaunted courage were
:
he to move for what he had deserved, he could only move for a public entertainment in the Prytaneum.
He
repeated the assurance that he could not on any account renounce his previous course of life. At
length, yielding to the entreaties of his friends, he was willing to consent to a fine of thirty minse, be
cause he could pay this without owning himself to be guilty. 1 It may be readily understood that to
the majority of the judges such language in the ac cused could only appear in the light of incorrigible 2 obstinacy and contempt for the judicial office ; hence
He
way
duct, frequently expressing before the judges his conviction, that for him death would be no misfor
tune. 4
1 The above is stated on the authority of Plato s Apology, in opposition to which the less accurate assertion of Xenophon, that he rejected any
effect, if
pecuniary
and composition, that of Diog. ii. 41, cannot be allowed to be of any weight. 2 How Socrates distinctly foresaw this effect of his con
duct is unknown. It may have appeared probable to him but he may also have anticipated
;
sciousness, carried through his to death, appears untenable for the same reasons as the above. 3 According to Diog. ii. 42, it was carried by eighty more votes than his condemnation.
condemnation
HIS SENTENCE
AND DEATH.
i
201
T,,, pending the return of the sacred-ship from Delos, e continued in prison thirty days, holding his accus
his friends, and retaining the whole period his unclouded brightness during
of disposition. 2 Flight from prison, for which his friends had made every preparation, was scorned as 3 His last day was spent in wrong and undignified.
quiet intellectual conversation, and when the evening came the hemlock draught was drunk with a strength of mind so unshaken, and a resignation so entire, that a feeling of wonder and admiration overcame
the feeling of grief, even in his nearest relatives. 4 Among the Athenians, too, no long time after his death, discontent with the troublesome preacher of
morals
is
said to
in consequence of which his accusers were visited with severe penalties ; 5 these statements, however,
1
Mem. iv. 8, 2
See
77, 1.
Plato, Phasdo,
;
58, A.
2 3
Phsedo, 59, D.
p..
Mem.
1.
c.
According to
him to
flight.
The Epicurean Idomeneus, who says it was Jfcschines (Diog. ii. 60; iii. 36) Us not a trust worthy authority. 4 Compare the Phasdo, the
account in wr hich appears to be true in the main. See 58, E. Xen. Mem. iv. 8, 2. 116, A. Whether the statements in
; ;
put Socrates to death, and attacked his accusers, putting them to death without a judi Suidas makes cial sentence. Metros (Meletus) die by ston Pint, de Invid. c. 6, p. ing. 538, says that the slanderous
accusers of Socrates became so hated at Athens that the citi zens would not light their fires, or answer their questions, or bathe in the same water with them, and that at last they were driven in despair to hang themselves. Diog. ii. 43, conf. vi. 9, says that the Athenians
Xen. Apol. 28 ; Diog. ii. 35 ; JElian, V. H. i. 16, are histori Those in cal, is a moot point. Stob. Floril. 5, 67, are certainly exaggerations. 5 Diodor. xiv. 37, says that the people repented of having
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
X.
B. The cause of this sen tence of
im
probable. The circumstances which brought about the death of Socrates are among the clearest facts of history.
condemna
tion.
Nevertheless the greatest difference of opinion pre vails as to the causes which led thereto and the
of his condemnation.
In former times
is,
it
was
the So
phists.
that neither
Themist.
The Athe
nians soon repented of this deed Meletus was punished, Anytus fled, and was stoned at Heraclea, where his grave may
;
Plato, nor Xenophon, nor the writer of Xenophon s Apology ever mention this occurrence,
which they
could
not
have
still
be
seen.
Tertullian,
failed to regard with great On the contrary, satisfaction. five years after the death of
Apologet. 14, states that the Athenians punished the ac cusers of Socrates, and erected to him a golden statue in a
temple. Aug. De Civ. Dei, viii. 3, reports that one of the ac cusers was slain by the people and the other banished for
life.
Socrates
Xenophon thought
it
necessary to defend him against the attacks of his accusers, while ^Eschines appealed to the sentence on Socrates without dreading the very obvious answer, that his accusers had
met with
This view, already expres sed by Forchammer (1. c. 66) and Grote, viii. 683, appears to be the correct one notwith standing Hermann s (I.e. 8, 11) arguments to the contrary. For though it is possible that
1
their deserts. That Isocrates is referring to this occurrence rather than to any
(irepl
other
avri56ff.
19)
is
not
established, nor
cusers
against
them
that
(2)
other in
not to
(3)
And
was performed.
20
CHAP.
deeper insight into his position in history, it would in deed be inconceivable that any vested interests could
have been
sufficiently injured by him to warrant a If then, he was nevertheless accused serious attack.
else
but the lowest of motives ^ersonal,,hatied ? Now who can have had so much reason for hatred as the So
phists,
so effective in
thwarting, and who were otherwise supposed to be ca pable of any crime ? Accordingly it must have been
at their instigation that Anytus and Meletus induced Aristophanes to write his play of the Clouds, and after
wards themselves brought Socrates to trial. This was the general view of the learned in former
Nevertheless its erroneousness was already 2 He proved that Meletus was pointed out by Freret. a child when the Clouds was acted, and that at a
times. 1
much
crates
later period
that neither Anytus can have had anything to ; do with the Sophists Plato always representing him
as their inveterate
enemy and
4
;
despiser
nor Meletus
with Aristophanes
1
in 549, others.
Meno,
92, A.
2 In the admirable treatise Observations sur les Causes et sur quelques Circonstances de la
the
Aristophanes often amuses himself at the expense of the poet Meletus, but, as has been remarked, this Meletus was probably an older man than the accuser of Socrates. See Hermann, De Socr. Accus. 5.
Inscript.
47, 6, 209.
04
SOCRATES.
,of credit
CHAP.
the Sophists, who had little or no political influence in Athens, 2 could never have procured the condem
nation of Socrates.
Least of
all,
preferred against charges which immediately recoiled on their heads. 3 These arguments of Freret s, after long passing unnoticed, 4 have latterly
him own
reception.
divided, and it is an open question whether the condemnation of Socrates was a work of private revenge, or whether it resulted from more general motives if the latter, whether these motives were political, or moral, or religious and lastly, whether the sentence was, according to the popular
; ;
much
it
may admit
Acad.
of a
partial justification.
(V. H. ii. 13), the chief authority for the previous hypothesis, knows nothing about a suborning of
Anytus by the Sophists. 2 The political career of Damon, who according to the use of the Greek language can be
called
Sophist,
establishes
German writers century, who for the most part follow the old view for instance, Seiners, Gesch. d. Wissenschaf t, ii. 476 Tiedemann, Geist d. spek. Phil. ii. 21, Others, such as JBuhle, Gesch.
;
d.
Phil.
i.
372
Tenneman,
on the same plea Socrates was attacked by Aristophanes, who never spared any partizans of
sophistry. 4 The treatise of Freret was written as early as 1736, but
Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 40, confine themselves to stating generally, that Socrates made many
rality,
not published till 1809, when appeared together with several other of his writings. See
it
205
CHAP.
the one lying nearest to hand, ( 2 ) & di ^ is that of some older writers, who attribute the execeedfrom e/ sonal cution of Socrates to personal animosity always P r
>\
giving up the unfounded idea that the Sophists were A great deal may man in any way connected therewith. 2 be said in favour of this aspect of the case. In a grudge.
Plato,
3
animosity.
is
not the
victim of Anytus or Meletus, but of the ill-will which he incurred by his criticism of men. Even Anytus,
it
Plato hints
owed him a personal grudge. being aggrieved with the judg ments passed by Socrates on Athenian statesmen, 5 and, according to Xenophon s Apology, took it amiss
is
however
4
said,
at his
Pint. Cato,
is
c.
23.
This Gesch. d.
found
i.
in
249,
Fries,
Phil.
who
speaks of the hatred and envy a great portion of the of people, as the motives which brought on the trial. Sigwart, Gesch. d. Phil. i. 89, gives prominence to this motive, and
JBratidix,
only place where it would have been possible to carry it on so long, and that it is by no means a matter for wonder, that Socrates was accused and condemned, but only that this did not happen sooner. If he had been tolerated so long, there must have been special
reasons, however, for the accusation and these he is in clined to find partly in his relations to Critias and Alcibiades, and partly in the hatred of
;
Gr.
Rom.
Phil.
ii. a.
two distinguishes lands of opponents to Socrates, those who considered his philosophy incompatible with ancient discipline and morality, and those who could not endure his moral earnestness, attributing the accusation to the latter. Grote, viii. 637, inclines to the same view. He proves how unpopular Socrates must have made himself He by his sifting of men. remarks that Athens was the
26,
who
Anytus.
3 4
Sw/cparous xA.euatr^uoj 5 Compare with this Hegel, Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 92 ; Grote. Hist, of Greece, viii. 641.
.
206
CHAP.
SOCRATES.
that Socrates urged him to give his competent son a higher training than that of a dealer in leather,
thereby encouraging in the young man discon tent with his trade. 1 Anytus is said to have first
moved Aristophanes
in no small degree to the success of this attack is 3 To convince men of their antecedently probable.
ignorance
is
Anyone who
the most thankless task you can choose. can persevere in it for a life-time so re
must make
many enemies
his
mark men
But
sole
other
Still personal
statements
to
binding
upon
us.
work
lead to his
condemnation.
Socrates and his pupils became convinced of the -justice of his cause, the less were they able to disJ
cover any grounds in fact for the accusation. The one wish of Socrates being to will and to do what was
best,
for
Later
c.
; ;
give
to
more
Pint,
details.
Ale.
According 4 Amator.
17, 27, p.
and Satyrus in Athen<sus, xii. 534, e, Anytus was a lover of Alcibiades, but was rejected by him, whilst Alcibiades showed every attention to Socrates, and hence the enmity Such of Anytus to Socrates.
762
Socr. since
Cive,
133)
Xenophon
and
2
1.
JElian, V. H.
ii.
13.
c.
Diog.
638.
c.
s
Compare
Grate,
1.
207
The narrative
CHAP.
Apology would at most only explain the hatred of Anytus it would not account for the
Xenophon
Socrates.
all
;
It is a
and whether, its truth, this personal injury was the only granting cause which arrayed Anytus as accuser against him. Lastly, allowing, as was undoubtedly the case, that Socrates made enemies of many influential people, is
1
not strange that their personal animosity should only have attained its object after the re-establish
it
ment of order
in Athens ? In the most unsettled and corrupt times no serious persecution had been Neither at the time of the set on foot against him.
mutilation of the Hermse, had his relations with Alcibiades ; nor after the battle of Arginusae, 2 had
the incensed state of popular feeling been turned 3 Plato, too, says that what told against against him. Socrates at the trial, was the general conviction that
his teaching was of a dangerous character ; and he states that as matters then stood, it was impossible for
political matters
with
Thrasybulus
treaties,
faithful
to
the
not unimpeachable
we gather
(Aristot. in liar;
pocration Sendfav Diodor. xiii. 64; Pint. Coriol. 14), that when he was first charged with treason he corrupted the On the other hand judges. Isocr. (in Callim. 23) praises
him
208
SOCRATES.
of youth. 1
CHAP.
On
testimony of writers so
Xenophon and Aristophanes proves that the prejudice against Socrates was not merely a pass ing prejudice, at least not in Athens, but that it lasted a whole life-time, not confined only to the masses, but shared also by men of high importance
opposite as
state.
Athens,
if
With regard
of art, and for a comedian, who in his mad way holds up to ridicule all authorities divine and human, to clothe himself with the tragic seriousness of a poli 2 Yet it is no less an error to lose tical prophet.
sight of the grave vein which underlies the comic license of his plays, and to mistake his occasional
pathos for thoughtless play. Were it only this, the hollowness of the sentiment would soon show itself
in artistic defects.
patriotic sentiment
1 Polit. 299, B. ; Kep. vi. 488, 496, C. Apol. 32, E. ; Gorg. 473, E. ; 521, D. 2 Kotscher s spirited description suffers from this onesidedness, and even Hegel, in his passage on the fate of Socrates,
;
Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 82, is not quite free from it, although
quite as much in the comediesin of Aristophanes, as the state of things of which he complains.
2C
CHAP.
through all his plays, in some of the earlier ones even disturbing the purity of the poetic tone, 2 but
proving
all
love
to his
This interest only could have brought him to give comedies that political turn, by means of 3 which, as he justly takes credit to himself, comedy
gained a far higher ground than had been allowed to it by his predecessors. At the same time it must be
granted that Aristophanes is as much deficient as others in the morality and the faith of an earlier
4
age,
and that
it
men and
His
was rather one of those cases so frequently met with in history, in which a man attacks a principle in
others to
fallen a victim,
with
out owning it to himself. Aristophanes combats innovations in morals, politics, religion, and art. Being, however, in his inmost soul the offspring of
his age, he can only combat them with the weapons and in the spirit of this age. With the thorough
dislike of the
narrow practical
3
man
unable to give a
;
See
p. 29.
Compare
him
and
Peace, 732 Wasps, 1022 ; Clouds, 537. 4 Compare Droysen, Aristoph. Werke, 2 Aufl. i. 174, which seems to go too far.
210
SOCRATES.
thought to anything beyond immediate needs, he proscribes every attempt to analyse moral and poli
tical motives, or to test their reasonableness or the
CHAP.
he thinks nothing of trifling with truth and good manners, provided the desired end is reached. He thus becomes entangled
reverse;
whilst
as
poet
in the inconsistency of demanding back, and yet by one and the same act destroying, the old morality.
That he committed this inconsistency cannot be And what a proof of shortsightedness it was denied. to attempt to charm back a form of culture which had been irretrievably lost That he was conscious of this inconsistency cannot be believed. Hardly would a thoughtless scoffer which is what some would make of him have ventured upon the danger
!
ous path of attacking Cleon. Hardly would Plato have brought him into the society of Socrates in the
Symposium, putting into his mouth a speech full of spirited humour, had he seen in him only a despic able character. If, however, the attack upon Socrates is seriously meant, and Aristophanes really thought
to discern in
him
him
then the charges preferred at the not a mere pretence, and something more trial were than personal motives led to the condemnation of
in the Clouds
Socrates.
Do we
that
is
All
and the personal character of the accusers only leaves us a choice between two either the attack on Socrates was alternatives
:
known of the
211
in particular, or
CHAP.
mode of thought and teaching in respect to morals, religion, and 2 Both alternatives are somewhat alike, still politics. are not so alike that we can avoid distinguishing they
them.
great deal may be said in favour of the view, that the attack on Socrates was in the first place setl
on foot in the interest of the democratic party, Amongst the accusers, Anytus is known as one of the
3 The judges, too, leading democrats of that time. are described as men, who had been banished and
We
know, more
the charges preferred against over, Socrates was, that he had educated Critias, the most unscrupulous and the most hated of the oligarchical
5
party
^Eschines
tells
the
Athenians plainly
to death the Sophist Socrates, because the teacher of Critias. Others, too, are found
among the
friends
Thig
p.
Com-
1.
c.
More
Tub. Zeitschrift, 1837, 3 128-144. 3 See p. 194, 1. 4 Plato, Apol. 21, A. 5 Xen. Mem. i. 2, 12 Plato Apol. 33, A.
;
2 Hegel, G- esch. d. Phil. ii. 81 Rotscher, p. 256, 268, with special reference to the Clouds of Henning, Aristophanes ;
shows.
ian.
p 2
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
X.
aristocratical
sympathies.
about the time of the trial of Socrates, perhaps even in connection therewith, because of his intimacy with Sparta and the Spartans friend, Cyrus the younger. Lastly, one of the formal indictments is
referred to as charging Socrates with speaking dispa 3 ragingly of the democratic form of election by lot,
and with teaching his audience to treat the poor with 4 insolence, by so frequently quoting the words
He
Each prince of name or chief in arms approved, fired with praise, or with persuasion moved.
But
if
Him
1
a clamorous vile plebeian rose, with reproof he check d, or tam d with blows. 5
the
Charmides,
uncle
of
Neither
Xenophon nor
Theramenes
Plato
Plato, one of the thirty, was, according to Xen. Hell. ii. 4, 19, one of the ten commanders
mention
among
at the Peirasus, and fell on the same day with Critias in conflict with the exiled Athe nians. 2 he Forcliliammer, p. 84 also mentions Theramenes, the supporter of the thirty tyrants, who may have been a pupil of Socrates without, as Forchhammer will have it, adopting the political opinions of his But Diodor., xiv. 5, teacher. from whom the story comes, is a very uncertain authority.
:
the pupils of Socrates. Neither of them mentions an interven tion of Socrates on his behalf, as Plato, Apol. 32, C. does in another case. In the accusasation brought against the vic
tors at Arginusae, it was So crates who espoused their cause, and Theramenes who by his in trigues brought about their
condemnation.
Pseudoplut.
Vit. Decrhet. iv. 3, tells a similar and more credible story of Socrates. Probably it was first told of him and then transferred to Socrates.
3
4
For Diodorus
it
combines with
Mem.
i.
2, 9.
the very improbable story that Socrates tried to rescue Thera menes from the clutches of the thirty, and could only be dis suaded from this audacious at
Forcliliam-
tempt
by
many
entreaties.
mer, p. 52, detects a great deal He more in these verses. thinks that Socrates was here expressing his conviction of
213
CHAP.
X.
the democratic party did come into play. Still these motives were not all. The indictment
(4)
He was
by no means places the anti-republican sentiments of Socrates in the foreground. What is brought against him is his rejection of the Grods of bis country, and Those (rods were, however, hjs corruption of youth.
1
the victim,
of more general
causes.
(a)
The
cliarges
mere not
the necessity of an oligarchical constitution, and was using the words of Hesiod epyov 5 ovdtv oveiSos (which the accusers also took advantage of), as a plea for not delaying, but for striking when the time for The real impor .action came. tance of the quotation from Homer, he contends, must not be sought in the verses quoted by Xenophon, but in those omitted by him (II. ii. 192-197, 203-205) the charge was not brought against Socrates for .spreading anti-democratic sen timents, which Xenophon alone
:
directed stance, he enumerates not only against the Critias but Alcibiades among political the anti-democrat ical pupils of element in Socrates and he speaks of the his teach political activity of Socrates ing only. after the battle of Arginusas
;
remarking that the oli garchs elected on the council board their brethren in politi cal sentiments. It is true the levity of Alcibiades made him dangerous to the democratic party, but in his own time he never passed for an oligarch, but for a democrat. See Xen.
by
Mem.
i.
2,
12
48 and 68.
With regard
to the
Forchhammer relies upon the statements of Xenophon, how can he at the same time assert that they are false in most im
If
And if on portant points ? the other hand he wishes to strengthen these statements, how can he use them to up hold the view, by which he
condemns
them
them
He
has,
For in
SOCRATES.
CHAP. X.
not only the (rods of the republican party, but the Grods of Athens. If in some few instances, as in the
the mutilation of the Hermse, insult to the was brought into connection with attacks on a Grods republican constitution, the connection was neither a
trial for
it
named
regards
in the indictment of
Further, as
the corruption
of
was certainly supported by the youth, plea that Socrates instilled into young men contempt
this charge
for republican
insolence, and
also that
But the training of Alcibiades was also laid to his charge, who had injured the city by republican
rather
than
by
aristocratic
opinions.
further
count was, that he taught sons to despise their 2 fathers, and said that no wrong or base action need
be shunned
if
only
it
Herefrom
much the
the subject of attack. The latter aspects exclusively draw down the wrath of Aristophanes. After all the ancient and modern discussions as to the scope of the
Clouds,
4
it
may
be taken
the So
crates of this
comedy is not only a representative drawn with a poet s license of a mode of thought
Mem.
29.
i. i.
2, 9.
i.
Xen. Mem.
2,
49
Apol.
20 and
8 4
Mem.
2, 56.
Since then, Droysen opinions. Schnitzer, Forchhammer, p. 25, and Kochly, Akad. Vortr. 1, have further gone into the
and
question.
CHAP.
and the absurdity of sophistry and useless learning but the play was distinctly aimed at the philosophic
;
tendency of Socrates.
posed, after
Just as
little
can
it
be sup
attack
said, that
this
Plato s description in the Symposium puts this 2 3 out of the question. Keisig s and Wolf s opinions are also untenable. Reisig distributes the traits
;
which Aristophanes assigns to Socrates, between himself and the whole body of his pupils, Euripides 4 still the spectators could not do in particular
;
otherwise
all
to
Socrates
hence
Aristophanes must have intended this reference. Wolf supposes that the portrait drawn in the Clouds is of Socrates in his younger years, when he was But the very same given to natural philosophy.
charges were repeated against him eighteen years in the Frogs; 5 and we gather from Plato s 6 Apology that the current view of Socrates and his
later
teaching up to the time of his death agreed substan not to mention the tially with that of Aristophanes
;
assumed by G. Herad Nubes, p. Com33, 11, and by others. pare, on the other hand, RotAs mann,
1
is
Similarly
1
Praaf.
scher,
2
p.
294,
273,
307,
;
311;
Silvern, p. 3.
Khein. Prsef. ad Nubes Mus. ii. (1828) i. K. S. 191. 3 In his translation of the
Clouds,
see
10 years* older than Socrates, and certainly not his pupil, although possibly an acquaintance. 5 Frogs, 1491. 6 See p. 18.
Who
was
Rotscher,
297.
216
CHAP.
fact
SOCRATES.
probably never was a lover of philosophy, and that in the Clouds he is attacked as a Sophist rather than as a natural
that
Socrates
natural
philosopher.
O) TMs
^liepart
is
Aristophanes must, then, really have thought to discern in the Socrates whom the history of philoso-
phy sketches features deserving his attack. Saying J ,. f / this, however, is, of course, not saying that he did
.
not
caricature
it
the
historical
figure,
consciously
attributing to
all that,
many
For
we may suppose
that the
main
features in
agreed with the idea he had formed to himself of Socrates, and also with common opinion.
his picture
is not meant for an individual, but for a and that the poet s attack was not aimed at symbol, Socrates, but at the sophistic and rhetorical school in
the Clouds
general,
cannot be right.
Far from
it,
Socrates was
champion of sophistry, because in mind he really was that ; the poet be Aristophanes lieved that, taken in his public capacity, he was
really the
be.
made
to be the
Not a
dangerous innovator he represents him to single line of his picture has an exclu
political colour. Independently of some which are obviously not seriously meant, 4 the things
sively
charges against
1
him
Clouds, 98. In the treatise already referred to, pp. 19, 26, 30, 55. 3 Not to mention the false
2
who
is
concealed
180
4
Schnitzer, p. 34.
opinion, which however is supported \syHertzberg (Alcibiades, p. 67), that the play was aimed
flea-jumps.
21
CHAP.
corner-point of the whole play, his sophistic facility of speech, which can gain for the wrong side the victory over the right, and make the weaker argu
ment the
stronger.
irreligious, and sophistical elements in the Socratic teaching are attacked there is not a word about his anti-republican tendency, which Aristophanes, we may suppose, had he observed, would before all things have
;
exposed. no other
Even
Only these points, too, according to Plato, constituted the standing charges against Socrates, causing him 5 And there is every reason for be special danger.
lieving his assurance. If then the impeachment of Socrates has, nevertheless,
Sacra-
(<)
this
down to a political motive, how can admission be made to agree with the previous
been
set
stronger as to the actual regiving to an unjust act the colour of justice.
suit,
4
^ ac ]ie ^
143-234, 636. 365-410. 8 889. Clouds, Droysen, Clouds, p. 177, unfairly blames this play for making a stronger argument into a right one. The \6yos Kpfirrcav is the really stronger case in point of justice, according to the original meaning of the word (Xenopli. CEc. ii. 25 Arist. Khet. ii. 24),
2
;
\4yov<rtv,
us
t/ie
^caKpdrrjs ris fffn /jLiapcararos Kal Kal eVetSdV Smtpfleipet rovs vtovs
^ time.
.
0(l
-KOMV Kal 6
/
tva 8e
SOKUXTH/
a-rropeiv,
TO.
Kara
/^erecopa /col
which
is
TWV
ra ra
the shade by the \6yos ^Trtav and what is meant by rbv T^TTCO
on TU
Geovs
vonifciv
Troieiv.
\6yov KpeiTTW iroif iv is, making the case which in point of justice is weaker, to be the
\6yov KpeiTTca
Ibid. 18, B.
18
SOCRATES.
statement ? The true answer to this question has been already hinted at by other writers. The con viction of the guilt of Socrates rested on the assumed
1
CHAP.
dangerous character of his teaching for morality and religion the reason that this offence was judicially
;
prosecuted lay without doubt in the special political circumstances of the time. The rationalism of the
Sophists was neither the sole nor the chief cause of the fall of Athens in the Peloponnesian war still it contributed unmistakeably to that result, and the op
;
ponents of the new culture were naturally disposed to make its guilt out to be greater than it really was.
not the schools of the Sophists sent forth not a few of the modern statesmen, who either as the leaders
of oligarchy or democracy had torn the state to pieces ? Was not in those schools a corrupt form of morality publicly taught, which substituted the wishes and
caprice of the individual in place of existing custom and religion, put gain in the place of right, and taught men to desire absolute sovereignty as the
Had
summit
schools
of
human
happiness
Were
not those
the
cradle of an
unscrupulous eloquence,
which employed a variety of technical tricks for any purpose, no matter what, considering it the highest triumph to make the wrong side the winning side ? Can we then wonder that Aristophanes thought the
new-fangled education responsible for all the misfor tunes of the commonwealth ; 2 that Anytus in Plato
1
Ritter,
p.
31.
Mcvrbaeli,
;
Further
in
Silvern,
Clouds, 24.
21
CHAP.
^r
__
Sophistry lay the chief malady of the state; and that this feeling was intensified during the last years of the Peloponnesian war, and under the oligarchial
Was it then other than natural that reign of force ? those who had rescued Athens from the oligarchy, re-establishing with the old constitution her political
independence, should wish by suppressing the educa
tion of the Sophists to stop the evil at its source. Now Socrates passed not only for a teacher of the
modern Sophistic
teaching were thought to be seen in several of his pupils, among whom Critias and Alcibiades were
prominent.
What more
intelligible
under such
circumstances, than that just those who were bent upon restoring a popular form of government, and
the ancient glory of Athens, should see in corrupter of youth, and a dangerous citizen ?
him
Thus
he certainly
fell
which set in after the overthrow of the thirty tyrants. For all that his political views were not in them
principal motives which provoked the His guilt was rather supposed to consist in the subversion of ancestral customs and piety, of
selves
the
attack.
How
Meno,
91, C.
as well as
istance
condemnation of
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
X.
How
then does
it really
l
and of the sentence to which it led ? And what must he thought of the modern attempts to justify it? Most of the charges which were preferred against Socrates, rest undeniably on
tice of this accusation
misunderstandings, perversions, or false inferences. Socrates is said to have rejected the Gods of the
state. have already seen this statement contra dicted by all historical testimonies. 2 He is said to have substituted his Scupoviov in their place. We,
We
it
in
of
a republican government,
inferior to the treatise of Preller (Haller, A. L. Z. 1838, No. 87), although many of its details are valuable. I/itzac, de Socrate cive 1796, despite his usual learning, does little for the question. Grote s re
is
had been justly condemned. Forchhammer goes a great deal further in his treatise, and so
does
See p. 178, 3. the other hand, confines himself, in Acad.Vortr. i. 382, to the assertion that in the indictment of Socrates guilt was equally divided and
Denis.
Kochly, on
marks, on the other hand, touching the extenuating cir which, without cumstances, altogether justifying, excuse the condemnation of Socrates, are deserving of all attention.
Gfrate, Hist, 678, 653.
2
of
Greece,
viii.
reduced
either
to
minimum on
The answer of
side.
Heinsius to Forchhammer (So crates nach dem Grade seiner Schuld. Lips. 1839) is unimpor tant, and the learned Apologia Socratis contra Meliti redivivi
charge without proof, as if its truth were obvious of itself, and he speaks of orthodoxy and heresy like a modern theolo But a Greek thought gian. far less of belief than of out ward service, and hence Xenojyhon,, Mem. i. 1, 2, refutes the charge by an appeal to the fact that he had sacrificed to the Gods.
X
CHAP.
L_
the priesthood, a private oracle could He is said to have been de to no one. 2 be refused
voted to the atheistic, heavenly wisdom of Anaxa3 4 goras, although he expressly declared it to be absurd.
He
is
a charge instruction in the Sophistic art of oratory so untrue, that to all appearances even Meletus did
not venture to prefer it. He is blamed for having been the teacher of Critias and Alcibiades, to which
5 that these charge even Xenophon justly replied men did not learn their vices from Socrates, nor degenerate, until after being separated from him.
Allowing, too, that a teacher must instil into his 6 pupils a lasting turn for the good, is it necessarily
his fault if
Compare
178.
89
149,
If
to the Saifjitviov (Mem. i. 1, 2) in good faith as a proof of Socrates belief in the Gods, and Plato compares his re velatioiis with the prophecies of
have
given
such
careless
reply to Socrates, he forgets that it is always the way of the world to confound relative
with positive atheism, doubts about particular religious notions with the denial of all re
This is quite universal the nations of antiquity, and therefore the early Christligion.
how much private divination was practised, besides appealing to public oracles. 3 Not only Aristophanes but Meletus brings this charge against him in Plato, Apol. 26, like Ast (Platen s C., p. 10,
sources,
in
See p. 135,
1.
5
6
Mem.
i.
2, 12,
ForcUliammer, p. 43.
222
SOCRATES.
The value of any
by
its
CHAP.
"V
collective effects,
testimony to the value of the instruction of Socrates A man whose beneficial influence as can be wished.
not only reached to many individuals, 1 but by whom a new foundation for morals was laid which served
his people for centuries, was, as a matter of course,
no corrupter of youth. If further the verses of Hesiod, by which Socrates sought to promote useful 2 Xenophon has con activity are alleged against him clusively proved that an ill use has been made of these
;
verses.
parents and relations, because he maintained that only knowledge constituted worth ; 3 surely this is a most unfair inference from principles,
to despise
men
Any
pupil understand that he learn something in order to become a useful must and estimable man, is surely quite in order. Only
his
who makes
the rabble can bear the teacher a grudge for making sons wiser than their fathers. Very different would
have been had Socrates spoken disparagingly of the ignorance of parents, or set lightly by the duty
it
of children
1
Plato
tions
2
whole
i. i.
Xen. Mem.
2, 48.
Mem.
163, B.
3
4
56
Mem.
i.
2, 49.
ii.
2,
3.
A
to
is
induced
But in order to decide whether it is an established Tact, and whether Socrates is here to blame, it is indeed quite possible we need a more trustworthy authority, and we
UNFOUNDED CHARGES.
might be replied that one who judged the value of simply and solely by his knowledge, and who at the same time found all wanting in true knowledge,
It
223
CHAP.
man
was making his pupils self-conceited, and teach ing them to consider themselves above all authority
But
whilst
with partial eye overrating the importance of know ledge, Socrates avoided this practically harmful in
ference by above all endeavouring to make his friends conscious of their own want of knowledge, and laying
no claim to knowledge himself, but only professing to pursue it. No fear that any one imbued with
spirit of humility and modesty, would misuse the Socratic teaching. For its misconstruction and for the consequences of a superficial and defective
this
is
as little responsible as
Of more moment
himself to the
is
Athenian democracy.
1
As
is
well
At*_p<w-
known, Socrates considered the existing constitution ma rd a complete failure. He would not have the power state
in the state awarded by lot or by election, but by the and he occasionally qualification of the individuals
;
the
expressed opinions respecting the masses who thronged the Pnyx and filled the theatre at assemblies of the
son
a better education, or else expressed himself to a third party to that effect, See p. 167.
l
224
SOCRATES.
but coining very near to treason against the soveIt was natural that his reign ty of the people.
1
CHAP,
accusers should
make
that they should not be without influence on the Still a free censure of existing institutions judges.
is
by no means treason. Some Grecian states may have confined the liberty of speech within very narrow limits, but at Athens the freedom of thought and of speech was unlimited it formed an integral
;
portion of the republican constitution ; the Athenian regarded it as an inalienable right and was proud to be herein distinguished from every other state. 2 In
the time of the most violent party quarrels there is political views
The outspoken
friends of a
to
openly stick
their
from actual attacks on the existing state of things and was Socrates not to be allowed the same privilege ? 3
colours, so long as they refrained
;
In the shape of actual deeds nothing, however, could be laid to his charge. He had never trans1
In
Mem.
iii. 7,
Socrates at-
E.
tempts to relieve Charmides of his dread of appearing in publie by reminding him, that, the people whom he is afraid of, consistof peasants, shoemakers, pedlars, &c., and therefore do not deserve such consideration. The charge preferred by the
accuser, Mem. i. 2, 58, that Socrates thought it was reasonable for the rich to abuse the
603
3
Platonic state,
c. p.
679, in
not
The
Compare
of government.
UNFOUNDED CHARGES.
gressed the laws of the state.
223
as a citizen
His duties
CHAP.
had
been conscientiously fulfilled. His avowed was that man must live for the state and opinion obey its laws. He was no partizan of the oligarchical
faction.
1
life,
the contrary, he had twice hazarded his once to rescue the victors at Arginusse good
On
democrats
furiated
populace, the other time to prevent an command of the thirty tyrants from being unjust His school, too, in as far as it can be carried out. 2
called a school,
had no decided
political bias.
If
number
the aristocratic
friends
lus
;
party,
was amongst the companions of Thrasybumost of his adherents however seem to have
A charge of politics. has been brought against him in political inactivity modern times. On this head, different judgments
may be passed on him from different points of views. From our side we can only praise him for continuing
faithful to his higher calling, not wasting his
and his
powers on a career, in which he would have attained no success, and for which he was unfitted.
life
it
is
a punishable offence least of all to avoid it under the conviction that you can do more good to the state in other ways. To
1
to avoid a statesman
Xen.
See
i.
1, 17.
See
p.
pp.
66;
67;
148;
176.
4
166.
226
SOCRATES.
X.
CHAP.
help the state in his own way was to Socrates an 1 His object of the highest and deepest interest. political theories may not have corresponded with
must be admitted
state. 2
(2) Rela tion borne
~b]l
existing institutions, but his character as a citizen to be pure ; and according to the
Jtis
3 Hegel has so well indicated, at variance with the the ancient ground occupied by the old Greek morality. The! morality.
theory to
moral
life
life,
It relied partly on rested originally on authority. the unquestioned authority of the laws of the state,
and partly on the all-powerful influence of custom and training, which raised general convictions to the rank of written laws of (rod, traceable by no one to
a definite origin.
(To oppose
was
indeed permitted
and
its
an
1
enquiry into
But this law had long rights. fallen into disuse, if indeed it, and had ever been in force who can blame Socrates for re
;
of Solon, Pint. Sol. c. 20 ; Arist. in Gell. N. A. ii. 12, 1, threaten ing neutrals in case of an in ternal quarrel with loss of civil
Gesch. d. Phil.
ii.
81.
by personal intro-
CHAP.
felt.)
demanded such an enquiry, (a) Pcrallow nothing to be believed, and have no^mviction thing done, until men were first fully convinced of its substitrath or expediency. For him it is not enough to
Socrates, however,
He would
have a
lished,
and
legally estab-
deferent* utko ~
for himself,
and discover
its
reasons
true virtue
and
right action are only possible when they spring from Hence his whole life was spent personal conviction.
in
testing their
examining the current notions touching morals, in truth, and seeking for their reasons.
the
This examination brought him in nearly all points to same results as those which were established
If his notions were in
this
many
and sharper,
which he shared in
common
of his contemporaries. Nevertheless, tried by the standard of the old Greek morality, his position seems
very critical. In the first place the ordinary morality, and the received rules of conduct resting on authority
were by him deprived of their chief In comparison with knowledge, and the con scious virtue of Socrates, they were so much depre
and
tradition,
value.
was the
self-love of individuals
hurt, but the actual validity of the laws of the state was called in question. If man has only to follow his
own
convictions, he will agree with the popular will only when, and in as far as, it agrees with his convic tions. If the two come into collision, there can be
Q 2
223
CHAP.
X.
is
SOCRATES.
no doubt as to which side he
will
espouse.
This
his de
would
obey God
And
thus his
views stand, even in theory, in sharp and irreconcileIt was impos able contradiction to the older view. sible therefore to guarantee, indeed it was highly
improbable that there would be, a perfect agreement between the two in their results, and as a matter of
fact, Socrates
by
was undeniably
fact,
2 opposed to the existing form of constitution. There can moreover be no mistaking the
that the whole character of the Socratic philosophy is at variance with the preponderance given to politi
cal interests, without
states could
never, considering their limited range, have achieved The duty of the individual towards the greatness.
community was indeed recognised by Socrates to its Even his friends he urged to devote full extent. their attention to public affairs when any of them
showed ability for the task, 3 and in keeping back from public life those who were young 4 and unformed, he acted meritoriously from the point of view of
ancient Greece.
Still
the
maxim
that
man must
be
and be sure of
his
own moral
well-being before meddling with that of others and with the community ; 5 the conviction of Socrates
that a political career was not only alien to his
Plat. Apol. 29, C. See p. 167 and 223.
4
own
Mem.
iii.
iv.
Plato,
Symp.
5
See
p. 167, 3.
216, A. Plato, 1. c.
229
CHAP.
"V
..
thought and pursuits, the demand for self-know moral knowledge, for self-training all this could not but weaken in himself and his pupils the
to
ledge, for
life.
make
the moral perfection of the individual the main that point, while reducing activity for the state highest and most immediate duty of a citizen accord
to a subordinate
and de
And, lastly, if the charge of rejecting his country s O) His Grods was, as he believed, unjustly preferred against Socrates, still his theory, it must be admitted, was an
extremely perilous one, as was seen in the case of Antisthenes, when once the Socratic demand for
knowledge was developed to its consequences, and religious notions were similarly dealt with in order
what people understood thereby. This is As a kind of oracle it had indeed a place on the ground of the Greek faith, but
to discover
by its internal character it made the decision depend on the subject instead of depending on external por tents. And yet how dangerous was this proceeding
which oracles were not only a religious How easily might others but a political institution be led to imitate the example of Socrates, taking
in a country in
!
own understanding
in
stead of with an undefined inward feeling, and thus thinking little of belief in the (rods or of their utter1
30
SOCRATES.
ances
!
CHAP.
__1___ was in
We may
all
these points right in the main, and it is true that he was the precursor and founder of quite our moral view of the world ; but how could this new
idea of right be admitted by any one who shared the How could traditions of the ancient Greek world ?
upon these traditions allow such an idea to be spread, without commiting an act of suicide ? Even remembering, then, that Socrates laboured and
a state built
taught in his simple manner, not in the Sparta of Lycurgus, but in Athens and amongst the generation
that had fought at Marathon, we shall still ficd it quite natural for the state to endeavour to restrain
his action.
For Athens was absolutely ignorant of that freedom of personal conviction, which Socrates 1 In such a com required, nor could she endure it.
munity the punishment of the innovator can cause no surprise. For was not a dangerous doctrine, ac
cording to old notions, a crime against the state ? And if the criminal resolutely refused to obey the sentence of the judges, as Socrates actually did,
how
could the penalty of death fail to follow ? To one therefore starting from the old Greek view of right and the state, the condemnation of Socrates
which was, it is true, an institution later than Solon s time, but he disliked the popular and his elections of Solon
;
Kocli
of
A very different question is it whether Athens at that time had a right to this opinion, a point which
To the defenders of Athens assume far too readily. us the question appears to deserve an .unqualified
1
CHAP.
X.
(3) Rela tion borne
~by
Ms
a Socrates appeared in the time of negation. Miltiades and Aristides, and had he been condemned
then, the sentence
Had
(ayfheold act of defence on the part of the old morality against morality In the period after the tvas al the spirit of innovation.
might be regarded
as a simple
Peloponnesian war such a view can no longer be admitted. For where was the solid morality which
ready in a
decay.
state of
Anytus and Meletus were supposed to defend ? Had not all kinds of relations, views, and modes of life long since been penetrated by an individualising
tendency far more dangerous than that of Socrates ? Had not men been long accustomed in place of the
100, is here although he regards the Athenians exclu sively as the representatives
1
Hegel,
1.
c. p.
when
most nearly
right,
been brought
of
is
anything but impartial, in making the Athenians conser vative, and Socrates a revolu tionary, and attributing to the latter the extreme consequences of those principles, notwith standing his protest. Nietzsche,
too (Sokr.u. d. Griech.Tragddie, p. 29), overlooks the difference of times in thinking that, when Socrates had once been im
peached, his condemnation was quite just. If this were allowed, not a word could be said against the sentence of death. For, according to Athenian custom,
a verdict of guilty had in, the judges could only choose between the by the penalty demanded plaintiff and that asked for by the defendant in the present case between death and an illu But the question sory fine. really is whether Socrates de served punishment at all, and to this question a negative answer must be given both from our point of view as well as from that of his cotemporfrom ours, because we aries take liberty of judgment to be something sacred and invio lable from theirs, because the Athenians had long since de parted from the ancient state
;
;
of things.
232
SOCRATES.
great statesmen of old to see demagogues and aristocrats in feud with each other on every other point,
CHAP.
but agreeing in the thoughtless play of rivalry and ambition ? Had not all the cultivated men of that
time passed through a school of rationalism which had entirely pulled to pieces the beliefs and the
morals of their ancestors
?
Had
not
men
for a
gene
on Socrates, half in joke, half in derision, that they were one and all adulterers ? 2 What had become of ancient piety at a time when the sceptical verses of
Euripides were in every one s mouth, when every year the happy sallies of Aristophanes and other
Olympus were clapped, when the most unprejudiced complained that fear of Grod, trust, and faith, had 3 vanished, and when the stories of future retribution
of
(&) So-
were universally derided ? 4 This state of things Socrates did not make
{i existin g-
he
What he
is
blamed
sists
exiting
in this, that he entered into the spirit of his time, trying to reform it by means of itself, instead
of making the useless and silly attempt to bring it back to a type of culture which was gone for ever. It was an obviously false attack of his opponents to
1
Conf
p. 29.
3
4
Time.
iii.
82
i.
ii.
53.
Clouds, 1083.
Plato, Rep.
330, D.
X:
CHAP.
according to our conceptions of right, but it also according to the standard of his own time
is
;
so
it is
a crying political anachronism, one of those unfortu nate measures, by which a policy of restauration is ever sure to expose its incompetence and short
Socrates certainly left the original sightedness. of Greek thought, and transported it beyond ground
national
the bounds, within which this life was alone possible.
particular
form of
so before it
of the old position had been amply demonstrated. The revolution which was going forward in the whole
the Greeks, was not the fault of one indi vidual, but it was the fault of destiny, or rather it was the general fault of the time. The Athenians
spirit of
in punishing
him condemned
themselves, and
com
mitted the injustice of making him pay the penalty The con of what was historically the fault of all.
least use: in
stead of being banished, the spirit of innovation was, on the contrary, thereby all the more aroused.
We
have then here not a simple collision between two moral powers equally justified and equally limited. Guilt and innocence are not equally divided between
the parties.
On
torically necessary
SOCRATES.
ance, of which Socrates had an unquestioned claim to be the representative. On the other hand, one
far
more
limited, represented
by
his opponents,
but
to
do not faithfully adhere to it. This constitutes the A peculiar tragic turn in the fate of Socrates.
reformer
attacked by nominal and imaginary restorers of old times. The Athenians in punishing him give themselves up as
is
who
truly conservative
is
lost
that he
for in reality it is not for destroying morals is punished, but for attempting to restore
them.
To form a correct judgment of the whole occur rence, we must not forget that Socrates was con demned by only a very small majority, that to all appearances it lay in his own power to secure his
and that undoubtedly he would have es with a far less punishment than death, had he caped not challenged his judges by the appearance of pride. These circumstances must make us doubly doubtful
acquittal,
an unavoidable consequence
As of his rebellion against the spirit of his nation. they place the guilt of the Athenians in a milder
light,
by laying
it
in part on the head of the accused, same time prove that accidental
events, in
no way connected with the leading charac ter of his teaching, had great weight in the final ISTo doubt Socrates was at variance with decision.
the position and the demands of the ancient morality in essential points but it was not necessary in the then state of opinion at Athens, that it should come
;
to a breach
Although
L^
CHAP.
him
For
to escape the punishment of death. his honour and his cause it was a
happy
that
(4) Tin*
What
Socrates in
pious faith expressed after his condemnation to die would be better for him than to live
has
his work.
The
picture of the
dying Socrates must have afforded to his pupils, in the highest degree, what it now after centuries affords
to us
human mind,
a simple testimony to the greatness of the to the power of philosophy, and to the
victory of a spirit pious and pure, reposing on clear conviction. It must have stood before them in
all its glory, as
as it is depicted
the guiding star of their inner life, by Plato s master hand. It must
for
their teacher,
stamp of higher truth was on his life and words. The sublime repose impressed and happy cheerfulness with which he met death, was the strongest corroboration of all his convictions, the zenith of a long life devoted to knowledge and
ing.
By
virtue.
teaching, but
greatly strengthened
influence.
had been spent in sowing the seeds of know with a zeal unequalled by any other philosopher ledge
life
;
the harvest, so that they brought forth fruit dantly in the Socratic Schools.
abun
PAET
III.
CHAPTER XL
THE SCHOOL OF SOCKATES
:
HIS POPULAR
PHILOSOPHY.
XENOPHON:
CHAP.
XI.
MIND
so great
as that of
make
a lasting impression
on every kind of character with which it came into If then the most perfect systems are often contact.
not understood by all their adherents in the same sense, might not a much greater divergence and variety of apprehension be expected, in a case where
no system lay ready to hand, but only the fragments and germs of what might be one a person, a princi ple, a method, a mass of individual utterances and of
desultory discussions ? The greater part of the fol lowers of Socrates confined their attention to what
the originality, the purity of character, the intelligent view of life, the deep piety and the beautiful moral maxims of their teacher. Only a
smaller
One only with a deeper insight into the spirit phy. of Socrates has succeeded in creating a system which
presents in a most brilliant and extended form what Socrates had attempted in another manner and on a
more limited
In the
scale.
of these classes must be placed with out doubt by far the greater number of those who are known to us as the pupils of Socrates. The writings
first
1
1
who
;
1.
will
presently mentioned, are Crito (Xen. Mem. ii. 9 Plato, Crito, Phsedo, 59, B., 60, A., 63, D., 115, A. Euthyde;
be
A.,
Plato, Symp. 173, B., 174, 223, B.) Euthydemus 3 5 6 PL, (Mem. iv. 2
; ; ;
;
Theages
(PI.
;
mus Diog. ii. 121, who makes him the author of seventeen
;
books, which, however, belong to him as little as his suppos ed children Hermogenes, and others), and Clitobulus his son
Plato, Apol. 33, D., 38, B. Phcedo, 59, B. jEsch. in Atheiueus v. 220, a.) Chasrephon (Mem. 2, 48 ii. 3 Charm. Plato, Apol. 20, E. 153, B. Gorgias, Aristophanes, Clouds, Birds, 1296) and his brother Chserecrates (Mem. 1. also Apollodorus (Mem. c.)
;
Kep. vi. 496, B.) Hermogenes (Xen. Mem. ii. 10, 3, iv. 8, 4 Sym. 4, 46 Apol. 2, PI. Pheedo, 59, B). In Mem. i. 2, 48, perhaps Ep/jLoyev^s should be read for Hermocrates but
; ; ;
8. ii.
;
(Ec.
any rate this Hermocrates must be distinguished from the Hermocrates mentioned PL
at
19, C., 20, A, Krit. 108, the latter being a stranger who only stays at Athens on
Tim.
;
his way.
Compare
;
Steinhart,
;
PL W.
nides
59,
C.)
;
33, E.)
11, 17; Plato, Apol. 34, A., 38, B. ; Phgedo, 59, B., 117,
iii.
iii. 12) Menexenus (Phsedo, 59, B. Lysis, 206, D.) Ctesippus (Phasdo, Euthyde-
B.
Mem.
SOCRATES.
CHAP.
XI.
many of these
followers of
is
Socrates
that
much
1
is spurious were, on an average doubtless! little more than summaries of popular moral maxims.
mode of under and applying the doctrines of Socrates may standing be found in Xenophon. 2
One
of the best illustrations of this
mus,
(Theaetet. Soph. Pol.
;
Theaetetus Prod, in Euclid. 19, m. 20) the younger Socrates (Plat. Theaat. 147, E.
Lysis)
;
and
Jud. de Thuc. c. 31, p. 94], reckons among the followers of Socrates and Alcibiades in
their younger years (Mem. i. not to mention 2, 12, Plato) others who were acquainted
;
257, C. Arist. Metaph. vii. 11, 1036, 6, 25 conf. Hermann, Plat. i. 661) Terpsion (PL Theset. Phajdo,
; ;
;
Soph. 218, 8
Polit,
Charmides (Xen. Mem. iii. 7 6, 14 Symp. 4, 29 Hellen. ii. 4, 19 Plato, Charm. Sym. 222, B. Prot. 315, A.) Glaucon the brother of Plato (Mem. iii. 6 the same indi
59, C.)
; ;
; ;
Callias (Plato, Phfed., Symp.) (Xen. Symp., Plato, Phot.) the younger Pericles (Mem. iv. 5)
;
vidual to attributes
whom
nine
Eu-
many
Dioff.
ii.
124,
genuine
and
thirty-two spurious dialogues, and who is identical with the Glauco of Plato s Republic, and the Parmenides, as we assume conf. Abfollowing BocTih handlung d. Berliner Acad.
;
and Glaucon. Xenophon, the son of the Athenian Gryllus, died accord
2
others. 1 Crito
by
i. 34, Sext. Math. i. 48; David, Proleg. in Cat. 9 Schol. in in Arist. 13, b, 35 Porphyr. Isag. 2, b, to have committed suicide over the
84,
and
a statement in Diof/. From 360-359 B.C. Hellen. vi. 4, 35, however, itappears that he survived the murder of Alexander of Pheras 357. If the treatise respecting the public revenues of Athens belongs to the year 355, he must also have outlived that
ing
ii.
to
56,
Ammon
year.
Phsedo, probably not from mis understanding the exhortation to a philosophic death, but from shame for his conduct there blamed) Diodorus (Mem.
;
ii.
10); Critias,
whom
Dionys.
On the authority of Ps. Lucian. Macrob. 21, his birth was formerly placed in 450, or on account of his participation in the battle of Delium, p. 66 The first of these 2, in 445 B.C. passages is, however, extremely untrustworthy, as giving in formation depending on the date of his death which is very
,
XENOPHON.
impossible in reading the works of this author not to be struck with the purity and loftiness
It
is
230
CHAP.
The latter is so uncertain. much at variance with what Plato, Symp. 220, D. says, that
is a most uncertain foundation on which to build, Neither passage agrees with what Xenophon himself says it
in
Pausanias
More
he
died
(Anab.
iii.
1,
and
25,
oi>Siv
that he was banished by the Eleans (probably in 370 B.C., when they joined the Thebans after the battle of Leuctra Diodor. xv. 62), and spent the rest of his life at Corinth
(Diog.
53).
jrpocpaai^o/jLai
<rV
riXixiav) 2,
37,
His
banishment
where he mentions himself and Timasion as the two youngest These amongst the generals. passages place it beyond dispute, that at the time of the expedition he is describing, 401-400 B.C., he was about 45 years of age and not much older than
his friend Proxenus,
;
who
fell
appears to have ended, when Athens joined Sparta against Thebes, as the treatise on the revenues indicates, whether before or after the battle of Mantinaaa, in which his two sons fought among the Athenian cavalry, and the elder one Pint. Gryllus fell (Diog. 54
;
in it about 30. (So Grate, Plato iii. 563 Cobet, Novas Lect. 535 BergTt in Ersch. u.
;
Gruber
31.)
life
Encyl.
i.
81,
iii.
392
The
Consol. ad Apoll. 33, p. 118), Xenophon s writings are clistinguished for purity and grace of language, and the unadorned clearness of the description. They appear to have been pre-
He
we
basis
served entire. The Apology, however, the Agesilaus, and the treatise on the Athenian
constitution are certainly spurious and several others of the smaller treatises are either spurious or have large inter95,
to Socrates, as to the origin of which Diog. ii. 48, tells a doubtful story, and in the Anabasis of his activity and experience in the retreat of After his return the 10,000.
Steinkart, Plat. I. polations. 300, wrongly doubts the Symposium. For his life and
he entered the Spartan army in Asia Minor, and fought under Agesilaus at Coronea against his own countrymen. Banished for this from Athens, he settled in the Elean Scillus, colonised by Spartans (Xen. Anab.v. 3, 6 Diog.ii. 51 Pan; ;
writings
consult
Kruger, De
Xenoph. Vita, Halle, 1832, also in 2nd vol. of Historisch. philol. Studien, Ranke, De. Xenoph.
Vita et Scriptis, Berlin, 1851.
Bdlir in
vi.
6,
Grate, Plato
iii.
562; BergJt,
I.e.
of the sentiment, with his chivalrous character, and the healthy tone of his mind still his philosophical capacities cannot be estimated at a very high rate.
;
is
full of
admiration for
the greatness of his character ; his philosophical merit and his intellectual labours he has only im Not only does he share the perfectly understood.
narrowness of the position of Socrates as for instance when he quotes the derogatory opinions of his master
respecting natural science in proof of his piety and 1 but he misunderstands the true phi worth of the discussions he reports. The losophic
intelligence,
formation of conceptions, constituting as it does the germ of the whole teaching of Socrates, is only acci
dentally mentioned by him in order to show what care his master devoted to the critical culture of his
All that he gathers from Socrates peculiar habit of asking every one whom he came across, in his
thirst for knowledge, as to his mode of life, is that he tried to make himself useful to people of every
class,
friends. 2
craftsmen included. 3
The importance
of those
which the whole maxims peculiarity of the Socratic ethics consists, can only be gathered with so much difficulty from his account,
too, relative to virtue, in
|
that
it
is
obvious
himself. 4
how
little
it
was understood by
(Xenophon
Many
of the Socratic
of teaching are indeed to be found in his independent sketches ; but he is too ex1
mode
Mem.
Ibid.
i.
1,
11
iv. 7.
;
Ibid. iv.
6.
3
4
iii.
10, 1
i.
conf 106,
.
2.
Mem.
iii. 9,
and
p. 140.
XENOPHON.
clusively occupied with their practical application to engage in any really scientific researches. He de
scribes the catechetical
CHAP.
mode
of teaching, 1 in which
;
but his
dialogues do not aim, like those of the genuine Socratic type, at the formation of conceptions, and are
often far too easy in their proofs
and deductions.
self-knowledge, but primarily only in its popular sense, meaning, that no one ought to attempt what is beyond his powers. He insists on 3 piety, self-restraint, and so forth, but he appears not
to hold the
He recommends
maxim
Following the method used he proves that nothing is a good of which by Socrates, 5 that every one readily you do not make a right use
consist in knowledge.
;
submits to the wise, 6 that right and law are synony mous terms, 7 and that the rich are not more happy
than the poor, 8 that the true measure of riches and poverty is not simple possession, but a possession pro
9 He repeats portionate to the needs of the possessor. what Socrates had said about truth and error, 10 yet not without hinting that these principles are liable
to be abused.
With the same decision as his master, he declares against the sensual and unnatural abuses
1
3
4
p. 168, 2.
7
3,
17.
See
;
p.
4,
between Cyrus and Tigranes, Cyrop. iii. 1, 16, and Mem. i. 2, 19, in which the ordinary view is given rather than the Socratic, although the language allows
the latter.
148,
s
Ibid.
;
viii.
i.
29
9
Mem.
3, 6, 4.
40
Symp.
(Ec. 2 ; 2.
10
Cyrop.i.6, 31;
242
CHAP.
"*
and that her union should be made into a real com life, and should be based on a recipro He exhorts to of capacities and performances. 2 city
panionship for
work, without, however, like his teacher condemning the Greek prejudice against manual labour. 3 By many of his expressions he gives us to know what is
his ideal of a beautiful
and happy
life
4
;
but he
neither attempts to give a philosophic reason for his ideal, nor does he place it outside the platform of
traditional Greek ethics. Touching the knowledge and omnipotence of the Gods, their care for mankind, the blessing consequent upon piety, 5 he expresses himself with warmth but at the same time he fully
;
in regard to predic himself understanding their inter sacrifices, He makes Cyrus express the hope of a pretation.
tions
and
higher
life
after
death, confirming
that
view by
several considerations, without, however, venturing He reminds us that to assert it with full assurance.
the soul
is
invisible
He
165.
Symp.
8, 7, p.
Compare
1
amongst
i.
passages,
44: GEc.
Cyrop. 5, 19;
i.
;
6,
other 23
;
7,
7; 11, 8;
;
Hipparch.
8
;
5,
14
;
7, 1
9,
Mem.
6
;
iv.
8,
11
Cyrop.
i.
Anal.
i.
iii. 1,
viii. 7,
5
(Ec. 11, 8.
4,
6, 28, 6,
and
Symp.
46
Cyrop.
Cyrop.
(Ec. 7, 18.
with Mem.
i.
1, 6.
XENOPHON.
gives life to the body should be itself mortal, or that reason should not survive in greater purity after its separation from the body, seeing a sign thereof in
24
CHAP.
In all these explanations we prophesying in sleep. discern the faithful and thoughtful follower of may Socrates, but there is not a trace of original thought. Indeed
it
is
which Xenophon seems to have somewhat amplified the teaching of his master, ought not really to be at
tributed to Socrates.
His larger work on politics, the Cyropaedeia, is, as a book of political philosophy, unimportant. Xeno phon here proposes to pourtray the Socratic ideal
of a ruler
cares
flock
for
3
who understands
his business, 2
and who
his people as a shepherd cares for his but what he really gives, is a description of a valiant and prudent general, 4 of an upright man, and of a chivalrous conqueror. Not an attempt is
;
clearly the province of go to give a higher meaning to the state, or vernment, The demand to fulfil its object by fixed institutions.
to
for a careful education
5
made
may
is
educa
tion to knowledge, 6 that it might more easily pass for a Spartan than for a Socratic education. Every
1
Cyrop.
Ibid. Ibid.
i.
viii.
7, 17.
See
p. 167.
p.
179.
2
3
phon may
sage.
5
1, 3.
viii.
2,
See 14
;
Mem.
i.
Cyrop.
i.
2,
viii.
8,
13
2, 32.
vii. 5, 72.
6
A weak
ciple of
4, 3.
Mem.
iii.
1.
Perhaps Xeno-
44
CHAP,
The
to
state
an Asiatic kingdom.
institutions tend, 1
which
view
is
all its
of the sovereign
and
his courtiers.
Even
this
very imperfectly carried out, and many important 2 departments of government are altogether omitted.
The same remarks apply to the Hiero. In this dia logue Xenophon shows plainly enough, how little the
supposed good-fortune of an absolute sovereign is really to be envied. His remarks touching the means
his
allowing that
many
of his proposals
despotism. family life. It bears witness to an intelligent mind and a benevolent heart, which comes out particularly
in
its
woman 3 and
it
utterances respecting the position assigned to But it makes the treatment of slaves. 4
treatise,
no pretensions to be a philosophical
though
5
may contain many individual Socratic thoughts. From Xenophon, then, the history of philosophy can
gain but
1
little.
Xenophon by
d. Prakt.
24,
sees in him the developof Socratic thought from the point of applied ethics, and a supplement to Plato s
He
ment
204.
2.1
and
5
6
c.
7,
37
See
A more
p. 242, 2.
favourable view
of,
pure speculations. Yet he too says that excepting in the CEconomica there can be no trace of a systematic development in Xenophon (p. 481) his ethical teaching is extremely simple, almost entirely devoid
;
/ESCHINES.
.^Eschines
l
CHAP.
XI.
teaching of Socrates in the same way. The writings of this disciple, 2 are reckoned among the best models
of Attic prose, 3 and are
Xenophon.
of
It is
by some preferred to those of moreover asserted that they reproappears as his friend in Diog. ii. 82 Pint. Coh. Ira, 14. Poor
:
philosophic language (p. he never really proves 484) anything, nor employs any form for deduction, not even the favourite method with So crates, that of definition (p. In what then does his 467).
;
importance for philosophy and history consist ? The applica tion of the thoughts of others, without verifying their con tents or observing their me thod, may in many respects be
very meritorious, but it cannot be regarded as a service ren dered to philosophy. ^Eschines, son of Lysanias (Plato, Apol. 33 E), against
1
to begin with (Diog. ii. 34, 62) he was still poor in after-life on his return to Athens. He did not venture it is said to found a school, but delivered a few speeches and treatises for
62 what and Diog. ii. 20 say is not credible). Whether the dirty stories are true which
money
(Diog.
ii.
c.
Lysias in
of
him
is
a moot point.
His
writings according to Atheri. give the impression of an hon ourable man. The time of his death is not known.
2
Diog. ii. 60, can have no weight, is praised for his ad herence to Socrates (Diog. ii. 31 Plato Senec. Benef. i. 8).
;
whom
According to Diog.
ii.
61,
Phrymchus
mentions him (Phasdo, 59, R.), among those who were present at the death of Socrates. Idomeneus, however (Diog. ii. 60,
35 iii. 36), transferred to him the part played by Crito in Plato, probably only out of We afterwards spite to Plato. encounter him in the company of the younger Dionysius (Diog. ii. 61 63 Pint. Adul. et Am. c. 26, p. 67 PMlost. v. Apollon. i. 35, I/tieian, Paras, c. p. 43 32, conf. Diodor. xv. 76), to
; ; ;
The scanty remains them have been collected by Hermann, De JEschin. Socr.
genuine.
of
Reliquiis, Gott. 1850. See Ibid.
p. 8.
3
Long-in,
irepl
evpes.
Rhet.
Gr. ix. 559 (ed. Walz). * Phrynioh. in Phot. Cod. 61, Schl. 158, g. E ; Hermogenes, Form. Orat. ii. 3 Rhet. Gr. iii. 394. M. Psellos in Con. Catal. of Bodl. MSS. p. 743 quoted by
;
Grate,
;
Plato,
iii.
469, against
whom
he
had been
recom
mended by
Plato, according to
which authority Timon in Diog. ii. 55 62 carries no weight, He is said to have imitated
Gorgias in speech, Diog.
ii.
63.
duce the
spirit of Socrates
with wonderful
fidelity,
and the few fragments which remain confirm this view. Nevertheless they appear to have been singu
larly poor in real philosophic thought.
Their strength
consists far
in the grace and elegance of their than in an independent treatment of the language
more
Socratic teaching.
philosophic characters were the two The2 and Cebes. 3 Both were pupils of Philolaus ; 4 both are described by Plato 5 as thought
bans, Simmias
ful
More
men.
Still
nothing certain
6
is
known
of their
The writ
ings attributed to them were already rejected by Panaetius 7 as far as he knew them, and the single
Mirror
of Cebes,
is
cer
tainly spurious.
1
Still less
is
ylri.^.0r.xlv.p.35. Conf. Demetr. De Interpret. 297. Hence the story (Diog. ii. 60, 62; Athen. xiii. 611), that his speeches had been composed by Socrates, and given to him by Xanthippe. Diog. ii, 47 ranks him among the most distinguished followers of So
crates.
2
that
he
could
always
;
raise
most
ii.
124,
mentions
Xen. Mem.
i.
2,
48;
iii.
11,
17
C.
Mem.;
mias and three of Cebes, in cluding the Mirror. Other testi monies for the latter in Sclvme\gJianser,
Phtedo, 61, D. It is said (Phtedo, 242, B.), that Simmias delivered and
5
rwvos,
Eevo^ajj/Tos,
8i<rrdfL
Azm<r0ei/ou?,
Alffxivov
baiciwvos
5e
Trepl
r&v
&\\ovs 8 In
Kal
rovs 5e
&
CHAP.
_
._
shoemaker Simon.
2
Probably he
is
altogether an
known to
us
and Aristippus. Of these the two former are much the two others follow courses peculiar to alike
;
themselves.
tinct
dis
Socratic
the
One-sided however in their aims, and themselves on earlier theories, they only dependent imperfectly catch the spirit of the teaching of
Real-EncyCebes) and but c. 13, 33 Schweighiiuser, their assumption is refuted by two passages in it, one of which, mentions a Peripatetic, and the other quotes from Plato s Laws. In other re
clop.
by Bdlir (Pauly
2
vol.
likely
to
be
true.
Of
the
Art.
general colourlessness, traces appear of later times, e.g. in its Stoic morality and attacks
on
false culture.
See
s-
Dloff.
ii.
122;
S-uid.
Epist. Socrat. 12, 13 ; Pint. c. Prin. Philos. c. 1, p. 776 Bookli. in Plat. Minoem. 42. Simonis Socrat. Dialogi iv. Hermann, Plat. i. 419, 585. 2 What Diogenes says of
;
dialogues attributed to him a great part are found in writ ings belonging to other people {Hermann, 1. c.). It is sus picious, that he is not men tioned by any ancient autho rity, and that both Plato and Xenophon should be silent about an old and very remark In able pupil of Socrates. addition to the above, Suidas (SuKpaT. p. 843) mentions also Bryso of Heraclea as a pupil of Socrates. Others, however, as Suidas remarks, called him a Euclid s, and the pupil of
him is unsatisfactory, and the story that Pericles asked to be taken in by him, but that he refused, besides being chrono
logically suspicious, is hardly
ment
18
CHAP.
.
in the
and diverge from him and from one another most opposite directions. Socrates placed
the highest business of man in knowing the good. What that good was he could not mark out more
accurately, being partly satisfied with a practical description of it, being partly restricted to a theory
of
relative pleasure.
Socratic philosophy now diverge, and are rounded into systems. One party confines itself to the
general burden of the teaching of Socrates the abstract idea of the good. Others starting from
pleasure which is its result make that the gauge of the good, and the good itself something relative. Again
make the
theoretical,
others the practical treatment of the good, to be the main point. Thus the Socratic teaching gave rise
to the three schools just named, which in so far as they bring into prominence individual elements in
the spirit of Socrates to the detriment of the rest, revert to older lines of thought, long since passed The in the historical development of philosophy.
Megarians and Cynics go back to the Eleatic doc trine of the One and All, and to the Sophistry of
the Cyrenaics to the negative teaching of Protagoras, and to the early scepticism of HeracGrorgias
;
litus.
THE MEGARIANS.
CHAPTER
XII.
THE founder
1
is
Euclid. 2
CHAP.
XII.
Deycks, De Megaricorum Doctrina, Bonn, 1827, whose careful work has not been added to by Mallet s Histoire de 1 Ecole de Megare, Par. 1845. More independent, but some times too diffuse, is He tine Ecole de Megare, Par. 1843. Hitter, Ueber die Philosophic der Meg. Schule in Ehein. Mus. ii. (1828), p. 295 Harten^
;
stein,
Ueber die Bedeutung der Meg. Schule fur die Gesch. d. Metaphys. Probleme, Verhandl. der Sachs. Gesellschaft der Wissensch. 1848, p. 190; Prantl, Gesch. d. Logik, i. 33, which enters most deeply into the logical teaching of the
Megarians. 2 Euclid s
;
speech of Isteus npbs apropos of a piece of land, but that this Euclid was the follower of Socrates is pure conjecture. The time of his birth cannot be accurately determined, nor does the anec dote in GelL vi. 10 help for this. He was, however, pro bably older than Plato. This seems to be proved by the fact that on the death of Socrates he served for some time as a
judicial
Eu/cAeiSrjf
The
asserted by Cic. Acad. iv, 42, 129 Strabo, ix. 1, 8, p. 393 The statement Diofj. ii. 106. that he came from Gela (rives in Diog.} doubtless rests on a
;
misunderstanding. DeycJts, p. 4, imagines it arose from con founding him with Euclid the
jester, 7eAo?os, to
whom, how
ever, At/ten, vi. 242, b, 250, e, does not give this epithet. Henne, p. 32, conjectures, but without sufficient reason, that
also un If Stilpo and Pasicles certain. were his personal pupils, he must have lived at least till 360 B.C.; but this is very un On the whole little is certain. known of him. A celebrated saying of his to his brother, which bears witness to a gentle character, is quoted by Plut. de Frat. Am. 18, Ira, 14, p. 462 Stob. Flor. 84, 15; p. 489; Diog. ii. 108, mentions six dis courses of his.
is
faithful friend
but
at the
same time
made
familiar with the Eleatic doctrine, 2 Euclid use of the latter to develope the Socratic phi
it.
losophy as he understood
He
thus established a
3 separate branch of the Socratic School, which con tinued to exist until the early part of the third
4
century.
1
Ichthyas
is
named
as
his
pupil and
The story told by Gell., N. A. vi. 10, of his nightly visits to Athens is well known. It cannot, however, go for much, though not in itself impro bable. On the contrary, it may be gathered from Plato s Theretet. 142, C. that Euclid con stantly visited Socrates from
his death. A further proof of his close connection with the followers of Socrates will be found in the fact {Diog. ii. 106;
iii. 6) that Plato and other fol lowers of Socrates stayed with him for a considerable time after the death of their master. He is usually spoken of as a disciple of Socrates, and has a
these names. He proves that the terms Eristic and Dialectic were not confined to the Me garian School. Compare Sextus Empiricus, who generally
understands by Dialecticians,
Stoics, for instance, Pyrrh. 146, 166, 229, 235.
ii.
4 How early Euclid was at the head of a special circle of
most dis
tinguished disciples. 2 As may be gathered from his sj stem with greater cer tainty than from Cic. and Diog. When Euclid became acquain ted with the Eleatic Philosophy
is uncertain. It is most pro bable that he was under its influence before he came under that of Socrates, although the story in Diog. ii. 30, is too un
pupils, and whether he appeared formally as a Sophist, or like Socrates onlygradually gathered about him men desirous to learn, we are not told. Perhaps the emigration of many fol lowers of Socrates to Megara gave occasion for the estab lishment of this school, i. e., for the formation of a society, which at first moved about Euclid s house and person,
busying itself with discussions. There is no ground for sup posing that Plato and his friends removed to Megara,
attracted by the fame of the School of Euclid, as Henne
maintains, pp. 27 and 30. 5 Suid. EtmAei Srjs Diog. ii. 112, only makes the general remark, that he belonged to the School of Euclid.
251
known.
CHAP.
XII.
celebrated dialectician,
who wrote
against Aristotle,
mentioned as the teacher of Demos thenes. 5 Cotemporary with him were Thrasymachus 6 of Corinth, and Dioclides, 7 perhaps also
is
and who
however, would appear to pupil of Eubulides was Apollonius of Gyrene, surnamed Cronus, 10 the teacher of the
Pasicles,
Clinomachus. 8
be younger.
His name
ii.
;
is still
found in
De Mag.
c.
15, p.
478
Stiid.
112 dedicated to
Diog.
vi.
and Phot. Cod. 265, but being also alluded to by the Comedian in Diog., who can hardly have called a bare
Ailpoffeeviis,
Of Miletus according to Diog. ii. 108. Whether he was the head of a school, or whether he was an immediate disciple of Euclid, we do not know.
Diogenes only says, rrjs 8 Eu/cAeiSou SmSoxrjs eVrt KOI Evj8.
3
acquaintance a disciple. 6 According to Diog. ii. 121, a friend of Ichthyas, and a teacher of Stilpo s. 7 Suid. ^TiXirtav, a pupil of Euclid, and the teacher of
Pasicles.
8 A Thurian (according to Diog. ii. 112), and a teacher of Stilpo s son TSryso, S-uid. Tlvppwv, Diog. saj s he was the first to write on predicates, sentences,
Compare
Math.
Sext.
4
ii.
108
Aristocles in 5 Atlien. viii. 354, b. Themist. Or. xxiii. From these passages it 285, c. is seen that the attack of Eu2,
;
was very violent, and not free from personal abuse. We also hear from Atlien. x. 437 of a comedy of Eubulides. But he can hardly be the indi vidual whose work on the
bulicles
and such like. 9 According to Suid. ^r&iruv, a brother of the Cynic Crates, who had also Dioclides, a pupil of Euclid s, for teacher, and
Diog. vi. 89, Stilpo for pupil. in calling Crates his brother and Euclid his teacher, pro
Cynic Diogenes
Diog.
5
is
quoted by
pretty well established (although it is con spicuously omitted by Plutarch in his life of Demosthenes), being not only attested by Diog. ii. 108 Psetidopliit. v. Dec. Orat. viii. 21
; ;
bably confounded Euclid with Dioclides, unless this be the work of a transcriber and should be read for,
.
10
Diog.
ii.
Ill
Strabo, xiv.
3,
2,
21, p. 658;
xvii.
22, p.
838.
1 sharp-witted Diodorus Cronus, and another of his pupils was Euphantus, known only to us as a poet
and
historian. 2
All other
members
1 Diodorus, a native of lasos in Caria, belongs to the most distinguished dialecticians of the Megarian School. Gic. De Fato, 6, 12, calls him valens dialecticus Sext. Math. i.
;
made a
must be read
Mallet, p. 96.
309,
5ia\eKrLK(LraTOS
ii.
Sext.
give two epigrams of Callimachus ad dressed to him. His fallacies and his researches into motion, and into hypothetical sen tences, will be mentioned here after. Pique at a dialectical defeat inflicted by Stilpo at the table of Ptolemy Soter, is said to have killed him (Diog. Plin. Hist. Nat, vii. 53, 180).
and Diog.
Ill,
He bequeathed
his dialectic to
his five daughters ;_ Clem. Al. Hieron. Strom, iv. 523, A. adv. Jovin. i. t. iv. 186. His
;
mentioned by Athenaeus, is known from Diodor. xx. 21, as a favourite of Ptolemy Soter. 8 Stilpo of Megara (Diog. ii. 113) must have lived until the end of the fourth century. At least he survived the capture of Megara by Ptolemy Lagi, and his defeat by Demetrius Poliorcetes, two events which hap pened 307 and 306 B.C. respec tively, Diodor. xx. 37 and 45. On the former occasion the interview with Diodorus Cronus may have happened for Stilpo never visited Egypt (Diog. 115). Since he died at an advanced
:
nickname,
Kronos,
is
differ
ently explained by Strabo and Diog., and in modern times by Pan.zer bieter in Jahn s Jahrb. f. Philol. Supplement b. V. 223, f., who, however, does not
it altogether satisfac Consult, also, SteinJtart in Ersch. und Gruber s Ency-
explain
torily.
age, we may approximately place his birth in 380, and his death in 300 B.C. Probably we ought to place the date of both later, for the notices about his pupils in Diog. ii. 113-120, Senec. Epist. 10, 1, lead us to believe that his activity was cotemporary with that of Theo-
clop.
-
Sec.
i.
and accordingly it cannot have begun long before the death of Aristotle. Sudd.
phrastus
;
All
Diog. tutor says that to Antigonus he ad dressed a book, Trepl /SacriAeias. Athen. vi. 251 quotes an extract from the fourth book of his history, in which if he has not
we know of him is from ii. 110, who calls him the of King Antigonus, and
Eu/cAet 5. calls him successor to Some of the pupils Ichthyas. of Euclid are mentioned as his
teachers, and (Diog. ii. 113), in particular Thrasymachus. STI ATTO.) (Suid. Eu/cA.et 5. and
is
named
these
of
His spirited lectures made him an object of wonder to his cotemporaries, and the crowds who flocked from all sides to listen to them gained for the Megarian School a lustre such as it had not hitherto 1 At the same time the development of their enjoyed.
doctrine took with
CHAP
XII.
him
new
the Cynic School, into which Diogenes had initiated 2 him, being incorporated with his own to such an ex
tent, that doubts
may
which these two branches of the Socratic philosophy were carried over by his pupil Zeno. 4 Other Mega
rians,
critical character of this School.
character, as to which more will be said hereafter, is com mended as upright, gentle,
tyvxpol.
generous, open, and unselfish, Diog. ii. 117 Pint. Vit. Pud. c. 18, p. 536; adv. Col. 22, 1, p. Ill, a. In
persevering,
;
early
tirely
stated
by Diog.
ii.
120 son
vii. 2, 21,
on the authority
by strength of will
(Oic.
De
He also took Fato, 5, 10). part in public business, Diog. 114. Nine of his dialogues are mentioned by Diog. ii. 120. 1 Diog. ii. 113, exaggerates in saying, TOVOVTOV 5 fupecnXoyia
KalffotyKTreiq irporjye TOVS $AAous,
ilxrrf
/jiiKpov
The same per no doubt referred to in as Zeno the 116, Di-og. ii. Phoenician. The founder of
of Heraclides.
is
the Stoa
Several
els
iraffav
TTJV
fte-
is frequently called a Phoenician, Diog. vii. 15, 25, 30. In no case can it be Zeno of Sidon, the pupil of Apollodorus, as Mallet, p. 62, sup
EAAaSa
yapiaat.
a(popci!}tTav
avrbv
He
also
mentions (119
poses, who was himself a pupil of Epicurus, and who, accor ding to Diog. x. 25, vii. 35, continued faithful to Epicure
anism.
cotemporary of Stilpo,
is
notorious for his captiousness ; and logical subtleties are recorded 2 of Philo, the pupil of Diodorus. 3 Other
Megarians of this and the following age are only known to us by name. 4 With the verbal criticism of
1 Diog. ii. 109, speaks of him as a pupil of Eubulides (p-era^v
Clemens, Stromat.
iv.
523,
and
Se
aXKwv
&OXT)S
by
approximately determined his disputes with Stilpo (Pint. Vit, Pud. c. 18, p. 536) with Menedemus (Dioy.ii. 135), and with Zeno, whose strongest opponent he was, Diog. ii. 109 Pint. Sent. Math. ix. 108
be
Comm.
the
Not. 10,
3, p.
1063.
He
quote from his Menexenus the informa tion already given respecting the daughters of Diodorus, whom he must then have spoken of in terms of praise. It is a clear mistake on the part of Jerome to make him the teacher of Carneades. Still stranger is Mallet s mistake, the confounding disputant Philo with Philo of Larissa, the founder of the fourth Aca
i.,
:
demy.
The
latter lived
some
150 to 200 years later. Nor can Philo be reckoned among the Stoics, although this has been done by Fabricius in Sext. Pyrrh. ii. 110, and by Prantl. Gesch. d. Logik, i. 404.
Diog. vii. 191, 194, men tions Philo s writings Trepl 0-773
to Olympia in his last years, in order* to establish a new school This place of abode not there. suiting his pupils, he remained there alone, but soon died of an injury. For his writings con
sult Diog. ii. 110 vii.163 Athen. xv. 696 Aristotle in Eus. 1. c.
;
;
p.a.(nG)v,
and vrepl Tpoircov, against which Chrysippus wrote, with out doubt meaning this Philo. To the same individual must be referred what Cic. Acad. ii. 47, 143, and Sext. Math. viii.
Diog.
vii.
16,
passage
so
am
biguous as Hitter, Kh. Mus. ii. 30; Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 145, would have it, particularly when the subsequent accounts are taken into consideration.
Diog.
relates
113, Pyrrh. ii. 110, say respect ing his views of hypothetical sentences differring from those of Diodorus, and Alex. Aphi. in Anal. pr. 59, b, says respect
ing their differences in respect of the possible. By Diog. vii. 16, and Clemens he is sur-
named
4
6 SiaAe/crt/cds.
that
Zeno
of
MEGARIAN DOCTRINE.
the Megarians
is
connected Pyrrho
philosophy of
2
CHAP.
doubt, Pyrrho,
whom
Bryso
is
and
under Stilpo himself, the connecting links, in the same way that the being scepticism of Grorgias is connected with the critical
studied
subtleties of the Eleatics.
Timon, who
The Megarian philosophy is only partially known to us from the fragmentary notices of the ancients ;
and frequently
it
is
respect possible (see p. 193, 1 and 2) Diss. ii. 19, 5, speaks Epictet. of, is mentioned by Diog. v. 68, as the teacher of the Peri
Diodorus
in
of
the
patetic Lyco, and must there fore have nourished 280 to 270 A dialectician Aristides B.C. is also mentioned by Diog. ii.
113, among the cotemporaries of Stilpo, and an Aristotle living in Bicyon about 255
nology is still troublesome. For how can Pyrrho, before Alexander s expedition to Asia, as Diog. expressly says, have studied under the son of a
Pint. Arat. 3. Linias who is there mentioned, with him appears also to have been a
man, whose own professional career probably comes after that expedition ? It seems as though the relation of Pyrrho to Bryso as pupij. and teacher were an imaginary combina
designed to connect the school of Pyrrho with the Me garian. Possible it also is that Bryso, the teacher of Pyrrho,
tion,
Megarian. Somewhat younger must have been Artemidorus, who wrote against Chrysippus,
Diog. ix. 53. Tlvppwv ^woi/tre Diog. ix. 61 BpixrcDvos rov ST (\iravos, us AAe(v Suid. av5pos Aia5oxa?s. Ylvppcw: Sie^/coufre Bpvcrwvos, rov Instead of K.\ii>o/j.dxov /j.a6r)Tov.
1
:
been wrongly identified with the son of this Stilpo. Suid. ^caKpar. calls Bryso the
has
teacher of Pyrrho, a pupil of Socrates, or according to others, a pupil of Euclid. Roper Philol. xxx. 462, proposes to read in the passage of Diog. instead of Bpvacavos rov
j/os, 2
however
Bryso.
250
CHAP.
~V"IT
more
from Plato
which, in
Schleiermacher 2
common
yopevovariv.
deception.
The
difficulty
im
Platon
mediately
tion
is
arises,
that decep
only then possible, not-being, to which all deception refers, admits a cer tain kind of being. It may then be asked, how is the being of the not-being pos
when
? To answer this question Plato reviews various opinions respecting being. In the first place he examines the two most opposite statements, that being is the many, and that it is the one, and after having shown that neither a manifoldness of original substances without a substratum of unity, nor the unity of the Eleatics excluding the many, can be admitted, he continues, p. 245, lSt.:rovs fievroivvv StaKpifioXoyov/jievovs ovros T
sible
Platon s Leben u. Schreiben, 201 fieyck*, 37 Ifeindorf on Soph. 246, B. Brandis, ii. a., 114 Hermann, Ges. Abh. .Plat. 339; 246; Stallbaum, Plat. Parm. 60 Susemihl, Soph. f. Polit. 6.1 Genet. Entw. i. 298 SteinJiart, Allg. Encyk. i. 29, 53 Platon s Werke, iii. 204, 423, 554; Heune, Ecole de Megare, 84158 Prantl, Gesch. d. Log. i. 37. Against Schleiermacher are Bitter, Ehein. Mus. von Niebuhr und Brandis ii. 305
;
A at,
Werke,
ii. 2.
TTtpt.
Kal
/XT?
\v6afj.V, TOVS Se
ofj.cos
Trdvras 8e
(Jisv
ov oie\r)-
f/fc^cos
e^e rco*
reov.
into
rial,
a\\ws \fyovras a.v 6eaThese are again divided classes, those who only
allow reality to what is mate and others who are called Of 248, A. of TCOJ/ eiScuz/ (pi\oi. the latter it is stated 246, B.
:
Petersen, Zeitschrift f. Alterthiimer, 1836, 892, ffenne, p. 49, and Mallet, p. xxx., refers the description in Theastet. 185, C. of the formation of conceptions, to the Megarians, on the ground that it does not agree with Plato s own method. But it would seem that he is wrong in so doing, since we have no reason to think of others besides Plato and So Just as little may the crates. passage in Parm. 131, B. be re ferred to the Megarians, as has
roiyapovv ol materialists
Tro(i\v
irpbs
)
avrovs (the
a.
been done by Schleiemnachert PL Werke, i. 2, 409, and Deyck*, The question whether p. 42.
things participate in Ideas, is one which the Megarians did not examine, and it is widely remote from the view discussed in the Sophistes.
aiJiVVOVTai
elfST]
vorjra &TTO.
KCU
a(ra>/J,ara
Kal
rfy
UTT
avrwv
Kara
<r/j.iKpa
5m-
6pavovTs
TO?S \6yois
MEGARIAN TEACHING.
By making use of the testimony of Plato, and by considering the inward
1
257
fied in
applying to them.
CHAP.
XII.
sons.
is
tween the
s description too minute to be without reference to some philosophic Even School then existing. Deussen, De Plat. Sophistes
p. 44, is
reduced to
is also defi
There
Socratic
where an
violent altercation ensued be are parties. not obliged by this state ment to refer this view to an earlier period than that of Socrates. And among the So cratic Schools there is none to which it can be attributed with so much probability as to the Megarian. Some think that the passage refers to Plato
We
opinion
immaterial things. A philoso of conceptions was un known before the time of So and the description crates, agrees with no one of the pre-
is attributed to certain philosophers, to the effect that true existence only belongs to
and Scliaarschmidt, Die Sammlung der Plat. Sch., 210, do); and
this reference commends itself most to those who with them
phy
declare that the Sophistes is not the work of Plato. The reference would of course be
The philo conceptions are clearly distinguished from the Eleatics, and are manifestly different from them. quite Still less can the Pythagoreans be thought of, as Mallet has for they had done, p. liii. neither a philosophy of con ceptions, nor did they indulge in that subtle refutation of opponents, which Plato attri butes to these philosophers. Nor can the language of Plato,
Socratic Schools.
of
sophers
277
d. Plat,
d. Athetese Soph. Berlin, 1869, 21 iii. 482; Grote, Plato, i. 458 Campbell, the Sophistes and
; ; ;
Pi lyer, Ueber
f.
246, C., be quoted to prove the contrary, where speaking of the dispute between the idealists and the materialists he says that eV jueVw 5e -nepl
:
Plato can have treated a theory of his own with so much irony as he lavishes, p. 246, A. B., on ? Is it Plato s these teaching, or have we reason for thinking that it ever was Plato s teaching, that the Surov TroieiV does not belong" VO./J.LS to Being but to the Becoming ?
fl8u>v
<f>i\oi
ej
This does
not
that this dispute has always existed, but that it was as old as the Schools them selves, or that, every time the
mean
In his system, as far as it is known to us, it does belong to the idea of the good, to the creative vovs of Timseus, to the
alria of Philebus,
which must
ouaia.
point
was touched
upon,
a
S
258
CHAP.
XII.
mises, the contradiction is not greater than that involved in denying every change, and yet speaking of an action, an eVepIndeed, how 7e?v of being.
otherwise
losophy of conceptions to his doctrine of unity 1 And does not the language of the Sophistes, 246, B, telling, how that the friends of ideas destroy matter by resolving it into its smal
correspond with Euclid and his school ? Does it not best harmonise with the statement of Aristocles
rians,
lest particles, best
own
metaphysic
It
might seem
that by friends of e^ty in this passage Euclid cannot have been meant, because (1) ac
cording to Aristotle s definite assertion (Metaph. i. 6, 987, b, 7 ; xiii. 4, 1078, b, 9 Eth. N. 1. 4, 1096, a, 13) Plato first brought up the doctrine of
;
respecting the Mega that the latter should have refused to being the capacity to act or to suffer ? whereas this would not at all
and (2) the Megarians held one and not many primary substances. The first reason is not very cogent. Doubtless Plato first brought into notice the doctrine of ideas to which
ideas,
meaning here
literally
those
who
Aristotle refers, allowing that Euclid agreed with him in de claring the e?8os to be the only real element in things. Nei
speak different ly, with whom all does not turn (as with the philosophers men tioned 243, D) upon the an tithesis of being and not -being.
to
whom
ther is the second argument Euclid may well conclusive. in cases of materialism have insisted, that in every object the incorporeal form was the
Plato comes 245, E., the ques tion is not whether there is one or more than one form of
being, everything else being not-being, but whether there is only the corporeal or the in Conf. p. 243, D, corporeal.
only real thing, and yet have gathered all these forms to gether under the one substance the good. If the latter as sertion involved him in contra diction with his original pre
with 246, A.
;
Compare Hetme,
MEGAEIAN TEACHING.
which
facts.
shall,
CHAP.
XIL
(i) Conc wn f *%f
ledge of conceptions. With this demand Euclid combined the Eleatic doctrine of a contrast between
sensational
Distinguishing
these
two kinds of knowledge far more by their objects than by their form, he arrived at the convic tion that the senses show us what is capable of change
and becoming, and that only thought can supply us with the knowledge of what is unchangeable and He stood, therefore, in general, on really existing. the same footing as Plato, and it is possible that this
1
common
Plato Euclid was influenced by Heraclitus view of the world of sense. Socrates had indeed made the
immediate business of thought to be the acquisition of a knowledge of conceptions. Conceptions, accord that part of a thing which never ingly, represent
changes.
things, but only incorporeal 2 The species, taught Euclid, admit of true being.
1
Not material
Plato, 248, A.
ovffiav
ri
TeVeo-ii/,
rV
rrw-
pfv
alff6-f)treis
Kal
<pavraaias
KO.TO.-
Se
X 00 ? 15
ydp
^juas
TT]V
;
irou
SteA.tfyxci Oi
/SoAAetz/,
avrw 8e povov
riy \6ycf
\4yers;
/J.O.TI
jiiej
Nat.
Kal
81
yev4<rei
aiaO-ij-
(reus
8e
tyvxfj irpbs
ael
Kara
,
raura
<J>T6
5e &\XoTe &\\us. reason Aristoc. in Ens. Pr. Ev. xiv. 17, 1, says of the Megarians and Eleatics
yeveffiv
For this
2 In the passage of the Soph. 246, B., quoted at p. 214, 2, in which the words ra 5e eKtivav (rco^uara must not be taken to mean the bodies of those conceptions, efSrj the bodies of the /uara, but
a<rw
together
dtovrat.
yap
5e2V TUS
they
s 2
to allow
on the ground that a general conception implies some thing quite different from every individual thing,
and not
In this respect the Megarians again agree with Plato. 2 Whilst Plato, however, regarded species as
living spiritual forces, Euclid, following in the steps of Parmenides, denied every kind of motion to being. He, therefore, reduced action and passion to the
Of being, he asserted, you sphere of the becoming. can neither predicate action, nor passion, nor yet motion. 3
D-iog.
,
sal
and
different
(in
which we suggest
man.
is
He
from any
denies
to
shown
e iv instead of elVot), ofrre yap r( yap ToVSe \4yeiv O&TG roVSe. fj.a\Xov roVSe fy roVSe; oi/re apa Kal traXiv rb Xa.\avov ovx. T0V5e. rb fcrri Xa.xa.vov 5eiKvv/jt.Vov. eruv OVK IJLCV yap i\v irpb /jLVpiwv Dio eVrt TOVTO Xa.xo.vov. apa genes introduces this with the remark 5etj/bs Se ayav &v evTots
:
because cabbage 10,000 years ago in other words, because the gene ral cabbage conception of means something unchange not something which has able,
cabbage,
;
come
into
being.
We may
d. Phil.
T^
efSrj,
and
Plat.
be possible,
and especially to the Platonic ideas, from the Cynic School. But the above examples are not directed against the reality of groups
ral conceptions,
C.
Ae-
particular things.
Stilpo
yevlffei fj^v /werecm TOW Trdcr^iv Kal TroieTi/ Suj/ctyueajy, Trpbs 8e ovffiav rovruv ovfierepov
TT]V Svi/a/j-iv ap/j.6rTeiV tyaffiv. is accordingly afterwards
on
denies that the individual is a man, because the expression man means something univer
It
re
:
MEGARTAN TEACHING.
Connected with this denial of the becoming
is
CHAP.
XII.
the assertion, probably coming from Euclid, certainly from his school, that capacity does not exist beyond
the time of
is
its
exercise
is
actual
What is simply possible but not alone possible. 1 would at the same time be and not be. Here actual,
would be the very contradiction which Parmenides
thought to discover in the becoming, and the change from the possible to the actual would be one of those
changes which Euclid could not harmonise with the
2 conception of being.
a.K.tvi]Tov
is
imma-
rov
ticulars on this point will be quoted from Diodorus in the The passage in the sequel.
"al
Sophistes,
248,
C.,
which
to
KLVoi>fJievov
8^7
/cat
KiVTjffiv
ffvyx u
Home,
that
2
p. 133,
connects with
prjreov
V
77
cos
ovra
....
ft^re TUJV
of
/cat
TroAAct e?5rj
irav e(TT7]/cbs
something
tocl. in
Eus. Pr. Ev. xiv. 17, 1. The proofs by which the Me-
garians denied motion will be It does described hereafter. not, however, seem likely that the objections raised to the theory of ideas in the first part of Plato s Parmenides are of Megarian origin, as Stallbaum, PL Parm. 57 and 65, supposes.
1
Ari(,t.
Metaph.
povov
ix.
fieri
tvfpyrj
Svi/acrOai,
orav
OLQI/
3e
rbi/
fjify fj.T]
ivepyi), ov
SvvaffQai.
oiKo8o/j.ovvTa ov
6}j.o i(as
OTO.V olKo8op.fj
ra>v
Se
/cat 67rt
&\\Q}V.
statement
that it would make all motion and becoming impossible which was just what the Me-
quoted, even if it comes from Euclid. It is only a peculiar way of understanding the Eleatic doctrine against be coming and motion. Still less can we here support the Megarians
against
iii.
Hartenstein, p. 205, is of opinion that the above state ment is made in direct contra diction to Aristotle. It would in this case belong to EubuBut the Aristotelian lides. technical terms 8vva<rOcu, eVepdo not prove much. 7e/, Aristotle often expressed the statements of others in his own terminology. On the other hand, no very great im portance for the system of Aristotle must be attached to the Megarian doctrine already
garians wanted.
Further par
Grote, Plato,
terial
and unchangeable is allowed by him to be actual, and regarded as the subject matter of science.
Socrates had described the good as the highest In this he was followed by object of knowledge.
1
Euclid. 2
is
most
essentially real as the highest object of knowledge in accordance with his principles, Euclid thought
all
the
had assigned to real One only real good is there, unchangeable, being. ever the same, of which our highest conceptions are Whether we speak of Grod, or only different names.
of Intelligence, or of Reason,
terials,
tools
and intentions,
and other conditions are there, must build. For this is not at all the point on which the dispute between Aristotle and
the
totle
Grote to defend Megarians attributes to them reflections, which we have no right to attribute to them.
tions, p. 230, 2.
the
See
p.
Aris Megarians turns. on the contrary says in the connection of the above enquiry (Metaph. iv. 5, c. 7
;
1049, a. 5), that if the neces sary conditions for the exercise of a capacity are given (among which besides the Swdneis \oyiKal
the intention must be included), its exercise always follows. This, according to Grote, is likewise the meaning of the sentence, Megarian which he disputes. Its real that a capacity until meaning it shows itself by action is not only kept in abeyance by the absence of the necessary means and conditions, but is not even
existing maybe gathered from the objections urged by Aris totle, c, 3, and from the quota
That his assertions about the good should have nothing to do with the Socratic know ledge (Hermann, Ges. Abhandlung, 2-42) could only be ac cepted on the supposition that that knowledge was not know ledge about the good, and that Euclid was not a pupil of So Nor can it be readily crates. conceded that a pure Eleatic philosopher, if he had only moved in an ethical sphere of ideas, would have treated this
part of philosophy in the same way as Euclid. As long as he remained a pure Eleatic philo sopher, he could not have taken this ethical direction and have placed the conception of the good at the head of his
system.
GOOD.
CHAP.
XII.
and the same thing, the Good. For the same reason the moral aim, as Socrates had already shown, is
the knowledge uf the Good, and if we speak of many virtues, all these are but varying names for one and the same virtue. 2
always one
What, however, is the relation of other things to one Good? Even Euclid, as accounts tell us, denied any existence to what is not good 3 from which it follows immediately, that besides the Good
this
;
nothing real
*
exists.
This statement
is
on better
4 authority attributed to the later Megarian School. Therewith many conceptions, the reality of which
had been originally assumed, were destroyed as such, as far as any reality was admitted about them, to mere names of the Good. 5 Here, and reduced, in
1
Cic.
Acad.
iv. 42,
129
Me-
mentis
retur.
acie,
Illi
garici qui id
Megarians)
(o?oi/,
ii.
106,
Plato,
Eep.
vi.
505,
is
B.,
in
says
of
Euclid
OVTOS ev
rb
which Antisthenes
mention
avrt-
vow
2
Diog. vii. 161, says of the ovre Stoic Aristo operas T ovre iroAAas eio Tj yei ws 6
:
,
ZTJI&>J/.
ytu ai/
7roAAo?s
<
v6fj.a.<ri
Ka\ov/j.evrjv,
us
ol
MfyapiKoi.
eifpov
/zrjSe
flvai,
/iTjSe
yevvacrBai
virtue
(pOeipeffOai
.
^.rjSe
KivelffOai
the
good,
not
only
Arist. Metaph. xiv. 1091, b, 13, refers to Plato, and can hardly be applied to
Toirapdirai
triaci appellati
bonum
in
the Megarians. 5 Prantl s view, p. 35, that the conceptions of the Me garians must invariably have a nominalistic meaning, does
M
CHAP,
was being developed out of this contrast. At a later the Megarians appear to have used the maniperiod
1
foldness of conceptions for the purpose of attacking 2 popular notions, otherwise keeping it in the back
ground, and confining themselves to the essential oneness of being and the Grood. Inconsistent, no were yet we can understand how they doubt, they
;
became involved
in this contradiction by gradually the Socratic theory of conceptions to the pushing abstract doctrine of the Eleatic One. 3
not agree with the statements If the Megarians of Plato. declared conceptions and only conceptions to be aX-riQiv)) ovaia, surely they were Realists, not Nominalists. Not even Stilpo can, accordingly, be called a He had, moreNominalist. over, absorbed too much of the Cynic doctrines for us to be able to form from him any conclusion respecting the original Megarian views. Plato, at least in the passage before quoted, does not
1
way.
particular idea, in as far as it was a unity, and various conceptions were used by them to express various kinds of the But this very point good. the being of various kinds of
good
was what the Megarians denied. Starting with the oneness of being they cannot have arrived at the notion of a manifoldness of conceptions, since this oneness excludes in its abstract form any development or subordinate distinction. But
is quite possible that the Socratic may conceptions gradually have been lost in the Eleatic unity.
it
MEGARIAN
to the current
ERISTIC.
->Gfi
mode of thought, the greater became the necessity of fortifying their own position against Here again they had only to follow the assault.
example of the Eleatics.
their position directly, as
CHAP.
of
no easy matter.
if their
More important
might be
opponents ground was assailed by expected, the criticism of Zeno and Grorgias. From Zeno the
founder of the School had appropriated the Eleatic
doctrine precisely in this its critical function, Zeno and the Sophists being the principal persons who drew attention hereto in central Greece. This path
of criticism the Megarians now struck out with such preference, that the whole school herefrom derived
its
name.
We
are assured
2 by Diogenes, that
it
was
the practice even of Euclid, to attack conclusions and not premises in other words, to refute by a reductio ad absurdum. It is also said that Euclid 3 a form much explanations by analogies used by Socrates because a similar thing when cited makes nothing clearer, and a dissimilar thing is
rejected
irrelevant.
(i) Tiuit
The most
method
1
will probably be
found in Plato, who, speak470), it is most probable that the meaning given above is the real meaning of these words,
3
See p. 250, 3. TCUS re 107 fvlffTa.ro ov Kara X^/j-^ara oAA.a /car firKpopdv. Since in Stoical
2 ii.
:
a7ro5eie<ni>
Ibid,
/cat
terminology which we are of course not justified in ascribing to Euclid on the strength of this passage Af)yu^,a means the
\6jov avrjpei, \tywv tfroi e| o^oicav OVT^V ^ e avo^o iow (rwicrraffBaL /cat el pikv e 6/j.oiuv. irepl avra
eT/
/j.ii\\ov
ols
el
a/moid
avacrTpefpfcrdai.
e| d
Kapi\Keiv
TT)V irapaQecriv.
conclusion (Deycks, 34
Prantl,
50
CHAP.
but
is
subject to flux
and change.
the line which Zeno adopted, in order to prove the 2 uncertainty of the perceptions of the senses ; and
which we notice
:
also
in
the
Sorites
of the later
Megarians the apparently substantial bodily mass is divided into its component parts, and there being no limit to the division, and no ultimate atom on which contemplation can rest, it is argued
that matter must be itself unreal, and a mere pass ing phenomenon. Euclid is accordingly rightly re garded as the founder of the Megarian criticism.
Still,
tained the character of formal captiousness, although 3 it objection may be taken to his controversial tone
:
would appear
that, like
primarily anxious to maintain his positive princi ples, and that he only used the subtleties of argument
as a
of
means to this end. Nothing, at least, is known him which would lead to an opposite conclusion,
is
any one of the quibbling fallacies laid to his charge, for which the Megarian school was afterwards
nor
notorious.
259, 2. SeeZeller, G. d. Griech. Part I., 496. 3 According to Dioy. ii. 30,
;
1
See p. 256, I
statement
proves
but
little,
since it uses the term Sophist in a way peculiar to post-Socratic times. It is more worthy of belief (Diog. ii. .107) that Timon called him a quarrel-
sibly
But
this
267
how
over
CHAP.
XII.
the
element of
captiousness
prevailed
Such teaching as they had was positive teaching. too scanty to command attention for long, and too abstract to admit of further development. On the
other hand a polemic against prevailing opinions presented to the sharp-witted, to the contentious, and to those ambitious of intellectual distinction, an un
explored
1
field,
over
their metaphysical assumptions ranged. served only as occasions for hard-fighting with words.
Not seldom
Among
2
lides,
earlier
1 The ordinary form of these captious proofs is that of ask Hence the ing questions. regular expression \6yov epwTO.V (to raise a point) in Diog. 116 Sext. Math. x. 87 ii. 108 and the Meyapiita fpcar-fi/jLara in the fragment of Chrysippus in Pint. Sto. "Rep. 10, 9, p. 1036.
.
viii. 8
ii.
263,
a, 4,
Anal. Pr.
;
26
36
i.
the yi<fKa\v/j./Afvos, and the Electra are only different forms of the same fallacy. Do you know who is concealed 1 Do you know who is behind the Did Electra know her veil 1 brother before he announced himself to her 1 and the solu tion of them all consists in the fact, that he who was con cealed, or behind the veil, or had not yet announced him
self
to,
like the Sophists, they refused every answer but Yes or No.
respectively,
was known
Diog. ii. 135. 2 Diog. ii. 108, emimerates that called ^euSo^ef os, that 7 called Sia\av6dvcDv, the Elect ra, the ^y/ceKaAujiiiixeVo?, the ffupirrjs, the Keparivr]s, the <pa\attp6s. The
:
but not immediately recog nised by, the lookers on. See
Arist. S. El. c. 24, 179, a, 33 ; Alex, in loc. and 49 ; liiician, Vit. Auct. 22, and Prantl. The Have Kfpmitnfjs is as follows
:
you
of them is given as fol lows in Arist. Soph. El. 25, 180, Alex, ad loc. Oic. a, 34, b, 2 Acad. ii. 29, 95 If a man says he is at the moment telling a lie, is he telling a lie, or is he
first
;
r
your horns 1 If you say Yes, you allow that you had If you say No, you horns. allow that you have them still.
lost
Diog.
vii.
187
vi.
38
Ep. 45, 8;
sists
Gell.
Son-eea, xvi. 2, 9;
;
speaking truth
The
The
Sorites con
question:
How
time,
only one, the Sorites, has any intelligible relaBy means of this form of
it
argument
belongs
to
could be proved that no enduring being objects of sense, but that every such
is
The
rest
appear to
real
other object than to involve opponents in difficulties, 3 critical works of art, which made indeed the need
felt
an accurate investigation into the laws of thought, but in the pursuit of which the desire of
of
conducing to a right intellectual method by pointing out difficulties and refuting untenable opinions falls
altogether into the background. The powers of Alexinus in
argument seem
are
vii.
to
many
course
;
grains
make a heap ?
:
or
Chrysippus
known
196
;
to us
v.
from
Dioff.
49.
impossible to assign
;
;
a number. See Cic. Acad. ii. 28, 92 16, 49 Diog. vii. 82 Pers.
Sat. vi. 78
(pa\a.Kpbs is
:
Chrysippus, according to D-wg. vii. 198, 192, also wrote on the 8ia\av6dv(av, the e 7/ceKaXujUjiieVoy, and the o-wpirfjs. Philetus of
Prantl, p. 54.
The
Cos is said to have worked himself to death in writing about the i|/eu5o/iei/os, Athen.
ix.
401,
e.
See Hor. Ep. ii. 1, 45 Prantl, 1. c. DeyckK, 51. There are, for instance, in dications of the Sorites in Zeno and Euclid. In general it is difficult to say who are the discoverers of quibbles, which are taken seriously at the time they are produced, but are after all only bad jokes. Seneca, Ep. 45, 10, says that many books had been written on the among which those of Theophrastus and
J/et;5<fyiei/oy,
eyKeKaXv/j.fj.ti os
buted
Ill),
vii.
to
Diodorus (Dioy.
vii.
187) as also the Sorites (.Dioy. 82) to Chrysippus, certainly without reason to Chrysippus. 2 Compare what will be later said about Diodorus proofs in
p. 122,
ooji
He, at
least, is
1
only
CHAP.
known
further
to
is
us
as
a of
captious disputant.
Nothing
known
in
fallacy,
and a refuta
tion of
Megarian doctrines may be placed the discussions of Diodorus on motion and destruction, on the possible, and on hypothetical sentences.
Tradition has preserved four arguments, by which Diodorus attempted to support the fundamental teaching of his school on the impossibility of motion.
TJtatnf m dorm
(4)
-
Motion.
The
first,
is
Zeno,
is
as follows.
must
either
move
in
move,
it
it is,
or in
In the former it has the space in which it is not. not room to move, because it entirely fills it ; in the hence latter it can neither act nor be acted upon
;
motion
1
is
inconceivable. 6
The second
*v 5e TIK^V &pa
6
K6<rp.os.
is
a less
See p. 254, 1. In Diog. ii. 135. Zeno Sext. Math. ix. 107 had concluded, because the world is the best possible, and reason is higher than the absence of reason, that the world See Cic. must have reason. De N. D. ii. 8, 21; iii. 9, 22. rb To this Alexinus replied
2 3
: :
/cat
Cic.
N. D.
iii. 8,
21
10,
iii.
26
71
11, 27.
5
Sext. Pyrrh.
x.
ii.
242
Math.
6
85
i.
311.
iii.
iroit)TiKbv
TOV
effri
TrotTjTiKou Kat
/j.7]
T&
Sext. Pyrrh. 243, mentions a similar argument against in general, in immebecoming diate connection with the proof
TOV
ypawariKov
rb Kara ras
/cpetV-
given above
is
KOI
come
exists
ouSe
70
CHAP.
"XTT
third proof 2 is based on reposes. the assumption of infinitesimal atoms and particles. It is generally attributed to Diodorus. 3 Probably he
what
is
moved
only used
it hypothetically, as Zeno did his argument, to refute ordinary notions. 4 It is this : As long as the particle A is in the corresponding space A, it does
does
Just as completely fills it. it is in the next following for no sooner is it there than its motion
it it
move when
Accordingly it does not move at all. In this conclusion one cannot fail to discover the
s
note of Zeno
inferences,
and of that
critical process
which had been already described by Plato. 5 The fourth proof, 6 besides assuming the existence of atoms, 7 distinguishes between partial and complete motion. Every moving body must first have the majority of
consequently nothing at
It
is
all is.
Pyrrh.
;
iii.
32
possible that this argument also belongs to Diodorus. But Stelnlwwt is wrong in at-
Dionys. in
4
;
Em.
tributing to
Sect.
i.
him
(Allg.
Encykl
Pseudo15, all of
common
xxv. p. 288) the distinction between space in the wider and in the narrower sense, which is found in Sext. Math. x. 95, Pyrrh. iii. 75 since it would appear from these passages that the distinction was made with a view to meet Diodorus objections.
vol.
;
source. Simpl. Phys. 216, b ; Schol. in Arist. 405, a, 21. Diodorus called these atoms
o/tepfj,
4
Even the
first
proof, accor-
ding to Sext. Math. x. 85, was put in. such a shape as to prove
that every atom fully occupied but this is unimits space port ant here. 5 See p. 265.
;
Alex-
Kivf]ffis
KO.T
fTriKpareiav
and
271
particles
it
moved, before
that
should
as a
is,
whole
CHAP.
however,
not conceivable.
For supposing a body to consist of three atoms, two of which move whilst the third is at rest, such a body must move, because the majority The same applies, when a of its particles move.
fourth
atom
at rest
is
added:
for the
body being
it
moved
is
/car ETTiKpdrsLai^
consists are
rest
added to the three moving atoms. Why not So equally when a fifth and a sixth atom is added ?
body consisting of 10,000 particles must be moved, if only two of these first move. If this is, how
that a
ever, absurd, a
is
of particles
therefore inconceivable,
of the whole body. ness in this argument Sextus has already noticed.
He thing, It is moving, but only, It has moved. was, in other words, prepared to allow what the
5*
seemed to prove, 3 that a body is now in one place and now in another, but he declared the transition from the one to the other to be impossible. This is indeed a contradiction, and as such it was
senses
Math. x. 112, 118. A argument, the first argument of Zeno s, is not attributed to Diodorus by Scxt. Math. x. 47. He only says as to its result, that Diodorus
1
Seaet.
further
Sext.
Math.
x.
48
85
91
97-102. 3 This
>2r2
CHAP.
.
..__
(/>)
On
ti, , H .
the present. With the third of these arguments agrees substantially the argument of Diodorus that nothing
perishes.
It is as follows.
not perish ; so long as the stones keep together, it stands ; but when the stones are separated it no
2 longer exists.
That
it
perished,
On
the
his discussions
Closely related to the enquiry into motion, are on what is possible. In both cases
is
one case
it is
the other abstractedly. In both cases, Diodorus stands on exactly the same footing with regard to his School. The older Megarians allowed as possible
understanding by actual what was before them in the present. 3 To this Diodorus
is,
added what might be in the future, by saying Pos sible is what either is actual or what will be actual. 4
: 1 See Sext. 91, 97. Diodorus here proves the assertion that anything predicated of the past may be true, whilst it is not true predicated of the present by such irrelevant statements as that it can be said of Helen that she luid three husbands (one after another), but never that she has three (cotempora-
neously).
sufficient to
Grote
This example is show how erroneous view (Plato iii. 501) is,
that Diodorus only intended to assert that present motion is only the transition point between the past and the present,
2
3
4
Sext.
Math.
x. 347.
6,
12;
7,
13
273
CHAP.
XII.
criticism.
It is in the
main
as follows
From any
2 thing possible nothing impossible can result ; but it is impossible that the past can be different From
been possible at a past moment, something impossible would have resulted It was therefore never from something possible.
it
is
;
what
for
had
this
generally it is impossible should happen differently from what that anything has happened. 3
possible.
And speaking
Far
less
from being
might
result
17
Sto. Kep.
Pint. Alex.
Schol.
the
impossible
from the
40, 36.
possible.
Other pas
J3oeks,
;
de Interpret. Op.
ed. Basil, 364 Prantl, Gesch. d. Log. i. 19. The above sentence
is
Possible
effrai.
is
r)
effriv aArjfles
Comp. Epict. Diss. ii. 18, 18 we ought to be proud of moral actions, OVK eirl rS rbv
:
vrjs
yap
Trpbs ^AArjAa,
a,\r]6ks
Kvpitvovra
epcorrja cu,
and
just
eAuKal T(f
Aoi0eTj/,
rw
irav
"a-
before
(TaS,
Ko^bv
ffotyLff/udriov
TOS.
9,
He
TO?
Antipater, and Archidemus on the KupiezW. Chrysippus could only meet it (ac cording to Alex, in Anal. Pr. 57, b, in Schol. in Arist. 163, a, 8), by asserting that possibly
sippus,
Swpos rr) TWV Trpwr^v SuoTi/ iridavoTt]n ffvvexpTja eTO irpbs irapdGTaffiv TOV /j.v)$tv eTj/a: Suvarbv f(TTat. ^ otfr tffTiv dA7j0es OUT
Conf
Cic.
De
Fato,
6.
274
CHAP.
1
therefor.
provided a thing has only the capacity This was undeniably a departure from
O) Onhy*8entenc68
the Megarian teaching. In regard, too, to the truth of hypothetical sentences, Philo laid down criteria different from those
of his teacher. 2
sentences to be true, in which the apodosis neither can be false, nor ever could be false if only the pro
tasis
be true.
Philo says more vaguely, those are is not a true protasis and a false
appears, however, to
O) On
words.
the
meaning of
appears to be connected, that no words are meaning less or ambiguous, each one always meaning some thing, and everyone requiring to be understood ac
4 he will only allow that cording to this meaning meaning of a word to be possible which is actually Eespecting Diodorus, present to the speaker s mind.
:
in
however, and the whole Megarian School, our infor1 in Categ.Alex.-Simpl. Schol. in Arist. 65, a, 39, b, 6 1. c. Panthoides, accorSoekSj ding to Epict. Diss. ii. 19, 5, attempted by another turn to
;
Philo,
do not
at
all,
affect his
real
avoid Diodorus argument, by disputing the sentence that every thing past must be of
necessity. 2 See Sext.
however much they may follow from the words of his definition. Hence Prantl* p. 454, can hardly have quite grasped the meaning of Philo. 4 Gell. xi. 12 Amman., De
meaning
Pyrrh.
;
ii.
;
110;
Cic.
Interpret. 32, a Schol. in Arist. 1103, b, 15 ; Simpl. Categ. f. 6, h. In order to show that every
;
Math. Acad.
8
viii.
113
i.
309
Sextus,
word has a meaning, Diodorus, according to Ammon., gave the name aAAojuV to one of his
slaves.
275
mation
far
CHAP.
XII.
may then
the Megarians did not confine themselves to those our notices logical subtleties which are known to us
;
however, too deficient for us to be able to attri bute others to them with anything like certainty. 2
are,
peculiar position in the Megarian philosophy is (6) That of Stilpo, that occupied by Stilpo. Ever ready to defend the which
teaching of the School at the head of which he stood, adopted much from clinging to universal conceptions, maintaining the im the
possibility of
3 becoming, the unity of being, and the Every difference between sensuous and rational perceptions, 4 combina tion of he at the same time combines with his Megarian
subject
views theories and aims which originally belonged to and predi cate re In the first place he rejected, as did Anthe Cynics. as
jected
impossible.
Hitter s (Rh. Mus. ii. 310, Gesch. der. Phil. ii. 140) conjectures seem in many respects
1
may be gathered
beyond historical proba and beyond the spirit of To the Megarian teaching. illustrate this here would take
to go
bility,
too long. 2 Prantl, p. 43, believes that the majority of the sophisms enumerated by Aristotle really belong to the Megarians. Most of them, however, would ap pear to come from the So phists in proof of which a reference may be made to Plato s Euthydemus, which
;
from the Sophistes, 246, C., and the introduction to the Theaetetus and Eubulides had not appeared when Plato com posed the Euthydemus. That the Megarians made use of
;
the Sophistic fallacies, of course not denied. Only nothing for certain is known of such use.
many of
is
See pp. 260,3; 263, 4. Compare the passage in Aristocles quoted p. 259, 1, in
4
which
ol irepl ~2,rL\ircava KOI rovs MryapiKovs are spoken of in addition to the Eleatics.
T 2
276
CHAP.
XII.
since the conception of the one conception of the other, and two things with different 1 conceptions can never be declared to be the same.
The doctrine
be shown to have originated with Stilpo, may be deduced as a corollary from this view for if nothing can be predicated of anything else, it follows that
;
itself.
Truly cynical are also Stilpo s moral principles. The captious logic to which other Megarians devoted themselves with speculative onesidedness, to the entire
3 neglect of the ethical element, was also a charac-
In Pint. adv. Col. 22, 1, p. 1119, the Epicurean Stilpo raises the objection rbv Oebv avaipe iffOai UTT avrov, \eyovros e-repov TTCUS frepov /j.rj KarriyopelaQai. yap Biooffd/jLeda, /JL^J \eyovres avaAA avdpwdpcairov ayadbv irov avdpwirov Ka\ ayaObv and again, c. 23 ayaQov ; ov /J.fyv aAAa rb ir\ 2,ri\ir<avos el <roiovr6v Iffriv. irepl l-mrov rb
1
:
by Simpl. Phys.
rV
KO.\
ol
MeyapiKol
>v
%a>pls
<pi\6ffo(poi
\a.p6vres us
ol
irp6ra.ffiv.
ori
\6yoi
fin
erepoi
ravra erepa
Kf
ecrri
Kal
erepa
X(apio"iJ.evov
rpe%eiv
Karrjyopovfji.ei
ravrbv
petrai
elvai
ri>
v<$
irep\
/ce-
eKao~rov
i.e.
since
Karriyopov^fvov, aAA eTfpov /J.ev avdpwTTci) rov rl ^v flvai rbv \6yov, eVepoi/ 5e ry Kal ird\iv rb linrov elvai ayaOaj
rov rpexovra eli/at Sm^epetj/ e/carepov yap airaiToi>ij.evoi rbv \6yov ov rbv avrbv a7roSi5o/xei/ virlp
a/uL<po
will be found in the case of Antisthenes. All the less reason has Plutarch to regard
same thing
conception of SwKparTjs is a different one to that of njs \evic6s, the one according to Megarian hypothesis must be a different person to the other. 2 See p. 263. 3 Excepting Euclid s doc trine of the oneness of virtue, nothing bearing on Ethics is known as belonging to the
/J.OVO-IKOS
2&>/cpd
the
Megarians.
277 CHAP.
"VI
(*) TJlK
mentioned by biographers with the greatest respect, but many traits are recorded of him, which identify
his morality
good
The highest
good he placed in that apathy, which forbids the The wise man is re feeling of pain even to exist.
quired to be in himself independent, and not even to stand in need of friends to secure happiness. 3 When
Demetrius Poliorcetes enquired after his losses by the plunder of Megara, he gave for answer that he had
4 When re seen no one carrying off his knowledge. of the immoral life of his daughter, he re minded joined, that if he could not bring honour on her, she
Banishment he
See Chrysipp. in Plut. Sto. Rep. 10, 11, p. 1036, and pp. 211,
1
at
a,
What
210,
2
6.
See
p. 251,
note
:
3.
3 An merito Sen, Bp. 9, 1 reprehendat in quadam epistola Epicurus eos, qui dicunt sapi-
remarks also probably applies to Stilpo, that the Megarlans look on affx\i]aia. as trpuTov
oiice iov.
4
;
entem
et
Hoc
ob-
quibus
est
summum bonum
:
ab Epicuro et
Plutarch, Demet. c. 9 Tranquil. An. c. 17, p. 475 Puer. Ed. c. 8, p. 6 Sen. de Const. 5, 6 Epis. 9, 18 Diog. Floril. Joan. Damasc. ii. 115
;
visum And a
infer
interest
sentit
quidem
;
13, 153 (Stob. Floril. ed. That Stilpo Mein. iv. 227). wife and thereby lost his daughter is probably a rhetorical exaggeration of Seneca,
ii.
The well-known
omnia mea
quidem.
mecum
is the observation of Stilpo in Teles, in Stob. Floril. 103, 83, in order to warn from excessive grief
porto, attributed by Seneca to Stilpo, is by Cicero referred to Bias of Prisne. 5 Pint. An. Tran. c. 6 ; Diog.
ii.
114.
278
CHAP.
XII.
To be independent
of everything without, and to be absolutely free from wants this highest standard of Cynicism for the wise
man
was
And
lastly,
towards religion adopted by the Cynics was also shared 2 by him, and finds expression in many of his utterances. Whether, and if so, in what way, he attempted
(6-)
The
to set
Cynic and
Megarian
theories
between the Cynic and Megarian theories, we are not told. In itself, such a task was not difficult. With the assertion that no
up a
logical connection
not logi
cally hartnonised by
hostile attitude
;
him.
towards proof by analogy is closely related this too rests on the general proposition that things dissimilar
cannot be compared. It is also quite in harmony with the negative criticism of the Megarians and if Euclid denied to the good any form of manifoldness,
;
others
might add,
"the
More
over from the oneness of the good the apathy of the wise man might be deduced, by considering that all
else besides the
good
is
The
denial of the popular faith was also involved in the doctrine of the one, even as it was first taught by
Xenophanes.
1
Flor. 40,
2
According to Diog. ii. 116, he proved that the Athene of Phidias was not a God, and then before the Areopagus evasively replied that she was not a 6e6s but a 0ea, and when Crates asked him as to prayers
Conf. Diog.
3.
ii.
106,
and
p.
263,
and
sacrifices,
replied
that
ELEAN-ERETRIAN SCHOOL.
Stilpo, there
279
it
is
true, points of
CHAP.
XII.
approach from the original form of the Megarian teaching to allow explicitly such an element to exist.
Closely connected with the Megarian school
is
II.
it
was a deviation
the Elean-Eretrian, respecting which, however, very information has reached us. Its founder little
^^
A. it*
history.
Eleann
was Phsedo of
1
Elis,
the well-known
Life
story, that
favourite
of
See Preller
Philol.
iv.
and Writings,
fur the
Phagdo Ehein.
391.
Mus.
Phsedo,
no conquest of Elis took place at that time, where as Diog. sa3r s of Phsedo ffv:
a noble Elean family, had been taken cap tive not long before the death of Socrates, probably 400 or Preller concludes B.C. 401
scion of
He
therefore
infers that M^jAtos should be read for HAeTos in Dio(j. ii. 105. Yet Phasdo is called an Elean by both Gell. 1. c. and Strabo,
ix. 1, 8, p. 393,
from Phasdo, 89, B., that he was not eighteen years of age at the time of the death of Socrates it may, however, be asked whether Phagdo "followed Athenian customs in his dress. He was employed as a slave in most humiliating services at Athens, until one of Socrates
;
called
Elean.
Elis itself
friends (besides Crito, Cebes and Alcibiades are both men tioned, the latter certainly not being at Athens at the time,
did not fall into an enemy s hand, its suburbs were occu pied by the Spartan army in the Elean- Spartan war, pro bably in the spring of 408 B.C. (Xen. Hell. iii. 2, 21, and Prel ler, on the passage, Ourtius, Gr. Gesch. iii. 149. 757.) Phasdo appears to have been taken Most captive at that time. probably Phaedo left Athens on the death of Socrates. But whether he at once returned
4>aiScoi/
67 Athen.
Cio.
N. D.
xi.
home, or repaired with others to Euclid at Megara, is un known. Diog. ii. 105, mentions two genuine and four spurious dialogues of his. His Zopyrus is even quoted by Pollux, iii. 18, and the Antiatheista in BeWter s Anecdot. i. 1 07. Panaatius seems to have had doubts
as to all the treatises passing under his name, Diog. ii. 64. He is called by Gellius philo-
Hermippus,
ij/ai/eccj/
irepl
T<av
Stairpe-
4v TraiSeia 8ov\cov.
iii.
Grote
(Plato,
280
CHAP.
XII.
and Moschus as
his pupils. 4
however, know nothing of any one of them. By Menedemus and Asclepiades, 5 the school was removed
to
Eretria,
and
it
sophus
illustris, and his writ ings are spoken of as admodum elegantes. Even Diog.
ii.
47,
89,
2
H.
HAeicueoi, Strata, ix. 1, 8, p.
;
393
8
4
Diog. ii. 105, 126. Diog. ii. 105. 126. Perhaps these
they joined Stilpo at Megara, and thence went to Moschus and Archipylus at Elis, by whom they were in troduced to the Elean doc trines. Returning to their native city and becoming con nected by marriage, they con tinued together in faithful friendship until the death of Asclepiades, even after Mene
risen to
state,
demus had
highest
men rank
in
the
and had
his.
were not immediate pupils of Since nothing is said of Menedemus studying under
Plistanus, the latter, we may suppose, was no longer alive. 5 The account given by Diog. ii. 125 of these philosophers in his life of Menedemus (probably
attained wealth and influence with the Macedonian princes. The sympathetic, noble and firm character of Menedemus,
his pungent wit (on which Pint. Prof, in Virt. 10, p. 81 Vit. Pud. 18, p. 536), his mode ration (Dioff. ii. 129 Atlien. x. 419, e), his liberality and his merits towards his country, are a subject of frequent Soon after the panegyric. battle of Lysimachia, which
; ;
taken from Antigonus of Carystus and Heraclides Lembus) is as follows Menedemus of Ere
:
tria, originally
tradesman,
soldier to
Megara. There he became ac quainted with the school of Plato (so Diog. says with Plato but this is chronologically im possible) and joined it together with his friend Asclepiades, both
;
took place 278 B.C., he died, possibly by suicide the result of a grief which is differently stated at the age of seventyfour. According to Antigonus in Diog. ii. 136, he left no
cf
iv.
them (according
writings. 6 Strabo, ix. 1, 8; Diog. ii. 105, 126 Cic. Acad. iv. 42, 129.
;
ELEAN-ERETRIAN SCHOOL.
Flourishing as was its condition here for a time, appears soon to have died out.
1
L 8l
it
CHAP.
~VT T
Among
its
adherents
B.
the only two respecting whose opinions any information is to be had, and that information is little
enough.
4
3 By Timon Phsedo
is
as a babbler,
dency. Ethics
Menedemus, at
least,
appears to
life
and to moral questions. He is, however, spoken If he hardly of as a sharp and skilful disputant. 6 went the length of Antisthenes in declaring every com bination of subject and predicate impossible, 7 it still
sounds captious enough to hear that he only allowed affirmative judgments to be valid, but rejected nega1
Plut. Tranqu.
An.
13,
p.
of morals,
41, quotes
6
472.
2
94,
Athen.
iv.
162, e,
mentions
5u<r/ca-
re
says of him has nothing to do with philosophy. A treatise of the Stoic Sphserus against the Eretrian School in 260 B.C. is the last trace of the of the Eretrian existence
school.
3
4
nphs iravra
KO.}
up(rt\6yfi
epitr-
Ai ri-
The
Diog. vii. 178. Diog. ii. 107. The Platonic Phaedo does
verses of Epicrates in Athen. ii. 59, cannot well refer to this Menedemus, since they are also directed against Plato, who
not give, the slightest ground for thinking, as SteinJuirt, Plat, W. iv. 397, does, that Phasdo was inclined to a sceptical
According to Phys. 20, a (Schol. in Arist. 330, a, 3), the ^Eretrians asserted ;ui?8e// Kara p.fSei/bs
KarrwoptLffQai.
They ap-
withholding of judgment. 5 Compare the short but clever fragment on the subject
pear in this passage to be confounded with the Cynics and the later Megarians.
tive
Chrysippus
blames
It
him
he disputed the view that pro may exist apart from particular objects, in the perties 4 On the other hand, it is spirit of Cynic nominalism.
asserted that in positive opinions he was a Platonist,
and only employed argument for amusement. 5 From what has been already stated, this seems incredible, nor can it be deduced from his disputes with Alexinus. 6 Indeed, it is in itself most improbable. 7 Still
so
much seems
Stilpo, he attributed to ethical doctrines a value above criticism. For we not only hear that he ad mired Stilpo, who was his teacher, more than any
ov^a^s
Se TO?S KadtKacrra
5
/ecu
Heraclides in Diog. ii. 135. Ritter s conjecture, Gesch. d. Phil. ii. 155, that this Mene
Endymion
is
mentioned,
who
we know from
32, p.
denied that you could know what was false, for no know ledge could be deceptive. The allusion does not, however, appear probable. The continu ation, that the sun corresponds
to truth, and the moon to false hood, that error and change bear rule under the moon, but truth and immutability in the domain of the sun, certainly
Heraclides Lembus had treated the Eretrians in detail, as we learn from Dioy., so that it is difficult to imagine such a con fusion. The context also tells against that view. 6 Diog. 135, 136, says that he
Simpl.
68,
Arist.
Categ. 24 a,
:
Schol.
ol
in
rrjs
Acoi/
T&V
irepl
IIAaTcoj/a Kal
curb
Eperpias avfjpovv
ras TrotdrrjTos
Diog. 134.
ELEAN-ERETRIAN TEACHING.
1 being a Cynic, but we know that he busied himself with enquiring as to the chief good He affirmed that there was only in a practical way.
283
derided
for
CHAP.
1CTT
one good intelligence, 2 which, to his mind, was identical with a rational direction of the will. 3 What
are
commonly spoken
4 maintained, only different names of this one virtue 5 and, by his activity as a statesman, he proved that he did not aim at dead knowledge. In his free views
Zeno, however, having about this time united the most valuable and lasting parts of the
Cynics.
Megarian and Cynic teaching in the more compre hensive system of the Stoics, stragglers, such as the Eretrians, soon found themselves unable to exercise
any important influence.
1
Diog. 140
ra
/xev
ovv irpura
8iKaiO(rvvr)V
5
XeyeffOoi,
Ka6dirp
/caire^poi/etTO,
TUV
2
:
Kal \r\pos virb Eperpetcoi O.KOVWV. Cic. Acad. ii. 42 Diog. etVtWa TroAAa Trpbs 8e
KV(I)I>
rbi>
That he exercised a conon his influence siderable friends by his teaching and
personalty is shown by Plutarch, Adul. et Am. c. 11, p. 55 Diog. ii. 127-129. d Diog. 125 Biwvos re Aws Kararp^ovros veicpovs avrbv tiricrcpdTTe against which a trait of personal fear, such as is described
his
;
:
Tt6ffa TrActo?
Kal
el VO/J.LOI
r6v and in 134 are some questions to prove that the useful
is
TU>V
/cat
irore
TWOS
efy
aicovaas,
(jLtyitnov
ayadbv
fiv
coi/
rb irdvTwv
67n0v/A?,
rvy^di
iroAi/
5et.
TIS
fltre
S>v
5e
fj.fiov
by Diog.
rb
4
eiriQvp.eiv
Mei/e-
132, proves nothing. Josephus, Antiquit. Jud. xii. 2, 12. Tertullian s Apologet. 18,
ST/^OS
e|
Eperpias
avypei
/cat
ruv
dpercof
/cat
rb TTATJ^OS
ras
5ia(J>opas,
a>s
/nius OVCTTJS
/cal
jueVTjs
airb
xp u ~ r6 yap
CHAPTER
XIII.
THE CYNICS.
CHAP.
THE Cynic, like the Megarian School, arose from a fusion of the teaching of Socrates with the doctrines
o f fo e Eleatics
A. History of the
and Sophists. r
Both
1
schools, as has
Cynics.
been already remarked, were united by Stilpo, and The founder of passed over into the Stoa in Zeno.
2 Cynicism, Antisthenes, a native of Athens, appears
It is
accordingly not
com
patible with an insight into the historical connection of these schools to insert the Cyrenaics between the Cynics aud the Megarians, as Tenne-
and Aristippus its effects on happiness, according to his own imperfect conception of it. 2 Antisthenes was the son of
an Athenian and a Thracian
slave (Diog. vi-. 1 ii. 31 ; Sen. De Const. 18, o Plut. De Exil. 17, p. 607, calling his mother and Clemens, Strom, i. 302, C. in calling himself a Phyrgian, are
; ; ;
mann, Hegel, Marbach, Braniss, Brandis, and Striimpell have done. Otherwise it is of no moment whether we advance from the Megarians to Antisthenes and thence to Aristipfor these pus, or vice versa three schools were not being
;
confounding him
with
Dio
The order the same origin. followed above appears, how ever, to be the more natural one the Megarians confining themselves more closely to the fundamental position of So Antisthenes consider crates
; ;
genes, or else must have been thinking of the anecdote in Diog. vi. 1: Sen. and Plut., 1. for further particulars c. consult Winkelmann, Antisth. Fr. p. 7 Miiller, De Antisth. vita et scriptis Marb. 1860, p. 3).
; ;
He
Mem.
ing
its practical
consequences
in extreme poverty. The time of his birth and death is not further known to us. Diodor. xv. 76, mentions him as one of
HISTORY OF THE
to
1
CYNICS.
285 CHAP.
XIII.
have become acquainted with Socrates only late in life, but ever afterwards to have clung to him 2
with enthusiastic devotion, imitating his critical reasoning, though not always without an element of
3
Early in life he had captiousness and quibbling. the instruction of Grorgias, 4 and included other enjoyed
5 Indeed he had Sophists likewise among his friends. as a pleader and teacher, himself appeared Sophist-like
the acquaintance of Socrates. 6 It was therefore only a going back to his old mode of
before he
life,
made
School. 7
the
when on the death of Socrates he opened a At the same time he did not neglect to
living about 366 B.C.
is
men
and Plut. Lycurg. 30, Sch., quotes a remark of his on the battle of Leuctra. According to Budocia ( Villoison s Anecd.
56), he attained the age of 70 years, which would place his birth in 436 B.C., but the circumstance is uncertain. We have every reason to refer Plato s yep6vruv TOLS o^i/j.dB., to him, as fleo-i, Soph. 251,
i.
1
Delium. The story, however, is of no account, for Diog. ii. 31 quotes the same words of Socrates in a different way. 2 Xen. Mem. iii. 11, 17 Sym. 4, 44; 8, 4-6. Plato, Phgedo,
;
59, B.
3
Diog.
vi. 2
is
This at least
;
tion
6,
4
Symp.
5
;
8.
will be subsequently seen. The only thing against it is the account in Di-og. vi. 1, that Antisthenes was praised by So crates for his valour in the This objec battle of Tanagra. tion applies even if the battle referred to was not the victory of the Athenians in the year 456 B.C. (in which it is impos sible that Antisthenes can have taken part), but the battle mentioned by TJmcyd. iii. 91 in 426 B.C., or that which was fought late in the autumn of 423 B.C. between Delium and
Diog. vi. 1, referring to the rhetorical school of Gorgias nor does Antisthenes deny his At a later period teaching.
;
Antisthenes wrote against Gorgias, Athen. v. 220, d. 5 According to Xen. Symp. 4, 62, he introduced Prodicus and
Tanagra (Thuc.
iv. 91),
which
286
CHAP.
XIII.
praised.
Among
the pupils
of Antisthenes, Diogenes
of
cording to Diog. vi. 4, he had but few pupils because of his harsh and severe treatment of them. It is not reported that he required payment, but he appears to have received volun
tary presents. Diog. vi. 9. Diog. vi. 15 (comp. Mutter, 1. c., p. 25) gives a list of these
1
writings, which, according to Diog. ii. 64, was in the main approved of by Panaetius. They are by him divided into 10
volumes.
Excepting a few
Antisthenes was already called orrAoKiW (Diog. 1. c.), and Brutus speaks disparag ingly of a Cynic (Plut. Brut. 34). Diogenes boasted of the name (Diog. 33 40 45 55-60 Stob. Eel. ii. 348, u, a), and the Corinthians placed a marble
a, 5.
;
;
fragments, the only ones which are the two are preserved small and comparatively worth less declamations, Ajax and Ulysses, the genuineness of
dog on
4
his grave. (Diog. 78.) Steinliart, Diogenes, Allg. sect. i. bd. xxx. 301 Encyc.
;
Ges. Abh. i. 251 ; Bayle, Diet. Art. Diogene is always worth reading. Diogenes was the son of the money- changer Kikosios at Sinope. In his
Diog.
vi. 18.
See Theopomp. in Diog. vi. 14 and 15, and vii. 19 Dionys. Jud. de Thuc. c. 31, p. 941 PhryEpictet. Diss. ii. 17, 35 nich. in Pliot. Cod. 158, p. 101, b Pronto, De Orat. i. p, 218 Longin. De Invent. Rhet. Gr. Cic. ad Att. xii. 38 ix. 559 and lAician adv. Indoct. c. 27 Theopompus passes the same
;
youth he had been engaged with his father in issuing counterfeit coin, and in conse quence was obliged to leave his country. Diog. vi. 20, quoting
authorities, gives further par
ticulars,
but
is
nob
always
;
opinion
dresses.
3
on
his
spoken
ad
faithfully explained by GottConf. Ibid. 49, 56 ling, 251. Plut. Inimic. Util. c. 2; De Exil. c. 7, p. 602 Musonius in Stob. Floril. 40, 9 Lucian, Bis Accus., 24 Dio Chrys. Or. viii. have no reason to doubt this fact, as Steinkart
; ; ;
We
Called by Aristotle,
3
;
~M.eta.ph.
viii.
HISTORY OF THE
Sinope
trie
is
CYNICS.
and eccenoriginality,
287
CHAP,
alone
known
individual,
whose
imperturbable
66
in
of
;
In Athens he became acquainted with Antisthenes, who, for some reason or other, drove him away with a stick, but was at length overcome by
details.
vi.
50.)
According
to
Diogenes,
he
Syracuse.
pirates,
journey he
fell into
his perseverance.
ufllian, V.
H.
ii.
x.
(Diog. 21 16 Hieron.
;
adv. Jovin.
206.)
When
this
sold him to For Xeniades, a Corinthian. this event see Diog. vi. 29 74 Plut. Tran. An. 4, p. 466 An.
;
: ;
who
place is unknown, and s conjecture that the condemnation of Socrates was of the cause Antisthenes hatred of mankind, is not to
took
"Vitios,
s. 3,
p.
;
499
Stob. Floril.
Bayle
be depended upon for chrono logical reasons. Diogenes now devoted himself to philosophy in the Cynic sense of the term, and soon surpassed his master in self-denial and abstemious He himself mentions ness. Antisthenes as his teacher, in the verses in Pint. Qu. Conv. ii. He appears to have 1, 7, 1. lived a very long time at Athens, at least if the account of his meeting with Philip before the battle of Chseronea may be trusted (Diog. 43; Plut. de Adulat. c. 30, p. 70 De Exil. c. 16, p. 606 Epict. Diss. iii. it is not, however, 22, 24 stated that Diogenes fought at
;
; ;
Epict. Diss. iii. Philo, Qu. Omni. Prob. Lib. 883, C. Julian, Or. vii. Xeniades appointed 212, d. him the instructor of his sons, and he is said to have admir
3,
; ;
63 24, 66
40, 9
ably
discharged
this
duty.
Highly esteemed by his pupils and by their parents, he re mained with them till his death. At this time occurred the meeting with the younger Dionysius, mentioned by Plut. Timol. 15, and the conversa tion with Alexander, so greatly tradition. exaggerated by
(Diog. 32;
Benef
311
;
v.
4,
Chasronea, as Gottling, p. 265, says, nor is this probable of a Cynic), according to which he was then still living at Athens.
possible and this agrees with his principle of having no home that he may have visited other places as a wandering preacher of morals, particularly Corinth. Plut. Prof, in 63 (Diog. 44 Dio Chrys. Or. Virt. 6, p. 78
Theo. Progym. c. 5 Julian, Or. vii. 212.) The most simple version of it is that found in Plut. Alex. c. 14; De Alex. Virt. c. 10, p. 331 ad Princ. Inerud. c. 5, p. 702. Diogenes died at Corinth, on the same day, it is said, as Alexander
;
;
But
it
is
also
(Plut. Qu. Conv. viii. 1,- 4, p. 717 Demetr. in Diog. 79), i.e. 323 B.C., at an advanced age
;
(Diog. 76, says almost ninety, Cens. Di. Nat. 15, 2, says eighty-one). The story of his
death
vi.
Val.
Max.
iv. 3
Diog.
ii.
is differently told. (Diog. 76; 31; Plut. Consol. ad Apoll. c. 12, p. 107 ^fllian, V.H. viii. 14 Tatian adv. Cens. 1. c.
; ; ;
288
CHAP.
XIII.
and vigorous mind, have made him the most typical figure of ancient Greece. Of the pupils of Diogenes, 2 Crates is the most
in its excesses, fresh
1
celebrated. 3
Gr.
By
his
influence,
his
wife
Hippar-
Hieron. adv. Jovin. ii. c. 2 LuciaH, Dial. Mort. 21, 207, 2 ; Cic. Tusc. i. 34, 104 Stob. Floril. 123, 11.) Most probably he succumbed to old age. The
away by his master for throw ing money out of the window
in Cynic fanaticism, one of the most distinguished Cynics, and
Corinthians honoured him with a solemn burial and a tomb, and Sinope erected a monu ment to his memory (Diog. 78 Pausan. ii. 2, 4 Anth. G- r. iii.
;
amongst them
AaA.7)0uitt
;
of
irai-yvia o-rrovSfj
(Diog.
vi.
Diog. 80, mentions many writings which bear his name. A portion of them were, how ever, rejected by Sotion. Others denied that he left any writ
558).
ings.
ru>v
Theophrastus
treatise
Aioyevovs cruvaywy)] (in Diog. v. 43), by Grote, Plato, iii. 508, to the Cynic Diogenes, cer tainly refers to Diogenes of
Apollonia.
1
That he exercised an
irre
charm over many per sons by his manners and words is attested by Diog. 75, and confirmed by examples like that of Xeniades, Onesicritus, and
sistible
B.C. (Diog. vi. 87). Since, how ever, stories are current not only of his tilting with Stilpo
his sons.
2
besides
and biographer
(Diog. ii. 117), but also of his quarrelling with Menedemus in his later years (Diog. ii. 131 vi. 91), his life must have lasted to the third century. Another Crates, a pupil of Stilpo, who
;
is
mentioned Diog.
ii.
114,
must
not be confounded with the Cynic Crates. He is probably the same as the Peripatetic of that name in Diog. iv. 23. In zeal for the Cynic philosophy, Crates gave away his consider able property. For the diif erent
HISTORY OF THE
chia
l
CYNICS.
2
289
were gained for the School. The names of several immediate and Cynic remote pupils of Metrocles 3 are known, through whom the School may be traced down to the end of the third
CHAP.
XIII.
Yet all its nobler features were cultivated century. by the Stoics from the beginning of the third century,
only toned down and supplemented by the addition of other elements also. Henceforth Cynicism was
useless as a special
branch of the Socratic philosophy. Subsequent attempts which were made to preserve
distinct
its
in caricatures.
Vit.
lostr. v.
i.
13. 2
He
Hieron. died at
sembled Plato
s,
after having been cured by him of his childish idea of suicide. At a later period, however, he hung himself to escape the burdens of age, Diog. 94. Re specting his apathy, see Plut. An. Vitios. Ad. Infelic. c. 3, p. 499 for a conversation of his with Stilpo see Plut. Tranqu. An. 6, p. 468.
;
3 Diog. 95. His pupils were Theombrotus and Cleomenes the former was the teacher of
;
and
ding
of
Tiof them of
Di-og. vi.
Contemporary with
Apul. Floril. he was ugly and deformed. The daughter of an opulent family from Maronea in Thrace, who from love to Crates re nounced her prospects and habits of comfort, and followed
1
From 14, we
102. Contemporary with Me trocles was Diodorus of Aspendus, mentioned in Zeller s Phil, d. Griech. vol. i. 289. At an earlier period, under Antigonus
the
him
96
;
in his beggar
s life,
Diog.
Apul. Floril. ii. 14. 2 Formerly a pupil of Theophrastus and Xenocrates, but won over to Cynicism by
Crates (Telos.
97,
Great, lived the Cynic Thrasylus (Plut. Reg. ApophVit. theg. Antig. 15, p. 182 Pud. 7, p. 531) under one of the Ptolemies, Sotades, whose abstinence Nonnm, Cynical Exeg. Histor. Greg. Naz. 26
; ;
in Stob. Floril.
214,
31,
vol.
iii.
Mein.),
290
CHAP.
XIII.
of the basest of its later representatives are to us in the persons of Menedemus 1 and Me2
nippus.
Soon
after it
became extinct
as a School,
A pupil of Echecles, and previously, as it would seem, of the Epicurean Colotes (D wg. vi. 95, 102), of whom we only
hear that he occasionally ap peared in the mask of a fury,
to
cian Ikaromen. 15, who makes Menippus an eye-witness of a number of things, all of which
B.C.
In
philippics.
Ktesibius,
c.
to his his is
i.
15,
iv.
162,
names
as
Menippus was,
Diog.
vi.
to
N. A. ii. 18, Phoenician slave. He is said to have amassed a considerable fortune money-lending by (Hermippus in Diog. 1. c.), the loss of which he took so much to heart that he hung himself. His career must fall in the first half of the third century. Dio genes indicates that, placing him between Metrocles and Menedemus, it being his habit to mention the philosophers of
this
cannot go for much. There is probably here a mistake in the text perhaps KCXT is written for |UT or as JVitscke, p. 32, pro poses, we ought to read rov /col avrov yfvofj.^vov KVVIKOV. Pro bably this Menippus is the same person as Menippus of
:
Sinope, called
by
for
Diog.
vi.
101
in
counting up the various Menippuses does not mention him as well as this Menippus, but calls him as Athen. xiv. 629, e, 664, e, likewise does Mevnnros 6
KWLK6s.
The name
:
^Lvcowebs is
chronological order also the story that he was the author of a treatise respecting the festivities of
;
school
in
Epicurus
101),
birthday
of
and
an
c.;
thus explained his master was a certain Baton of Pontus (Achaicus in Diog. vi. 99), with whom he probably lived at Sinope. (Compare also Nietz
sche s
u.
Beitr.
z.
Quellenkunde
mician of this name died at a also great age in 240 B.C.) the circumstance that a portion
;
of his writings was attributed to a Zopyrus (Diog. vi. 100), probably the friend of the Sil-
Basel, 1870, p. 28.) According to Diog. 13 treatises of Menippus were in circulation, of which he gives the titles of seven, and Athen. the titles of two more. That they were not his own
lograph Timon (Ibid. ix. 114); also Probus who (Virg. Eel. vi.
calls 31) earlier than
production
is
probably
All
enemy
slander.
only these
Menippus
Varro
;
much
Lu-
also
CYNIC TEACHING.
and only reappeared at a very much
offshoot of Stoicism.
1
2<>1
later
time as an
CHAP.
The Cynic philosophy claims to be the genuine B fynic 2 The many-sidedness, however, (i) Depi-eteaching of Socrates.
-
<*?**>*<
theoretical
kiuwsledyv.
elements were completely fused, and the foundations thus laid of a more comprehensive and deeper-going science, was above the powers of Antisthenes. Natur
ally
narrow and
dull,
strength things the independence of his master s character, the strictness of his principles, his self-control, and
his universal cheerfulness in every position in life.
of will, Antisthenes
How these moral traits could be in a great measure the result of free enquiry on the part of Socrates, and how they could thus be preserved from narrowness,
satirist
It would fully explain school. these statements that he was attaching himself as a writer
Meleager (Dioff. vi. 99), but by Varro in his Satire Menippeae (Cic. Acad. i. 2, 8 N. A. ii. 18, 6, also fif ell. conf. Macrob. Saturn, i. 11 Probusy 1. c.), and that even Lucian gives him a prominent
;
and Diog.
vi.
This his teaching proves independently of the opinions of opponents, such as Plato, Theaatet. 155, E., in which the
Conf. place in his dialogues. Miese, Varr. Sat. Eel. p. 7. 1 Besides the above, Meleager of Gadara should be mentioned, could we be sure that he was a member of the Cynic School. But the mere fact that Atlien. iv. 157, 6, in addressing a Cynic calls him 6 vptyovos v/j-wv, and that he is
words
crKAypoiJs
nal
juaA.
kvBpcairovs
and
avrirvirovs e3 fyowoi
refer without doubt to Antisthenes and not to the Atomists Soph. 251, B. yepAvrwv
;
rols
TT?S
o^t/uafletn
-nepl
VTTO
irfvias
QpAvriffiv
K-H?<rec>y
TO
;
perhaps mentioned by Diogenes as a Cynic, does not prove the continuance of the Cynic
roiavra T6aviJ.aK6ffi. Arist. Metaph. v. 29, 1024, b, 33, viii. 3 1043, b, 23. 4 As Cic. De Orat. iii. 17, 62,
and Diog.
u 2
nor did he see that the prin ; ciple of a knowledge of conceptions reached far be yond the limits of the Socratic platform. All know
ledge not immediately subservient to ethical purposes
he accordingly rejected as unnecessary, or even as injurious, as the offspring of vanity and love of plea
sure.
Virtue, he maintained,
is
an
affair of action,
All
1
the strength of will of a Socrates. Thus he and his School not only regarded logical and
is
needs
physical enquiries as worthless, but passed the same opinion on all arts and sciences which have not the
for their
?8ta
immediate
ayvoovj/Tas
TOVVTO.S TO. 5
Kal
[J.GV
es avT&pKf) 8
aper^v
irpbs
TTJJ/T
IJ-^TC
^UTJTC
IJL^V
Kal
Trj
TOVS fj-ovaiKovs
lv
Tas
r: s n
ev
on
jurj
Sw/cpaTJKrjy icrxvos.
Tff6ai,
ap/j.6T-
dpeTrjj/
rwv
epyoav
elvai,
TO. ^Qf}-
p.a6r]iLi.aTiKovs
\6ywv
2
ir\iffTwv
ScofJLevriv
fji.a9iitJi.dT car.
T^V
fff\ (ivr]v,
ra 8
Diog. 103: apeV/cei ovv avTOIS rbv Aoyi/cbj/ Kal rbv fyvffiKbv
TOTTOV
TreptatpeiV,
/j.aTa
The pas irpaTTtiv 8e /uTjSa/x&Js. sage on astronomers may pos According- to Dio sibly have been supported by rf said what the story of Thales falling des, Diogenes others attribute to Socrates into a well whilst contemplat or Aristippus (see p. 150, and ing the heavens. An answer Pint, in Eus. Pr. Ev. i. 8, 9). thereto is the passage in the that we ought to learn OTTI Theaetetus 174, A, 175, D, on the Thracian maiden who upbraid rot ev fjieydpoiffi K.a.K.6v T a-yaQov T6 TTVKTCU. TTapOUTOVVTat Se Kal ed him for so doing. The mother of Antisthenes was a TO eyKVKyia irepiaipovcri 5e /cat Ka\ Thracian slave, and the words Kal yeca/j-eTpiaj/ When a dial which Plato puts into the Troj/ra TO ToiauTo. mouth of the Thracian girl was shown him, Diogenes re closely resemble those quoted plied, that it was not a bad instrument to avoid being late by Diogenes. It would also TOVS 5e tally with the character of for meals. Ibid. 27 Ta Antisthenes, that he as an ypafi/JLUTiKovs e flau^afe [Diog.] OSuaaews Ko/ca wafrshould be charged /xe/ ToG
c^epoos
ApifTTfavt.
T<j5
Xicp, novcp 8e
7rpO(Te%6ij/
T?0t/c<.
p.ov<riK.riv
CYNIC TEACHING.
object
;
for,
said
Diogenes,
is
as
neglected. Even reading and 2 writing Antisthenes declared could be dispensed with.
object intervenes, self
CHAP. XII L
with considerable
statement must in any case be taken 3 limitation, nor can the Cynic School as a whole be regarded as so hostile to culture
last
The
as this
In
fact,
some
decided language as to the value of culture is on record coming from Antisthenes, 4 Diogenes, 5 Crates, 6
with not troubling himself about the general conception of things. Diog. 73 says of Dio
genes:
fAOvffiK^s
in a
man
so fond of writing.
If it is
re
Kalye(i)[ji.GTpLKrjs
TO-"
TOIOUTUV ws uxprjo Tcoj Kal OVK avayKaiwv. Conf Diog. 24 39 Julian, Or. vi. 190, a Seneca, 7, 32 ; Ep. 88, particularly Stob. Floril. 33, 14 id. 80, 6
Kal a(TTpo\oyias Kal
ctjueAeiV
. ;
; ; ;
:
it may either rest upon some individual expression, such as, that it would be better not to
an astronomer pointing
to
a
:
map
ovroi
of
eicrtv
the
ol
heavens
Tr\avda/jLvoi
says
read at all than to read such nonsense, or it is based upon more general statements such as that quoted by Diog. 5, that wisdom must not be written in books, but in the soul. 4 Exc. e Floril. Jo. Damasc.
ii.
TO>V
13, 68
Set rovs
/xeAAoj/ras
da-rfpci)v
ayaQovs
8e
&v8pas
yevfja-fcrdai
rb
rfyv
yv/Avaffiois
affne iv,
Ibid. 33, in
-n-oTos
flfflV
01
TT\aVW/JLVOl,
ttAA
OVTOl.
in Simpl. De Coelo, 33, b, Schol. in Arist. 476, b, 35, that even an ass takes the shortest cut to his food and to the water, was probably meant as a hit at geometry and its axiom of the
The
saying
of
Diogenes
ToTs IJLCV v&ois ffuxppoffvvqv, roTs 8e Trpecr/Surepots Trapa/j.v6iav, rois 5e irevqffi Tt\ovrov, rols 5e
clire
irXovniois
TratSeia
(pdv({)
6
K.6ff^ov
ecrri
flvai.
Floril. Jo.
ii.
Damasc.
yap
86
:
13,
Exc. e 29: r)
ffrt-
6/toia
^putraJ
Mem.)
yovv Ai Ti-
Kal
Diog.
103
ypd/j./j.aTa
TroAure Aeiai/.
fj.av9a.vfiv
ecpaffKev
Diog.
Kal
ravr ra
e^w
Kal
6V(r
/j.*ra
<r6fvris
H/j-aQov
*<t>p6vTi(ra
"iva.
[Ji^]
oAAor-
Movffoov
(Tf/j.v
eddi/iv.
8e TroAAa
piois.
3
It
e^ap\f/e.
204
CHAP. XIIL
Diogenes too is said to have zealously his pupils the sayings of poets and of
Besides,
it
men, who wrote so much that was good, should have One thing we may declared war against all culture.
however take
for established, that the value of culture
its efficacy
in producing
Hence
and physics, in
speculative knowledge, only studying logic as far as these sciences seemed neces
3 From this judgment we sary for ethical purposes. are not justified in exempting even the founder. 4
2<x0&>z/
Damasc.
.
.
ii.
13,
Tlfpl
Tlepl
KptiTTov rbv elvai rvcp\bv fy atraiSevrov /jLfv yap els rbv fiddpov, rbv 5
:
88
M.6vt/j.os
f^rj
/JL(iT(av,
Flept
epcoTTjfrecos
airoKpiffews,
ei?
2
5e oi iraiSes TroA,-
ffvyypa.fy(av Kal
Ao|ai TOV pavQavtiv TrpojSA^uara. To the second, Ilepi fawi (pvcreoDS, Tlepl (pvcrewi (per haps the same which Cicero
riepl
SO^TJS
/cat
e ;rt<TTT]/XT)s,
epia-Ti/cbs,
Tlepl
rtav
mentions N. D.
TTj/xa -jrepl
i.
13, 32),
(pvaews.
A commen
Epw-
See Mtter,
4
120.
Although the division of phi losophy into Logic, Ethics, and Physics can have been hardly introduced in the time of Antisthenes, and hence the words in Diog. 103 cannot be his, it
does not thence follow that the statement there made is false. Amongst the writings of Antisthenes some are known to us, which would be called logical writings, to use a later division
tary on the writings of Heraclitus, which Diog. ix. 15 men tions, does not belong to him. See Zeller, Phil. d. Griech. i. So 527, and Krische, p. 238.
little,
however,
is
known
of
these writings, that no con clusions can be arrived at which contradict the above assumptions. His logical writ ings, to judge by their titles, appear to have contained those polemical dissertations on con
ceptions, judgments, and ex pressions, which were required as a foundation for critical Of the writings researches.
CYNIC LOGIC.
The utterances of Antisthenes on logic, so far as they are known to us, consist in a polemic against the
philosophy of conceptions, the object of which is to prove the impossibility of speculative knowledge. Likewise his remarks upon nature have for their ob
ject to show,
l
995
CHAP.
what
is
For
this
no
deep research seemed necessary to him or his fol a healthy intelligence can tell everyone lowers
;
anything further
is
only
a theory, based
(2)
Logic.
which in
its
expanded
form and in
its
shows the
disciple of Grorgias.
Socrates having required the essence and conception of every object to be investi
gated before anything further could be predicated of it, Antisthenes likewise required the conception of
things
on Physics, it is not known whether they treat of other than those natural subjects, which Antisthenes required immediately for his Ethics, in order to bring out the difference between nature and custorn and the conditions of a Even the of nature. life
treatise nepl tycav may Prohave had this object. bably Plato, Phileb. 44, C.,
<j>v(reoas
Even
calls
Cicero
ad
Attic, xii.
38,
*
Antisthenes
homo
acutus magis
quam
reckoned
the
Trepl
Antisthenes
among
Diogenes, with what the Schoon Arist. Categor. p. 22, b, 40 says of Antisthenes. Sesct. Pyrrh. iii. 66, only asserts of a Cynic in general that he refutes the arguments against
liast
/jidXa Seivovs
questions about morals and prevailing customs, he invariably referred to the requirements of nature.
irpa>r6s
re
aipi-
<raro
TO ri
^v^ean
Confining himself, however, exclusively to this point of view, he arrived at the conclusion of the Sophists, that every object can only be called by its own pecu
1
name, and consequently that no subject can admit a predicate differing from the conception of the sub Thus it cannot be said that a man is good, but ject.
liar
only that a
man
is
human,
or that the
Good
is
good.
Every explanation, moreover, of a conception con sisting in making one conception clearer by means of another, he rejected all definitions, on the ground
in Top. 24, m, Schol. in Arist. 256, b, 12, on the Aristotelian
ri 3\v flvai
ri
^j/,
a great progress as proving that Antisthenes recognised all analytical judgments a priori as such to be true, but has since been obliged to modify his opinion (Plat. i. 217, Ges.
Ari-st.
Metaph.
v.
b,
33
Ai/TiffQevris
29 ^ero
1024,
eurjflcos
ju.TjSfi/
aiwv
Aeyeerflcu
TrXfyv
5e
/xrjSe i^euSecrflcu.
Alex
Plato,
251,
VfOlS
B.
oQtv ye,
TCOJ/
/ecu
afivvarov
rd
re
eli/at,
d\\a
dyaBov dya6bv, T^V Se &vdpcairoi>.-Cf. Philebus 14, C. Arint. Soph. El. c. 17, 175, b, 15 Phys. i. 2, 185, b, 25 Isokr. Hel. Si-mpl. in loc. p. 20
;
;
i.
1,
is
said p. 276,
respecting Stilpo.
Hermann,
destructive
of
all
know
ledge.
CYNIC LOGIC.
that they are language which does not touch the
CHAP
XIII.
thing Allowing with regard to composite that their component parts could be enume things, rated, and that they could in this way be themselves explained, with regard to simple ones, he insisted
itself.
the more strongly that this was impossible. Compared these might be with others, but not de nned. Names there might be of them, but not con ceptions of qualities, a correct notion but no know The characteristic of a thing, however, the ledge.
all
1
1
A.rist.
:
Metaph.
w<rre
viii.
a-rropia,
1043, b, 23
oi
T)
r,v
auro yap TaAAa, Ao^oi OVK ex KaQ OWTO t<ao~rov 6vofjido~ai \j.ovov
-
Ai/TtfrfleVetot Kal ul
l
o&Vcos airai-
Seurot rfTropon/, %x
on OVK ecrrt rbv yap Xoyov eli/ai p.aKp6v see Metaph. xiy. 3 1091, a, 7 and Schwegler on this pas
opoi>
5e ovSev aAAo e?j, Trpoffenrciv dvvarbv, ov6 us efrnv ovd ws OVK .... eire! ovSe ro avrb ouSe rb zKtivo ouSe rb tKaarov ovSe rb IAOVOV Trpocroio reot/, oi8 aAAa TroAAa roiav ra ravra jjikv
to~rii>
sage
^I
aAAa
/J.GV
irolov
jueV
ri
to~nv
apoiov
yap
o~6ai,
Se xerai
KOI
5t5a|at,
t>,
iba-irfp
erepa ovra
yvpov ri
rjs
to~riv,
C&CTT
on
6erai.
/caTTtrepos.
T
5>v
CuV07]T7J
ft
re
OTjrr?
irp(t)T(av
OVK
e| Z&TLV.
avrr]
avrb avrov \6yov, aVeu rwv airdvrcw \4yea6ai. vvv 5e rov eij/ai onovv
TU>V
That
this,
pTidrjvai
Xoyca
uv yap
elj/at
avry
appears from Plato, Theastet. 201, E., and is wrongly denied by Brandis, ii. b, 503 the ex pressions are indeed Aristo telian. Alexander, on the pas
;
^ovov ovofj.u ^ K rovrtoi/ yap fjt.6vov X^ LV Ta ^5rj 0-vyKei/j.tva, &o~irtp avra TreVAe/crat, ovrw Kal ra oz/o/xaTa avruv
r)
dAA
6vo/j.deo~9ai
ffu/uLir\aKfvra
\6yov
yeyovevai
elvat
:
e<pT)
6vofj.drwv
yap
cn^uTrAo/r)??/
\oyov
ovffiav.
And
201,
more fully, but without adding anything fresh. That this view was not rirst put forward by the dis
sage,
explains
it
Se TT?V fj.fv/j.ra
7n(TTi7U7jj/
fKrbs
fffri
Triffr f)fj.i]s
Siv /j.ev
/aft
\6yos, OVK
/cat
eTricrTT/Ta
etj/at,
from Plato
ciples of Antisthenes, appears s These! et. 201, E. 70) yap ay e So /couc aitoveiv rivccv or i ra p-ev irpwra fafftrepel ffroi^la,
:
ovruxrl
ovo/j.dfaj/,
%et,
This whole descrip tion agrees with what has been quoted from Aristotle so en tirely, trait for trait, that we
eVto-TTjTa.
name which can never be defined, the conception of the subject which is borrowed from nothing else, and therefore can never be a predicate, consists only in its proper name. By this it is known when it can be
individual.
explained by nothing else. All that is real is strictly General conceptions do not express the nature of things, but they express men s thoughts
about them.
demand
for a
the most decided Realism, Antisthenes derives there from a Nominalism quite as decided. General con
ceptions are only fictions of thought.
cannot possibly refer it to any one else but Antisthenes. Itis all the more remarkable that Plato repeatedly (201, C. 202, C.) affirms the truth of his In modern times, description.
;
Horses and
ing Antisthenes, whereas no such principle is known of the School of Megara. We may, endorse Schleiertherefore,
s conjecture (PL W. ii. 19) that the Cratylus was in great part directed against
Sokfoiermacker, PI. W. ii. 1 and 184, was the first to recognise the reference to Antisthenes. His opinion is shared by Bran-
macher
b,
Antisthenes
conjecture
Gr.-Rom. Phil. ii. a, 202, f Susemihl, Genet. Entw. d. Plat. Phil. i. 200 Scliwegler and Bonitz on Arist., 1. c., but con
dis,
;
tradicted
by Hermann
(Plat.
which appears to harmonise with the view that Antisthenes was the expounder of HeracliIt is opposed by Brandis, tus. ii. a, 285, f. Nor yet would
venture to attribute to An tisthenes a theory of monads
499, 659) and Stallbaum (De Arg. Theaetet. ii. f). Steinhart (Plat. W. iii. 16, 204, 20) finds that the explanation of know ledge, as here given, corre sponds with the mind of Antis thenes, but refuses notwith standing to deduce it from him.
we
of
connecting
ideas
it
(Susemihl,
202, in
Schleiermacher (as Brand is, ii. 203 Susemihl, pp. 200, 341, remark) has not the slightest right to think the reference is to the Megarians in Theaet.
a,
;
connection with Herma/nn, Ges. Abh. 240). What we know of him does not go beyond the principle, that the simple ele ments of things cannot be defined what he understood by simple elements may be gathered from the example
;
vii.
201, D.
What
is
there stated
of the silver
and the
tin.
CYNIC LOGIC.
men
are
seen,
201)
conception of a
CHAP.
horse or a man. 1
campaign
this position he opened a his fellow pupil, with whom he was against
From
xm.
Simpl. in Categ. Scliol. in 8e 45, says TroAaicDi/ 01 juev avypovv ras TroioVrjras reAews, TO iroibv ffvy-^wpovvrfs eTrat (the terminology of course belongs to the Stoics)
Arist. 66, b,
:
TU>V
The character and position two men was Plato must widely different.
in life of the
have
felt
himself as
much
re
6s
S>
Trore
pelled by the plebeian roughness of a proletarian philosopher as Antisthenes would have been annoyed by the refined
17T7TOJ/ fJ.eV
OpC
which Plato gave the excellent answer True, for you have the eye with which you see a horse, but you are deficient in the eye with which you see the idea of horse.
opw,
to
Ibid. 68, b, 26 AvTia6evr)v KOI TOVS trepl avrbv Ae -yovra?, &v9pcaTrov opca avOpwiroTTjra 5e ot/% 6pw. Quite the
Ibid. 67, b, 18
; :
delicacy of Plato. 3 Compare (besides what is said, p. 292, 2) Plato, Soph. 251, C., and the anecdotes in Dioy. iii. 35, vi. 7 also the corre sponding ones about Plato and Diogenes, which are partially 40 54 58 ; fictions, in vi. 25 Julian, V. H. xiv. 33; Theo.
; ;
;
the
same
Diog. story of
vi.
Diogenes and
story compare Diog. 40, Plato, Polit. 266, B. ; Gottling, For the Cynical attack 264. p.
in
on
and
Kvador-rjs
instead of
in Porph.
Am<r0eV7?s
o.vQp(air6 rt]s.
Ammon.
says
:
Isag.
22, b,
I\e7e ra yeVrj Kal TO. e^STj ev (l\cus firivoicus tlvai, and then
he
mentions
a.v&po}Tr6rt]s
tTTTroVTjs
as examples.
language, almost word, is found in Tzetz. Chil. Plato is no doubt vii. 605, f.
referring to this assertion of Antisthenes, when in the Parm. 132, B., he quotes an objection to the theory of ideas,
Plato in his SaQwv, see Diog. iii. 35, vi. 16; Athen. v. 220, d, A trace of Ant sxi. 507, a. thenes polemic against the doctrine of ideas is found in the Euthydemus of Plato, 301, A. Plato there meets the as sertion of the Sophist that the beautiful is only beautiful by the presence of beauty, by say e av oiiv TrapayfU-rirai ffot ing
:
fiovs, )8oCs
el, /cal
on
vvv tyca
el;
croi
napeifu Aiovv(r6Suipus
We may
-rS>v
rovr<av
i/OTjjUa
i<al
suppose that Antisthenes really made use of the illustration of the ox, to which Plato then replied by making use of the
only natural that Antisthenes should have at tached the greatest importance to enquiries respecting
it is
names.
Stopping at names and refusing to allow further utterances respecting things, he in truth any
1
made
all scientific
enquiry impossible.
This fact he
partially admitted,
conclusion that
self.
2
Taken
same
of
illustration in the person Steinhart Dionysodorus. (Plato s Leben, 14, 266) con siders the spurious. He will not credit Antisthenes with such a scurrilous produc
2c0a>i/
eiret poTO
on
/J.^
eariv avn-
\eyeiv rovs
/J.GV
yap avTiXtyovras
TWOS
8vva<r6ai
povs TOVS \6yovs fyepeffdai Ttf eVa T\)V oiKeiov eKdffTOv eTvot eVa yap
eli/ai /cal T^J/ \eyovra irepl avrov \tyeiv /j.6vov Siffre et /iei/ Trept rov irpdy^aros rov avrov avra Aeyoiej/, ra \4yoifv
tion.
ej/bs
Antisth. in Epict. Diss. i. 17, 12: apx^l iraififvo~e(as j\ r&v ovoiudruv firiffK^is. It is a pity that we do not know more accu rately the sense and the con nection of this saying. As it
1
"av
aAATjAois
(eT?
yap
Trepi
tvbs
is, we cannot judge whether it required an individual enquiry into the most import ant names, or only a general enquiry into nature and the meaning of names, which the principles contained in the above should the develope. Respecting theory that Antisthenes held to the etymologies of Heracli-
avrovs
later
Trept
Gesch. d. Log.
sK.a(TTq>
Arist. Metaph. v. 29 see 296, 1 104, b, 20 Top. i. 11 OVK tffriv avri\yiv, Kaflcforep
; ; ;
:
a>s
Et yap ^.ejitrrjcrai, ec^r;, J) Kr fjffnnrf. Kal apri eTreo ei^a/.i.ev jU7]5ei a \tyov-
e(pi7
AyTirt-flej/Tjs,
which Alex.
ra us OVK
(pdvrj
fffri.
rb yap
v
ov
(Schol. in Arist. 732, a, 30; similarly as the passage in the topics, Ibid. 259, b, 13) thus explains $ero 8e 6 AvrurOeviis
:
Xfywv.
TLdrfpov ovv
rov avrov
\4-
\6yov
yovres,
r)
a/j.(p6repoi
juei/
ourco
;
Uv
STJTTOU
(Kaffrov
oiKeici)
ruv ovruw
.
\fyeo~6ai.
ry
ravra
6rav
Xeyoifjici
SviVfjfj&pei.
e<^>77,
AAA
\6yq>
\6yov
/z7]5eVepos,
TrpdyfJiaros
CYNIC MORALS.
not only that drawn by Aristotle that no false propositions, but also that no propositions of
iriises
is
]
CHAP.
XIII.
any kind are possible. The doctrine of Antisthenes was logically destructive of all knowledge and every
kind of judgment.
Not that the Cynics were themselves disposed to renounce knowledge in consequence. Four books came from the pen of Antisthenes, respecting the difference between knowledge and opinion. 2 Indeed,
the whole School prided itself in no small degree on having advanced beyond the deceptive sphere of
3
C.
Theory
of
Mora /x.
Good and
e cil
opinions,
av
&j/
;
and
being
in
full
1
possession
See
p.
:
of truth.
^ ovrw 76 rb Ttapdj
296,
1,
Prod
yap,
in
ue/Ai/7jjU.fVos
eft]
;
ouSerepos
r\u.<av
rov Kcu
Crat. 37
Seli/
AvTHrQevys t\cyev
iras
^
rl
avTiXeyeiv
(prjcri,
rovro
6ra.v
ffv
ffvj/(afj.o\6yfi.
eyk Xeyw
oi>5e
juei/
\6yos a\T)6evfi
yap Xeywv
t>v
5e
/Ltrj
\eyeis rb Trapdirav b
\tyovri Trias kv avriXtyoi; Plato probably had Antisthenes in his eye, although this line of argument had not
5e
\4ywv r
6 Se rl \4ytav rb AeAe^et 6 Se rb bv Xeyoov a\rjdevet. yet Conf. Plato, Crat. 429, D. 2 Uepl 86r)s Kal eTrto-Trj^rjs, Doubtless this trea Diog. 17.
tise
3
originated with
Zeller,
1.
him.
Conf.
ix.
c. i.
905,
and Diog.
53
given
8>o~re
06^5
/J.ev Kara<ppove?v,
Trpbs
fffTiv
avriXeyeiv,
ovros (Prota
aArjfleicu/
TrapopfjiSv.
goras) Ttpooros SietAe/crai Kara UXaTtav eV Eu0u5^juy (286, Here, too, belongs the c). saying of Antisthenes in Stob. Flor. 82, 8, that contradiction ought never to be used, but
<pr)(ri
der,
Cynic
viii.
^liritiv
ru>v
Menanthe same
elvai irav
ecpr),
and
6
Sext. Math,
MOVI/JLOS
KVUV
rv<pov
ra
4o~rl
Conf.
persuasion. will not be brought to his senses by another s raving. Contradiction is madness; for
only
A madman
M. Aurel.
kavr.
5rj\a
ii.
jjikv
15
8n
irav uTroATjif/ts
yap ra
\fy6-
Movi/jiov
peva.
On this ground
the later
he who contradicts, does what is in tHe nature of things impos sible. Of this subject the
^
Trepl
Sceptics wished to reckon Mo nimus one of themselves, but wrongly so. What he says has
With them, however, knowledge is directed entirely making men virtuous, and
As the highest object in the Cynics, herein agreeing with all other moral
1
philosophers, regarded happiness. Happiness being in general distinguished from virtue, or, at least, not
united
to
virtue,
they regard
is
the
two
as
abso
lutely identical.
an
evil
is
but vice
for
Nothing what is
;
other
man
indifferent. 3
common
what
it
aya6bv
avfipuv Kai jStorav
[t-ovov
p&raTO KOI
Diog.
irpbs
ii.
aurdp/CTj
TT\V
dpe-
T)]V
eu8at/x.oj/iaf,
so
that
end,
Stob.
and
Eel.
Diog.
avroiis
/col
vi.
104
re Xos
ape-TV
r<
&V ws
:
Af
Ti<r0eV?7s
(fsrjalv
eV
Hpa/cAe?,
Kaitias
6/J.oia)S
TO?S (Tron/coTs.
Ibid. 105
Kai
6fji.oici)s
ra 8e
afiidcpopa T&5 Xco.
TTovypa
v6p.i^
iravra
^eviita.
Compare
Dio
Plato,
Symp.
oJ.fj.ai
20,5,
E.
ou 7ap rb eaurcoi/,
enaffToi
Api<rTa>j/t
des, in Diog. vi. 12 says of An tisthenes Tayada Ka\a ra KUKO. Epipli. Exp. Fid. 1089, alffxpd. C [Diogenes] rb o.ya.Q bv
: :
e</>7j(T6
Kaxbv
Charm.
olarbv
TO,
TOt/ceToi/
Travrl
ffo<$>
elj/at,
y &\\a
Trdvra ouSej/
rj
<^>\uap/as
Whether the epi gram of Athen. in Diog. vi. 14, refers to the Cynics or the Stoics is not quite clear.
irjrdpxfw.
S>
only the useful and good is oiKeiov. Although Antisthenes is not here mentioned by name, yet the passage in Diogenes makes it probable that the
antithesis of ayaObv and ot/ceToj/ belongs to him, even if he was not the first to introduce it.
CYNIC MORALS.
thing which belongs to man is mind. Everything else is a matter of chance. Only in his mental and
1
303
CHAP.
XIII.
is he independent. Intelligence and constitute the only armour from which all the virtue attacks of fortune recoil ; 2 that man only is free who
moral powers
is
3 things without.
to
may learn to despise, in order to content himself with virtue alone. 5 For
Compare p. 293, 6 Xen. Symp. 4, 34, puts words to the same effect in the mouth of
1
;
Ekl.
r)]v
ii.
348
Aioyevr)s e^Tj
6pav
Ae-
Antisthenes
r})v
vo^ ifa,
S>
avSpes,
/cat
Svva/j.at
oi/K eV rq dtKcti robs TT\OVTOV KOU TTJV irtviav X* lv oAA eV rats tyvxcus this is then
ais6p<>Trovs
,
&a\tiv
KVVO.
is
Xvaayrripa..
further expanded
Diss.
iii.
24, 68,
applied by David, Schol. in Arist. 23, to Antis Conf. Stob. Floril. thenes.)
108, 71.
3
same verse
(The
This
of
iii.
is
what
:
<?
Diogenes
in ov
says
Diss.
Aeuo-a,
himself
24, 67
Epiet.
<pi\oi,
Ai>-
(p fl/Ar),
T^TTOJ,
Siarpifiii,
iravra
ravra
;
6ri
aAAoVpta.
ffbv
ovv
rr\v
-ri
xprjffis
e8i|e ftot avavdyxaa Toi K.T.\. We have, however, certainly not got the very words of Diogenes or Antisthenes. 2 Diog. 12 (teaching of An
i
and he also asserts in Diog. 71 that he led the life of Hercules, /xrjSei/ e\eu0epioy Crates in Clem. irpoKpivuv. Strom, ii. 413, A. (Theod. Cur. Gr. Aff. xii. 49, p. 172) praises
a the Cynics
Kal
:
tisthenes)
<j>p6vri<Tiv
avcHpaiperov
aQavarov
fjL-fire
fiacrihfiav
e\evdepiav
ykp
Karap piiv
is
ayairuffiv,
fj-rirf
TrpoSiSofT^ot.
The same
and he exhorts
little
his Hipparchia
tfdei
Kparei tyvxris
ovff
VTT})
aya\-
e po>T7j0e!s
ri
avrq irepiyeyovev
tfpfl
tic
xpvffioav
(pL\o<ro(plas,
ei
Kal
/zrjSei/
&\\o,
4
rb yovv irpbs
i
iraffav
and 105
:.}04
CHAP
XIII.
talk of fools, about which no child of reason will trouble himself ? For in truth
?
The
amongst men
a good, since
is
an
it
what we think. Honour despised by them is us back from vain attempts. keeps
evil.
To be
who
seeks it not. 4
;
What
TT\OVTOV
vovan.
i.
Kal
24, 6.
1
Epict. Diss.
i.
24, 6
(A<o-
7ej/rjs) Xeyei,
on
eu5oia ( Winck-
4, 35; 30; 10, Diog. in Diog. 47; 50; 60; Exhort, c. 7, i. 10, K. Galen. Metrocles in Diog. 95 Crates in Stob. 97, 27; 15, 10; the same in Julian, Or, vi. 199, D. 2 Stob. Floril. 93, 35 Aio7e;
:
elmann,
p.
VTJS
fji-hre
Crates therefore disposed of his property, and is said to have settled that it should only be restored to his children when they ceased to be philo sophers (Diog. 88, on the autho
vQai.
/ue xpt
TOUl
fyiXoffotytiv,
H*XP
efvai
^-
ffTpaT-rjyol
c.
bvi}-
Compare
also 93.
2,
Doxo-
Magnes). Unfortunately, however, Crates can at that time have neither had a wife nor children.
rity
3
of
Demetrius
pater in Aphthon.
Rhet, Gr. i. 192, says that Diogenes, in answer to the question, How is honour to be gained ? re
Diog. 104;
;
Floril. 95, 11
19.
CYNIC MORALS.
is
306
1
death
is
an
evil,
For only what is bad and death we do not experience to be an since we have no further experience when we are
?
XIII.
evil
dead. 2
All these things are then only empty fancies, 3 Wisdom consists in holding one s nothing more.
4 thoughts free from them. the most harmful thing is
Pleasure the Cynics not only deny to be pleasure. 8 a good, but they declare it to be the greatest evil
;
and a saying is preserved of Antisthenes, that he would rather be mad than pleased. 6 Where the desire of pleasure becomes unbridled passion, as in love,
Epict. 1. C. Ae 76i, on 6 Odvaros OVK eirre KUKOV, oi5e yap alSee p. 302, 3. ffxpov. * 68. Dioy. Diogenes in Conf. die. Tusc. i. 43, 104.
1
of
fjooval were the measure happiness, a happy man could not be found, 6 Diog. vi. 3 eAe7e re
ov<rai
<rvve-
X
xi.
/uoi/eiT]?/
Evidently the Cynic here is not thinking of immortality, nor does it follow from the re mark of Antisthenes on II. xxiii. 15 (Schol. Venet. in Winckelmann-, p, 28) to the effect that the souls have the same forms as their bodies. 3 Or as the Cynics techni
cally
rv(pos.
741
y
[^
7)80
>$7
So|aCeTOi]
call
KaKbv vir AvTiffdevovs. The same in Gcll. ix. 5, 3 Clemens. Stromat. ii. 412, D. ; Ens. Pr. Ev, xv. 13, 7 (Theod. Cur. Gr. Aff. xii. 47, p. 172). Conf. Diog. vi. Plato is 8, 14, and p. 258, 4. no doubt referring to this Cynical dictum, Phileb. 44, C. \iav fjL/j.iariK6rwv rfyv TTJS riSovrjs
;
and
4
p. 301, 3.
8vvafj.ii
Kal
vfi/o/jLiKorcav
ovSev
CCUTTJS
Clement. Strom, ii. 417, B. (Theod. Cur. Gr. Aff. xi. 8, p, Avriffdevrjs fj.fv T^V arv152)
:
vyits,
&<TT
rb eVay&rybj/
ctvcu,
ov% rjSovty
1,
and
:
Arist. Eth. x.
8
1172,
yoovriv
KO/j.iSp
a,
27
ot p.tv
yap rayaGbv
e| fvavrias
Aeyoutrtj/, ot
</)aOAo/.
Floril. 98, 72
by the considera
TO?S
tion, that the human life from beginning to end brings far more unhappiness than plea
Ib. vii. 12, 1152, b, 8: fjikv ovv ooKf? ow5e,ufa T)8ovT] flvai ayadbv oi/re /co0 avrb of/76
ov
yap
elvai
rjoovfjy.
Com
sure
if
pare p. 296.
where
man
there no
means can be too violent to eradicate Conversely, what most men fear, labour and
toil,
are good, because they only bring man to that 2 Hercules 3 state, in which he can be independent.
therefore
4
is
Cynic, no one else having fought his way through so arduous and toilsome a life for the good of mankind,
courage and vigour. In support of this view, Antisthenes appears to have argued that plea 5 On this sure is nothing but the pause after pain.
with so
much
Clemens,
1.
c.
406, C.
5e
cnroSe xo/iCU
rbv
,
rV
A^poSiTTji
\eyovra,
et
Kav
tin
Kararo^evo-aifJii,
Aaj8ot/xt
KaKlav ovres
vi.
Qriffi ot KO.KdSaiiJ.oves
<pu(re&>s
^s tfrrovs
6ebv
rfyv
v6ffov KaXovffiv.
86
;
if they are to come to any good, ought to be educated by abstemiousness, as early as they are susceptible of culture. 3 Who had also a temple near Cynosarges. 4 Antisthenes speaks of two Herculeses, Diog. 2, 18. Winekelmann, p. 15. Diogenes says of himself in Diog. 71 rbv avrbv %apa/CT7)pa rov filov 5tea:
ye.iv
tivirep
Kai
Hpa/cAfJs,
/urjSej/
et
5e
/A)J,
Antisthenes
dvvr)
HpaK\e<ariK6s
;
ns
On
67 Stob. also Diog. vi. 38 ; 51 Floril. 64, 1; 6, 2 18, 27; ^ Diog. 66 rovs /uej/ oiKeras rots 5eff7r6rais. rovs Se
:
e(f>r]
<f>av\ovs
rb (j}p6v-n/j.a and in JAicia?i, V. Auct. 8, Diogenes replies to the query as to whom he was imitating rbv Hpa/cAea, at the same time showing his stick for a club, and his philosopher s cloak for a lion s skin, with
dv^ip
:
rats
2
eTTidv/jiiais
SovXeveiv.
See p.
303, 3.
Diog. vi. 2, says of Anti sthenes /cat tin o ir6vos ctyadbv ia rov ^.eyoiXov Hpa(rvveo~r T)ffe K\eovs Kai rov Kvpov. Diogenes Exc. e Floril. Jo. says in Damasc. ii. 13, 87 {Stob. Floril. ed. Mein. iv. 200) that boys,
:
(rrparevofjiai 5e
&<nrep
. .
eKetvos
eir\
ras
fiiov
Tjfiovas
eKKa.Qa.pai
. .
rbv
Trpoaipov/Jievos,
ei/J.i
ra>v
e\evde-
pcorr^s
rwv
TraQ&v.
CYNIC MORALS.
supposition
it will
307
CHAP.
XIII.
own
;
51, A.
of people, as
ra
for
ol
they
eli/ai
maintain
iraffas
AUTTCOJ/
ram-ay
vvv
airotyvyas
as
without including pleasure If thereunder. the further is raised, that the objection opponents of pleasure here referred to, hate (according to Phil. 46, A) ras TUV riSovas, whereas the Cynics al
o.rT-)(T]\jL^v<av
ffiv.
out
Wendt
Cyren.
17,
1)
applies it to philosophers who declare freedom from pain to be the highest good. Grote, Plato, ii. 609, thinks of the
lowed no difference between things seemly and unseemly, this rests on a misapprehen
sion
;
for the
are,
f]$ovai
ra>v
o.crx n-
lj.6vvv
as
the
context
Pythagoreans, from whom he imagines Speusippus derived his theory of pleasure. Only no philosophers of Plato s age are known to us who made freedom from pain the highest good. As to the Pythagoreans,
we know
of
their asceticism,
ponents of pleasure, not because of their unseemliness, but be cause they are always combined with unhappiness. Nor can we assert that Plato would not have spoken of Antisthenes with so much consideration as he here does (44, C.). If he at one time of life replied to his sallies with appropriate
severity (see p. 292, 2 299, 3), it does not follow that after the lapse of years, and in respect of a question on which their
;
On the rejecting pleasure. other hand we know that Anti sthenes did reject pleasure. The probability is, therefore, that Plato in writing this pas sage had Antisthenes in his
That the expression ra Trept fyvffiv is no obstacle to this view, has been already the ex indicated, p. 294, 4 pression not referring to phy sical research, but to the prac tical enquiry as to what is con formable to nature, to which Antisthenes wanted to go back
eye.
Sew/ol
;
views more nearly approxi mated, he could not express himself more gently and apYet even here preciatingly. he will not allow to him the properly scientific capacity, the
1
ols
rov-
Oy/c, aA/V
/j.dvTeffi
TIVI,
uctJ-TUJ,u.eVoiS
ov
08
CHAP.
Pleasure which is not followed by to be legitimate. 2 or more accurately, pleasure resulting from remorse, labour and effort, 3 is said to have been called a good,
even by Antisthenes.
In Stobseus, 4 Diogenes recom mends justice as the most useful and at the same time as the most pleasant thing, because it alone affords
peace of mind, protects from trouble and sickness, and even secures bodily enjoyments. He also asserts, 5 that happiness consists in that true joy which can
only be obtained by an unruffled cheerfulness of mind~ Moreover, the Cynics when wishing to set forth the
advantages of their philosophy, did not fail to follow in the steps of Socrates, by asserting that life with
them was
far
with other men, that their abstemiousness gave the/ right flavour to enjoyment, and that mental delights
aAAa
crews
1
TIVI
OVK
Ari-st.
aycvvovs,
6.
<pv-
At/ten. xii.
51
;>,
a:
Avrt-
crfleVrjs
5e TTJV ySovriv
a.ya,Q\)i>
See p. 305,
Eth.
:
x.
Some
7re7ret<r-
a mistake
ol juep
,
*<r&>s
tya.aK<av, irpocreOriKe ryv ATJTOJ/, but we require to know the context in which Aiitisthenes uttered this.
65
TT^V rjfiovrjv
/j.^]
TWV
peireiv
(pav-
SicoKTeov,
ir6v(av.
4
Trpb
T&V
A.WJ
/cal el
fffriv
yap
TOVS iroAAous irpbs avTrjv Kal SowAeuetf ra?s r/5oi/aTs, Sib 5e?i/ ds
Tovi/avriov
ayeiv
e Afleij/
rb [j.4o~ov.
D wy. vi. 35
yap &v
:
virep
\cye (AioyeVTjs) rovs Kal yap eKeivovs T 6vov eVStSJra: eVeKa rov Tois
Trpoo"f)Koi/ros
Floril. 9, 49 24, 14, where probably the Cynic Diogenesis alluded to. It is, however, a question whether the wordsare taken from a genuine writing of his. 5 Ibid. 103,20; 21.
v6vov.
CYNIC MORALS.
afforded a far higher pleasure than sensual ones. Still all that this language proves is, that their theory was imperfectly developed, and that their mode of
1
<
309
HAP.
XIII.
expression was inaccurate, their meaning being that 2 pleasure as such ought in no case to be an end, and
>that
when
it is
Thus in Xen. Symp. 4, 34, where the description appears on the whole to be true, Anti1
sthenes demonstrates that in his poverty he was the happiest of men. Food, drink, and he better sleep enjoyed -clothes he did not need and from all these things he had
;
Diogenes (in Auct. 9), blesses him for being happier than the Persian king. See Dioy.
3,
p. 499), like
Liiciati, V.
self
44, 78.
2 As Hitter, ii. 121, has re marked, the difference between the teaching of Antisthenes
.so
more enjoyment than he liked little did he need that he was never embarrassed to think
;
and that
of Aristippus might.
:
how he
he
bad plenty
of leisure to asso
ciate with Socrates, and if he wanted a pleasant day, there was no need to purchase the requisite materials in the mar
be thus expressed Aristippus considered the result of the emotion of the soul to be the good Antisthenes considered the emotion itself to be the
;
end, and the value of the action to consist in the doing of it. Bitter, however, asks
but he had them ready in Diogenes in Diog. 71, speaks in a similar strain .(not to mention Dio Chrys. Qr. Ti. 12 33) he who lias learned
ket,
with
justice
whether
Anti
the soul.
to despise pleasure, finds there in his highest pleasure and in Pint. De Exil. 12, p. 605, he
;
congratulates himself on not having, like Aristotle, to wait or for Philip for breakfast
;
imputed to him. And same way it will be found that Aristippus never regarded pleasure as a state of rest, but as a state of motion The contrary is for the soul. not established by what Her mann, Ges. Abh. 237, f. al
tinctly in the
for Alexander (JDiog. 45) to the virtuous man .according to Diogenes (Plut.
like
:
Ca llisthenes
Hermann proves, it is leges. true, that Antisthenes con sidered the good to be virtu
ous activity, and that Aristip pus took it to be pleasure, but he does not prove that Anti sthenes and Aristippus spoke in explicit terms of the rest and the motion of the soul.
Tranq. An. 20, p. 477) every day a festival. In like manner Plut. Tranquil. An. 4, says that Crates passed his life in jesting and joking, like one perpetual and Metrocles (in festival;
is
it
From these considerations followed the conclusion, that everything else excepting virtue and vice is in different for us, and that we in turn ought to be
indifferent
thereto.
no
one, troubling themselves about nothing only such as these offer no exposed places to fortune, and can
therefore be free and happy. 1 As yet, here are only the negative conditions of What is the positive side correspondinghappiness. thereto ? Virtue alone bringing happiness, and the
Virtue, replies Antisthenes, herein following Socrates and Euclid, consists in wisdom or prudence 2 and Reason is the only
consist ?
;
Diog. in Stob. Floril. 86, 10 (89, 4), says the noblest men are ol Karatypovovvrts TrAourov 56^r]s rjSovris C&TJS, roav Se
1
sophy was
rb /r^Serbs
fvavriuv virepdvca
ovres,
irevias
Diog.
4vyvei
/cat
-yaptiv
p.^
Kal
(J.)]
re %o?vt| /cat Antis. in off-ris 5e Stol. Floril. 8, 14 5e 5oi/ce SovAos wv \4\Tjdev Diogenes in Dioy. 75 SouAou rb ^OjSeTfT^at. See pp. 305, 4. 302, 2 303, 2 and 3 2 This follows from Diog. 13
Btpfjuav
jueAct?.
yras
tye iv
7roAiTeueo-0ai,
Kal rovs
iraiSoTpo-
Kal
/urj
avrwv avaXwrois \oyiwe connect with it his maxims about the oneness and the teachableness of virtue, and his doctrine of the wise
ev
roTs
o/j-ols,
if
Crates,
Ibid.
86,
says
that
man.
CYNIC VIRTUE.
1 Hence, as his thing which gives a value to life. teacher had done before him, he concludes that virtue 2 is one and indivisible, that the same moral problem
311
CHAP.
XIII.
is
is
3 presented to every class of men, and that virtue 4 He further maintains that the result of teaching.
virtue
is
an inalienable possession
for
what
is
once
thus bridges 6 over a gulf in the teaching of Socrates by a system in which Sophistical views 7 contributed no less than
practical interests to
He
make
Wherein, however,
Se
attri
Trepl
buted to Antisthenes in Pint. Sto. Rep. 14, 7, p. 1040, and to Diogenes in Diog. 24 els
:
ras epiSa?
The
Se
TOI>
fiiov
\6yov 77 TrapeffKevd0~6ai 8p6%ov. Also Diog. 3. 2 Schol. Lips, on II. 0. 123 Avri(WincJtelmann, p. 28) ffdevns (p-no-lv, as et irpdrrei 6
Se"tv
:
does not prove that the first of these statements belongs to a different school from that to which the second belongs. 5 Diog. 12 avafyaipfrov 6ir\ov Xen. Mem. i. 2, 19 fj aperi}.
:
<ro(pbs
tcrciis
ovv
e^TTOtet/
&i/
iroAAol
rcav
<pa<TK6vTU>v
(^lAofTo^eTi/,
ClSt/COS
on
OVK
des
4
T]
CCUTT/
aV 7TOT6 6 SlKCUOS
76J/OITO,
Diog. 10
5
j/
SiSa/crV
aTreSef/cj/ue
>v
fj.dQr]cris
ecmj/, 6
TT}v apeTTjv.
105
avrois Kal
e7j/ai,
KaOa
Kal ava-
is
insuperable.
7
ev
T$ HpaK\fi,
U7rapx etj/
Without
Isocr.
The maxim that you cannot forget what you know is only
Hel. i. 1 is also to Antisthenes. Isocrates quotes the passages just given, with the sentence of Antisthenes which was dis
maxim
the converse: of the Sophistic that you cannot learn what you do not know.
8 It is only independent of external circumstances, when it cannot be lost for since the wise and virtuous man will never, as long as he continues wise and virtuous, forego his
:
cussed p. 300, 2, added /caraytynpaKaffiv ol fj.lv ov ^atr/coj/res oiov T clvat \l/ev5ri Xeyeiv
:
oi>8
avTi\4yU
ws
of
Se
wisdom and
virtue,
and
since,
Kal ^ucret
.ia
12
CHAP. XIII
this, as
If,
said to consist in unlearning what is bad/ neither does this negative expression lead a single step
further.
So much only is clear, that the prudence of Antisthenes and his School invariably coincides with a right state of will, of firmness, of self-control and
of uprightness, 4 thus bringing us back to the Socratic doctrine of the oneness of virtue and know
ledge.
Hence by learning
virtue,
they understood
research. 5
intellectual
follows
that
rb
f<j>-r),
/ca/ca
o.Tro/j.adeiv.
The
same is found in Exc. e Floril. Joan. Damasc. ii. 13, 34 (Stok. Floril. ed. Mein. iv. 193).
4
Plato,
Rep.
7*
r/8oj/7j
vi.
505,
B.
Compare
3.
pp. 292, 1
303, 2
oAAa
|U,V T($5e
otffda,
on
TO?S
and
5
psv -noXXols
ffis
.
. .
.
5o/ceT
flvai
rb to
ot
Here
it
may
:
suffice to call
<pp6i>rj-
6n
76,
d>
<uA.e,
p.
in
rovro
rjyovftevoi OVK ^%ovffi 5eT|at aAA. avayKa^ovTCU tfris re\VTU>VTfs rov rty ayadov If the Cynics are not fyavai.
<pp6vr)<ris,
Sirryv 8
fJikv
e\eyev ^v^i-
Kyv,
.
rr]v
.
5e
ffwfj.a.TUt fiJ
ravri]v
?5
ffvv
\_
^X^-}
yivfyfifM
Trpbs
[o<]
them.
2
3
1. c.
<pa.VTa.aiai
ei>\vcriav
ra
rrjs
apeTTjs
8,
Diog.
:
llias
(
.
Aj/Tjorfle
.
virb
epya Trape^ovrof flvai 5 are\ri r^v erepav rys erepas TraperiOero 5e reK^pia rov
%&>pts
.
. .
rov
or i
effoiro,
ffprf
<\>tvKra
fl86rwv.
Ibid.
tyuTtiOels
ri
r&v
padrjudrcav
avayitadrarov,
paSiws airb rr)S yv/j.vao~ias ev rrj apery Karaylveff6ai (to be at home in); for in every art practice makes perfect; 71: oySeV 76 rb Trapdirav fv r$ Pica /j.r)v e\yt
313
CHAP.
was produced by exercise or instruction, they would have replied, that practice was the best instruction.
has attained to virtue by the help of the (2) Wis dom at Cynic teaching, is a wise man. Everyone else is Folly. lacking in wisdom. To tell the advantages of the
"
He who
one, and the misery of the other, no words are too The wise man never suffers strong for the Cynics.
things are his. He is at home every where, and can accommodate himself to any circum Faultless and love-inspiring, fortune cannot stances.
want, for
all
touch him. 2
the Grods.
An image of the divinity, he lives with His whole life is a festival, and the Gods,
3
whose friend he
reverse
is
Most
The is, bestow on him everything. case with the great bulk of mankind. the of them are mentally crippled, slaves of fancy,
severed only by a ringer s breadth from madness. To find a real man, you must look for him with a
lantern in broad daylight.
Xtapis tier KT)ff seas KaropOavcrOai, 5uvarr]v 5e Tavrriv irav e/cviKrjcrat. 1 Plato, Meno, init.
2
t/coVTes
rj
&KOVTes
ou5ei>
Dioff.
ffo(j)6v
11
avrdpirr)
tlvai
Diogenes (in Diog. 89) allows that no one is free from faults. perfectly
\tyovffiv.
3 Diogenes, in Diog. 51 ayaOovs &v8pas Qewv i/coVas Ibid. 37, 72 TUV Qt&v
: :
Yet
rov
?j/ot
Trdvra
#AAa>j/.
TO rtav
|ej/oj/
rovs
efi/at.
(according
<ro(j)$
to
Diocles)
ov$
eVri
TO?S
ouSej/
airopov.
:
irAvra.
fy iXoi
5e
Se
01
cro(pol
aiepa<TTOS
6 aya66s.
fyiXov
Ibid. 105
Ojitoiy,
6eo7s
Koiva
TO T&V
<$>i\<av.
Travr
ital
r$
rvx"n
T
2.
fjLr)5tv
finTpTrfiv.
See
p. 303,
The passage in
vii. 14,
Arist. Eth.
:
1053, b, 19, probably .also refers to the Cynics of 5e v Kal rbv SV(TTVnrTovTa euirfpiir Saipova (pdffKovres elvaL, edv ?T
N.
&pa etTTt ran/ ffotyuv. Diog. in Pint. Tran. An. 20 avfy dyaObs ov Traaav Exc. e Floril. eoprriv ^etTot Joan. Damasc. ii. 13, 76 AnnaQtvi}? e po>T7?0els VTTO TWOS T/ 5t5aei TOJ/ ifbf, e?7rej/ ei /uet Oeots
t]/j.fpai>
;
^iaA,Aei avfj.$iovv,
el
<pi\6<ro>pov,
Se
dvOpcairois, p-fjropa.
Accordingly
all
man
classes.
Innumerable fools
stand opposite to a small number of wise men. Only a very few are happy through prudence and virtue. All the rest live in misfortune and folly,
all
ceived
Following out these principles, the Cynics con it to be their special mission to set an example
themselves of strict morality, of abstemiousness, of the independence of the wise man, and also to exercise
a beneficial and strengthening influence on others. To this mission they devoted themselves with extra
ordinary self-denial, not,
into such extravagances and absurdities, such offensive coarseness, utter shamelessness, overbearing self-con
and empty boasting, that it is hard to say whether their strength of mind rather calls for ad and miration, or their eccentricities for ridicule
ceit,
;
1
Diofj.
(Aio*yeV?7s)
TV<p\ovs,
33
ou
avair-hpovs
aAAa
Ibid.
TOVS robs
iriipa.v.
35
TOVS
TrAet-
ffTOvs
<r8ai.
aVT\
TOV
TpiaaOXiovs.
men
Trapct TTJV
avoiav Ka/co5cujuo-
Stob.
vi.
vovffi.
Ibid.
Hvdict
elTrev,
33
VIKOJ
irfis
TOV
80)
6 rvtyos ticnrep
TTOL/J.TIV
ov
elirovra
jj.ey
foSpas.
ffv
tyw
av-
ovv,
&v8pas,
:
8pd.Tro?a.
Ibid. 27
men
&yei.
Com
he
CYNIC SELF-RENUNCIATION.
whether they rather command esteem, or
commiseration.
it possible for
315-
dislike, or
CHAP.
make
to one
common
(1) Self-
ciency of virtue. ception of this principle, the Cynics were not content with a mere inward independence of the enjoyments
Ii
and wants of
life. Their aim, they thought, could be reached by entirely renouncing all enjoyment, only by limiting their wants to what is absolutely indis
pensable, by deadening
their
feelings
to
outward
impressions, and by cultivating indifference to all The Socratic inde that is not in their own power. of wants 2 became with them a renunciation pendence
of the world. 3
See p. 302.
.
According to Diog. vi. 105, conf Lucian, Cyn. 12, Diogenes repeated the language
guise, the staff and scrip nor is the truth of his account im-
pugned by
that
p.
is
was
Diodorus
beginning of his Cynic career, refused to look for a runaway he could do slave, because without his slave as well as the slave could do without him. Diog. 55 Stob. Floril. 62, Ibid. 97, 31, p. 215 Mein. 47.
;
3
-
genes,
5
statement is not very accurate, both Antisthenes and Diogenes being older than Diodorus. Nevertheless, in Diog. 22, Diogenes is described with great probability as the originator of the full mendicant garb, and he is also said to have been the first to gain his living by 46 49 ; begging. Diog. 38 Teles, in Stob. Flor. v. 67 ; Hieron. adv. Jovin. ii. 207. His followers Crates (see the
; ;
.
parchia.
According
verses in Diog. 85 and 90) and Monimus (Diog. 82) adopted the same course.
Possessing no houses of their own, they passed the day in the streets, or in other public places ; the
nights they
spent
in
porticoes,
or
wherever
else
chance might guide them. 1 Furniture they did not need. 2 A bed seemed superfluous. 3 The simple
Greek dress was by them made still simpler, and they were content with the tribon 4 of Socrates, the ordi 5 nary dress of the lower orders, without any under-.
1
67, 20, p. 4, Mein. says is that they spent day and night in the open porticoes. In south ern countries they even now often spend the night in a
portico.
2 The story that Diogenes threw away his cup, when he had seen a boy drinking with the hollow of his hand, is well known. Diog. 37 Pint. Prof,
;
and
p.
215 Mein. Hieron. Lucian, V. Auct. 9. Diogenes for a time took up his abode in a tub which stood in the en trance-court of Metroon, at Athens, as had been done by homeless folk before. Diog. 23 43 105 Sen. Ep. 90, 14. But it cannot have been, as Juvenal, xiv. 208, and Lucian, Consc. His. 3, represent it, that he spent his whole life there without any other home, even carrying his tub about with him, as a snail does its shell. Compare SteinJiart, 1. c. p. 302
;
;
reported to have trampled on Plato s costly carpets with the words, TTO-TU f})v HXaruvos rvQov, to which Plato replied,
erepyye
26.
3
Tv<$><t>,
Aioytves.
Diog.
Antisthenes in Xen. Symp. boasts that he slept ad mirably on the simplest bed. And the fragment in Dcmetr. de Elocut. 249 (Winckelmann,
4, 38,
p. 52),
belongs here.
As far as
i.
24, 7,
Gottling,
Ges.
Abh. 258,
and
distinctly asserts this of Dio genes) and Crates are concern ed, they slept, as a matter of
Equally
Compare
54, 4.
is
the
at
passages
at
and Hip-
parchia lived in a tub. Simpl. in Epict. Enchir. p. 270. All that Musonius in Stob. Floril.
quoted p. 5 That
sal
Athens;
Sparta the
rpifiiav
{Gottling,
CYNIC SELF-RENUNCIATION.
In scantiness of diet they even surpassed the very limited requirements of their fellow coun 2 trymen. It is said that Diogenes tried to do without 3 fire, by eating his meat raw, and he is credited with
1
317
clothing.
CHAP.
flesh included,
saying that everything, without exception, human might be used for purposes of food. 4
Even
in extreme age he refused to depart from his accustomed manner of living, 5 and lest his friends
should expend any unnecessary care on his corpse, he forbad their burying it at all. 6 A life in harmony
Antiquit.
iii.
21, 14),
from
will be seen, that the word did not originally mean something worn out, but a rough dress which rubbed the
which
it
skin
an
If^driov rpifiov
,
t/mTiof
TerptyijUevoj
Floril. 5, 67, means a covering which had grown rough. This was often done by the Antipoor {Hermann, 1. c.)
1
sthenes, however, or Diogenes, according to others, made this dress the dress of his order, allowing the rpi&wv to be doubled for better protection against the cold. Dioq. 6 13 22 76 105. Teles in Floril. 97, 31, p. 215. Mein. The Cynic ladies adopted the This same dress, Diog. 93.
; ; ;
Their ordinary food con bread, tigs, onions, garlic, linseed, but particularly of the dfp/j.01, or beans of some kind. Their drink was cold water. Diog. 105 25 48 85 90; Teles in Stob. Floril. 97, 31 Ibid. p. 215, M. Athen. iv. 156, c Lucian, V. Auct. 9 Dio Chrys. Or. vi. 12 and 21, and Gottling, p. 255. But, in order to prove their freedom, they occasionally allowed a pleasure to themselves and others. Dioq. 55 Aristid. Or. xxv. 560 (Winckelmann,p. 28). 3 Diog. 34 76 Pseudo-Pint. de Esu Cam. i. 6, 995 Dio
sisted of
;
Stol>.
single article of dress was often in the most miserable condition. See the anecdotes about Crates, Diog. 90, and the verses on him, Ibid. 87. Be cause of the self-satisfaction with which Antisthenes ex posed to view the holes in his cloak, Socrates is said to have observed that his vanity peered
In Diofj. 73, this principle is supported by the argument, that everything is in every thing else, even flesh in bread, &c. Diog. refers for this to a tragedy of Thyestes, the writer of which was not Diogenes, but Philiscus. A similar state
which
;
through them.
Diog.
8.
318
CHAP.
_!__
watchword of his School. 2 They never weary of belaud ing the good fortune and the independence which they owe to this freedom from wants. 3 To attain thereto, 4 bodily and mental hardships are made a principle. A Diogenes whose teacher did not appear to treat him
with
sufficient severity, 5 is said to
have undertaken
Even the
scorn
and contempt necessarily incurred by this manner of life were borne by the Cynics with the greatest com52
:
Cic.
Tusc.
i.
43,
104
JElum, V. H.
Floril.
viii.
14
Stob.
is
123, 11.
The same
Mein. and
4
repeated
xi. 194.
1
by
Compare
30.
p.
250,
1,
and
Which Diogenes
also
:
re
axp^TTcav
irovwv
fyvariv
Diogenes training appears to have been described" by Eubulus in the same glow ing terms as that of Cyrus was Exc. e Floril. by Xenophon. Joan. Damasc. ii. 13, 68; 67. Diogenes in Stob. Floril. 7, 18, expresses the view that mental
Diog.
vigour
this
is
subject the expressions of Diogenes in Stol). Floril. 5, Diog. 44; 35; 41 67, the hymn of Crates on
;
Compare on
exercise,
body. 5 Dio
(Stob.
Or.
viii.
Floril.
19);
2 conf.
yTeAeta, and his prayer to the Muses in Julian, Or. vi. 199, in addition to what Pint, de
Diog. 18.
6 According to Diog. 23 34, he was in the habit of rolling in the summer in the burning sand, and in winter of walking barefoot in the snow, and em bracing icy columns. On the other hand, Philemon s words about Crates in Diog. 87, that he went about wrapped up in
;
and Stobceus
summer and
in rags in winter, are probably only a comedian s jest on his beggarly covering.
319
CHAP.
know himself, 3 and the best revenge you can take 4 is to amend your faults. Should life from any reason become insupportable, they reserved to them
to
selves the right, as the Stoics did at a later time, 5 of
securing their freedom by means of suicide. Among external things of which it is necessary to be independent, the Cynics included several matters
(2) Re-
which other
men
life.
man must
others.
by no relations to
1
He must
Antisthenes
:
in
Diog.
7,
?j
3)
(piXcav
Se?
requires
Tepetj/
Siairvpwv sxQp&v.
Aotro.
p.a\Xov 77 t Atflots ns jSaA.He also says in Epict. Diss. iv. 6, 20 (conf Diog. 3) fiaffiXiKbv, KCpe, irpdrreiv fjikv
.
:
3>
4, p.
5
Diog. in Plut. Inimic. Util. 88 and Poet. 4, p. 21. When Antisthenes in his
last illness
became impatient
Diogenes
cv,
KaK&s 8
aitoveiv.
It is said
under his
sufferings,
of Diogenes, Diog. 33, and also of Crates, Diog. 89, that when his body had been ill-
which Antisthenes had not the courage to use. That Diogenes made away with himself is
indeed asserted in several of the accounts to which refer ence has been made, but can not be proved. In JElian, V. H. x. 11, he refuses the con temptuous challenge to put an
those by
2
inflicted.
whom
Tropvas
avy/3Aa-
12
TWV
afjiaprrjiJ-drofv
alffdd-
He
Inim. Util.
end to his sufferings by sui cide for the wise man ought to live. Nevertheless, Metrocles put an end to himself not to mention {Diog. 95),
;
same saying
Prof,
Diogenes in De Adul. 36
in
Virt.
ii.
p.
74
p.
82: rots
mens. Strom,
ii.
412, D.
320
CHAP.
XIII.
(a)
life.
Of
family
might, however, be
satisfied in a far
1 In Dioff. 6, Antisthenes in reply to the question, What good philosophy had done him, answers rb Svvacrdai. eavry 6fjuOut of this came the Xetit. caricature of later Cynicism, described by Lucia n, V. Auct. Yet Diogenes and Crates 10. were anything but haters of their fellow-men.
:
Chrysippus, according to Dioy. projected the same state of things for their ideal
vii. 33, 131,
state.
With
Dioy.
ya/j.-fjo-eu
re \_rbv
yvvai^i.
ffvvi6vra
d^veo-rarcusconjecture ( Wirikelmann, p. 29, according mis to Hermann) appears taken Antisthenes might well
:
The
require evtyveffrarai
irouav,
Trpbs TGICVO-
suited for child-bearing, whilst consider ing anyone good enough for a
women most
becomes an extravagance and a deformity. In Xen. Symp. 4, 38, Antisthenes boasts of his comforts, since he only asso ciates with those fair dames to whom others would have no thing to say. That he did so on principle is stated in Diof/. That he declared adultery 3. permissible, as Clemens. Floril.
v. 18 says, is by no means cer tain. He is even said to have satisfied his lusts in a coarser
plaything. 3 Dioq. 72
*
\eye 5e Kal
KOIVO.S
flvai SetV TO.S yvvcuKa.s, ya.jj.ov IJ.T]5era vofj-ifav, aAXa rbv ireifravra
TT) ireLtfOeiffrt
way, complaining that hunger treated in the same way. Brucker, i. 880,
could not be
Steinhart, p. 305,
p. 275,
ffwelvaL
KOIVOVS Se
and
Gfottlinff,
rovro /cat rovs vleas. The correctness of this is supported by the fact that Zeno and
8ia
doubt the truth of these and similar stories. Without vouching for their accuracy, it
.",21
CHAP.
XIII.
an opportunity
readily understood that they were in general averse to mar 2 riage, and to feminine society, or at least treated
for
home
pleasures, it
is
family
life as
a thing indifferent. 3
is
Diogenes
accused
;
is
said
may be enough to
;
say that they are not only quoted by Diog. Dio Clirys. Or. vi. 16, 46, 49 Lueian, V. Auct. p. 203, K. 10 Galen. LOG. Affect, vi. 5
; ;
also
of
having
.
publicly practised unchastity, Tkeod. Cur. Gr. Aff Diog. 69 xii. 48, p. 172. In Corinth the
younger
viii. 419,
K.; Atlien. iv. 158, f Dio Chnjs. 34 Horn, in Math. p. 398, C. S. Aug. Civ. Dei, xiv. 20 but also, according to Pint. Stob. Kep. 21, 1, p. 1044, Chrysippus had on this score vindi cated the Cynics, and accor ding to Seat. Phyrrh. iii. 206, Zeno appears to have done the same. Dio. probably borrowed
; ;
;
Lais, according to Atlien. xiii. 588, b, or Phryne, according to Tertull. Apol. 46, is said to have had a whim to
bestow on
him her
favours
gratuitously, whereas the philo sopher did not despise others. Clemens (Horn. V. 18) repre sents him as purchasing them
by scandalous conditions.
his
In
his
revolting The things are, Chrysippus, however, not so out of keeping with the ways of Antisthenes, that we could call them im and the very thing possible which to us appears so unin
;
extracts
from
tragedies (according to Julian, Or. vii. 210, c) stood that one might believe things
eraipais
airoh\f{<pdai.
On the com
modesty,
makes
mended, Demetr.de Eloc. 261. The case of Crates is an exception, and even Crates had
not wooed Hipparchia. He only married her, when she would not renounce her affec tion for him, but was prepared to share his mode of life. He certainly married his children in a peculiar way, according
to Diog. 88
2
;
likely to be true of Diogenes. If true, they were an attempt on his part to expose the folly It is from this of mankind. point of view rather than on
93.
See the
3,
To them it seemed foolish in the extreme to incur much toil, danger, and expense for an enjoyment, which might be had much more easily. See
thrifts.
Dwg.
9
:
KOI irarpiSos.
less objec
:
tionable
Trepl
vov<i.
thenes in Diog.
60
66
89
Pint.
the
maxim of
2
Floril.
6;
1,
and 277.
to
(*)
slavery and freedom does not affect the wise man. The man who is really free can never be a slave
for a slave is
one who
is
afraid
and
for the
same
is
The
wise
man
the natural ruler of others, although he may be called a slave, in the same way that the physician is the ruler of the sick. Accordingly it is said that
Diogenes, when about to be sold, had the question asked Who wants a master ? declining the offer of
:
his friends to
was a vindication of
slavery.
On
Cynics seem to have been the first among Greeks to declare it an institution opposed to nature, 3 quite in
Dio Cliryz. Or. x. 29, whose statement is confirmed by its agreeing with the universal See doctrine of the Stoics.
1
yap riv
peiv.
/j.fv
e \evdepov,
<ueret
tiicupffiicuoi/
Zfillcr s Stoics,
2
c.,
p. 4.
Dioff.
29
;
74.
4.
Compare
332,
lf>,
The contrast between ydp. vd/j.^ and Qvaei is not found so strongly drawn at that time except among the Sophists and Nor is it only met Cynics.
with in their religious views, On the contrary, their whole politics, and even their practical philosophy, are governed by the effort to bring human society from an artificial state recognised by law and custom We to a pure state of nature. should hardly look in sophistic circles for the opponents of
slavery
tions,
\(v0epias /ecu SoiMefas, and perhaps this is the origin of the account in Stob. Flor. 8, 14. 3 For this we have certainly
171, 4), it is probably in reto the Cynics that Arist. Polit. i. 3 1253, b, 20, says rots y.ev 8o/ce? CTTIO-TTJAI ? re
;
5e(T7TOTeta
<p6(riv
TO?S 5e
v6fj.q>
rb
(nr6eiv
unimportant and has nothing to do with the law of nature and reason. Yet they did not go so far as to attempt even in a small circle (as the Essenes did
at a later time) the abolition of slavery, regarding the outward state as something indifferent, the wise man
Nor was
it
other
The
wise
man
of the Cynics
civil life
imposes, without therefore feeling any impulse to mix himself up in such matters for where could be a
;
constitution which would satisfy his requirements? A popular government is severely censured by Antisthenes.
An absolute monarch only appeared to these freedom-loving philosophers a bad and miser1
stronger over the weaker was regarded as the most conformable to nature. But the view is all the more in keeping with a school which from no side could allow that one portion of mankind enjoy the right, quite
which do not distinguish the good from the bad {Diog. 5 6), must be intended for a hit at The saying in democracy.
;
independently of their moral State, to govern the rest, the claim of the wise man to govern
the fool resting upon reason, and naturally all men being
citizens of one state between fellow-citizens the relation of master and slave cannot exist. 1 Arist. Pol. iii. 13 1284, a,
;
Athen.
v.
220, d,
Antisthenes
all
15, tells
the fable
the applica-
tion of
is
which
to a
democracy
the popular leaders at Athens, Likewise in Diog. 24 41, Diogenes calls them u^Aou SiaKovovs, and he amuses himself at the expense of Demosthenes,
Ibid. 34, on which see Epict. Diss. iii. 2, 11. See also what was said of Socrates, p. 166.
obvious of the hares suggesting universal equality to the lions. The blame which he attaches to those states,
321
CHAP.
XIII.
man.
for
Aristocratical institutions
fell far
below
their ideal,
men
life
him, whose
2 What regulated by the laws of virtue? can be large enough for those who regard country themselves as citizens of the world? 3 Allowing
is
therefore a conditional necessity for a state and laws, 4 the Cynics 5 refused in their homelessness to take any
part in civil life. They wished to be citizens of the world, not of any one state ; their ideal state, as far
as they do sketch
.
it, is
a destruction of
30
;
4,
Floril. 49, 47
p. 68.
given a negative answer to Alexander s question, whether he did not wish to see Thebes
rebuilt
|tai/
:
27,
Kal ireviav
ff6(f>ov
/3oiAeuTOj
See
also
Kl/J.VOVS
VO^JLOVS
TroXlTV(T((TOai
5
dA\a
Kai-ct
r bv
rrjs operas.
:
e</>acr:e
genes, ibid. 38
TT&Oei
<j>v(nv,
Dio avnThis
<pvffts
Epiet. Diss. iii. 24, 66. Lucian, V. Auct. 8. Also the Stoic doctrine in Zeller s Stoics, &c.,
5e
\6yov.
chap, on Stoics, and what has been said above, p. 278, 1. 4 The confused remarks of Diogenes in Diog. 72 support
this statement.
5 Antisthenes was not without a citizen s rights (see Hermann, Antiquit. 1, 118), although a
See
re
p.
167,
8.
Ibid. 72
\iovt\v
6pdT]v
TroAiretai/
elvai
proletarian
by birth and
cir
r^v fv 12:
Koa-fj-w.
ffO(pa}
Antisthenes, ibid.
ei/oj/
T"$
ouSei/
:
ou5
Hiropov.
Crates, ibid. 98
irdrpas
JJLOI
ovx
efs
irvpyos, ov
fiia.
cumstances. Diogenes was banished from Sinope, and lived at Athens as a foreigner. Crates had chosen this life after his native town had
;
irctftTjs
5e %(pffov Kal
TtfJLiv
ir6\i(rfj.a teal
56/j.os
TOi/.w$
tvfiiaLTciaOaL Trdpa.
been destroyed. Monimus was a slave whom his master had driven awav.
8
The same individual in Pint. de Adul. 28, p. 69, shows that banishment is no evil, and ac
cording to Diog. 93 (conf. Ael. V. H. iii. 6) he is said to have
/ui?
Kays,
(j.
fjre
piy&ays.
LIFE.
CHAP. XI1L
mankind
nation
may have
are to live together like a flock. No its own laws and boundaries special
life, needing no gold, that mischief, abstaining from marriage and family life, they wished to return to the simpli l the leading thought of city of a state of nature ;
Confining themselves to
much
their
much
enlarged political sympathies being not so the oneness and the union of all mankind, but
Here again
irepl
The above description rests only in part on direct testi mony, but the combination which is the basis of it does not lack great probability. We know on authority that Dio
1
TroAiremv,
which appears
with the
to be identical
TToAiTiwbs 8td\oyos
men
tioned by Athen. v. 220, d, is in itself probable, and is con firmed by Plato s Politicus.
Eejecting, as his dialogue does, the analogy between states manship and the superinten dence of a flock, we might naturally think that Plato was
genes in
80)
his
TroArreia
(Dioff.
demanded a community
of
wives and children, and that same treatise he pro posed a coinage of bones or stones (d(TToo7ciA.oi) instead of gold and silver, Atken. iv. 159, e.
in the
provoked to
theory
;
We know
Lva.
a\\a Trdvras
^t){j.6ra.s
fa
KOivia
i.
6,
p.
329;
Plutarch s account of Zeno, that the Cynics reduced the idea of the state to that of a herd of men, it is most them. natural to think of Moreover, the description of the natural state, Rep. ii. 372, appears also to refer to Antisthenes. Plato at first describes
it as though from himself, but he afterwards clearly intimates that it belongs to another, when he calls it a state fit for pigs. Nor do we know of
from
That such views were on the whole advocated by Antisthenes, probably in the treatise
anyone else to whom it could be better referred than to the founder of the Stoic School.
326
CHAP.
XIII.
the mos ^ revolting in Cynicism their de liberate suppression of the natural feeling of shame.
^or us
This feeling they did not consider altogether un reasonable, but they urged that you need only be
1
ashamed of what
is
is
in itself
good may not only be unblushingly discussed, but done without reserve before the eyes of all. 2 They therefore permitted themselves what they considered
from doing in the public
1 It is expressly told of Dio genes, Diog. 37 54, that he ex postulated with a woman who lay in an indecent position in a temple, and that he called blushes the colour of virtue. 2 See the following note, and Nee vero Cic. Off. i. 35, 128 audiendi sunt Cynici aut si qui
;
:
natural, without regard to places, not shrinking even streets 3 what other men
to
breakfast in public.
Fol
lowing out this principle, he not only took his meals in pub
lic in
58),
but he also did many other eccentric and startling things, in the sight of all passers by It is even (Diog. 35; 36). asserted of him, Diog. 69
fiw9ei 5e irayra TrotelV eV
r<p
quod
non
children) nominibus ac verbis we flagitiosa dicamus (that consider it unseemly to name them), ilia autem quas turpia sunt (stealing, &c.) nominibus
172,
Theod. Cur. Gr. AfL xii. 48, p. says the same of him,
rp6ir<p
f-^p-fjro els
Ka0u5<wv
and
and Hipparchia, as is said to have been the case, consum mated their nuptials in the midst of numerous spectators. There are, however, not a few
authorities for it
Sext.
:
according to Diog. 69, he sup ported this by the argument, If it is at all allowable to breakfast, it must be allowable
Diog.
iii.
Pyrrh.
;
i.
153;
97 ; 200;
;
Clemens Strom at. iv. 523, A. Apul. Floril. 14; Lact. Inst.
327
do in
secret.
CHAP.
way forego his independence, the Cynic puts out of sight all regard for others, and what he is not
ashamed of by himself, he thinks he need not be ashamed of before others. The opinion of men is to
him
indifferent.
He
is
liarity
familiarity.
To the same
may be referred the Cynic Xo course of study under make men doubt the truth
(d~)
ite-
the popular faith. Such doubts were raised on all sides, and since the appearance of the Sophists, had permeated the educated classes. Not even the So-
From his inter had passed unscathed. course with Grorgias and the other Sophists, Antis thenes in particular must have been familiar with freer views respecting the Gods and their worship,
cratic circle
1
and specially with the principles of the Eleatics, whose teaching in other respects he also worked into his own. For him, however, these views had a pecu
liar
meaning.
Hence,
too,
may
be explained the
S. Aug. Civ. Dei, xiv. 20, who does not altogether credit it, but does not improve it by his
are
whole story may rest upon some such story as that this
married couple once passed a night in the aroa iroini\t], or else upon the theoretical assertion of some Cynic philoso-
On the other hand, we have no reason to doubt what Diog. 97 states, that Hipparchia went about in public dressed as a man. the diaAs we gather from logues of Socrates with Aristodemus and Euthydemus, Xen.
sible.
Mem.
i.
iv. 3
not to men-
tion Critias.
sharp and
hostile
attitude
of the
,1
__1_
popular faith, in
which they so
pendent of everything external, cannot possibly be dependent on a traditional faith. He cannot feel
pledged to follow popular opinions, or to connect his well-being with customs and devotional practices,
which have nothing to do with his moral state. Thus in religious matters the Cynics are decidedly on
1
>
the side of free thought. The existence of a God they do not deny, nor can their wise man do without
one
men
2 popular gods, owing, as they say, their existence to tradition in reality there is but one God, who resembles nothing visible, and cannot be represented
by any symbol.
1
holds good of
K^a.Qeiv
e
In this way we must explain the free thought of Aristodemus, Mem. i. 4, 2, 9-11; 14 who is also described by Plato, Syrap. 173, B., as a kindred spirit to Antisthenes. 2 AnCie. N. D. i. 13, 32: tisthenes in oo libro, qui phy;
Tertull.
Ad Nat.
ii.
2:
In reply to the question, Quid in coelis agatur 1 Diogenes replied Nunquam ascendi ; to the question, Whether there
:
sicus
0<fyi<p]
inscribitur,
Deos
is
No
Nescio nisi ut sint expedire. very great dependence can, it is true, be placed in Tertullian
s
lem which
i. 5,
[<>uCTti]
unum
sayings.
:
Id. Apol. 14
repeated by Minuc.
and Lact.
Clemens, Protrept. 46, C., and also Stromat. v. "b.vrLffQevr)s 601, A., says
: . . .
Ad. Nat. i. 10 Diogenes nescis quid in Herculem ludit, without, however, giving further
Qtbv ouSefi eoi/fevcu Sioirep ainbv ovSels titpaiOeiv e| titt6vos Svvarai. Tlieod. Cur. Gr. Affect,
</>r?<nV
i.
-n-epl
Aj/TKrfleVrjs
....
airb
T&V o\wv
ou5ei/l
)3oo
flit6vos
ov yvwpi&Tai,
e>(j>6a\/jLois
oux
fyT<zt,
eot/ce
St^Trep
Compare what particulars. was said of Socrates, p. 175. * The Cynics are therefore Atheists in the ancient sense of the term, i.e. they denied the Gods of the state, although from their point of view they were certainly right in reject ing the charge of atheism.
329
There
;
is
CHAP.
"
YTTT
Wisdom and
is
uprightness
make
What
is
generally done to
The
wise
1
man
is
fice,
honours Grcd by virtue, and not by sacri which God does not require. 2 He knows that a
temple
not more holy than any other place. 3 He does not pray for things which are considered goods
4 by the unwise not for riches, but for righteousness. Herewith the ordinary notion respecting prayer
;
is
also surrendered
own
exertions.
ridiculing
Hence Diogenes may be understood 5 The same sweeping prayers and vows.
is
judgment
6
pronounced on
oracles, prophecy,
and
prophets.
The mystic
rites also
biting scorn/ both by Diogenes and Antisthenes ; these philosophers, as far as religious views are conNothing follows from the anecdotes in Dioq. 37; 42. 1 Julian^ Or. vi. 199, B., excusing Diogenes because of his poverty, says that he never entered a temple or offered
sacrifice.
but looking at interpreters of dreams, or prophets, or credulous believers in them, he considers him the most foolish of Similar statements creatures. in Diog. 43 48 Tlieod. Cur.
;
&TOTTOV elvai
4
Gr. Atf. vi. 20, p. 88 ; and JJio. Antisthenes apOr. x. 2 17. pears also in Xen. Sym. 8, 5, to have doubts upon the subject of the Sajjuovtoi/ of Socrates, but
;
See the prayer of Crates in Julian 1. c. and Diog. 42. 5 Compare the anecdotes in Diog. 37 59. inDiog. 24 he says that,
;
"
Poet.
5J
p.
21
Clemens, Pro-
trept. 49, C.
30
CHAP.
^
sophistical training
which be had previously enjoyed. The various traditions must all be explained in har
mony with
this view.
Hence we
find Antisthenes
in no small degree engaged in allegorical interpre tations of the myths and the poets, and in an expla nation of Homer, which he committed to writing in
numerous volumes. 2 Looking for a hidden meaning 3 in legendary stories, he was everywhere able to dis
cover moral teaching, and to build on moral reflections. 4 Indeed, by laying down the further axiom, that the
own
3,
5 sentiments, he
Symp.
D.
4
;
Plato, Rep.
ii.
378,
lo, 530, C.
Plato, Thecetet. 153, C. lo, 530, Rep. ii. 378, D. and C. Phgedrus, 229, C. Zeller s Phil. d. Griech. i. 930, 3 also pp. 755, 831 Stoics, &c.
Sym.
; ;
3, 6
praise.
On
Homer and
211; vii. 257, he remarked, that no reliance could be placed upon lovers promises. In II. xv. 123, he found his doctrine of the oneness of virtue. See the passages in Winkelmann, p. 23-28.
Od.
Dio Chrys. Or. liii. 5, says that whereas the same had been previously said of Zeno, 6 Sf
\6yos
OVTOS
Avriffflfvous
fj.fv
sari
TO.
irptirepov,
on T&
8^77
5e
using
243.
8
myths.
vir&voia.
See
Krisahe,
ciAA TTOIIJTT? a\r)6da efyTjrcu 6 ptv OVK ^eipyda-aro avrbv, 6 5e Ka6 eKaffTov TUV eVt pepous e S^jT<j3
The
or 5/avom. Xen.
.33
CHAP.
have carried
2
;
which
natural, Cynic teaching being 3 very imperfectly expanded, and the taste for learned
is
also quite
them very
it will
small.
E. Their
From
the above
The ^the Cynics spoke of the self-sum cingness of virtue. wise man must be absolutely and in every respect world. independent; independent of wants, of desires, of
The devotion and prejudices and of after-thoughts. of will with which they compassed this end, strength
Disre certainly something grand about it. garding, however, the limits of individual existence, and putting out of sight the conditions of a natural
has
and a moral
life,
and
proportion is attached to the form of life, to such an extent that they again become dependent on external circumstances. The sublime becomes
out of
and every humour at last claims to be honoured as being higher wisdom. Plato, or who ever it was who called Diogenes a Socrates gone mad, was not far wrong in what he said. 4
ridiculous,
1
29. 92,
Even
their
Ethics
are
bodily exercise, she made effeminate men young again. 2 Dio says this expressly, and little has come down to us
of Cynic interpretations.
scanty enough, and their systern gave no opportunity for those lengthy, physical discussions, on which the Stoics
were
4
so great.
;
^Elian, V. H. xiv. 33
Diog*
vi. 54.
332
CHAP.
mankind
lise
Anxious not to monopo the blessings of virtue, but to share them with
to his
level.
own
work
as educators of their
people, desiring, possible, to bring a lax and effeminate nation back to the days of moral strict
ness
and simplicity. The mass of men are fools, slaves of pleasure, suffering from self-conceit and
The Cynic is a physician to heal their dis a guide to lead them to what is good. 4 Hence ease, he considers it his mission to care for the outcast
pride.
3
1
Diog. 11
"yap
/ecu
5e 6
/j.6i>ov
etSeVcu
praising the Spartans, replied ou5e yap larpbs vyteias &v irowrinbs ec rot s iryiaivovffi r^]v fiiarpifirjv 7roie?Tcu.
rivdiv
-xpr]
epav.
ai
12
a^icpafrros
<f)i\oi.
a.ya06s
ffirovficuoi
Antisthenes
Ep&m/cbs (Diog. 14;
wrote and an
18),
both
an
Epw/jievos
and he had
in his Hercules
mentioned love
(Prod, in Ale.
98, 6
ma?m, p. Diogenes
Diog. 80.
2 8
16).
is
An
also
WitwkelEpunicbs of
;
mentioned,
Accordingly, Diohimself in I/ucian, V. Auct. 8, eXevdepcar^s T&V avOpdirav Kal larpbs rwv iraBuv, and he expresses astonishment in Dio. Or. viii. 7, that men le-s frequently apply to him, the healer of souls, than they do to
genes
calls
an
4
:
oculist or dentist.
See
8ia
p. 314.
Diog. 4
TI
Aj
Tio-flfVrjs eporrTj-
0eis
e7ri7rA.ii?TT6t,
TO?S Ka.fj.vovo iv
Icnpoi
\a(v,
<>T;<ri,
aAA ou
In
25,
Diogenes,
When Diogenes was purchased by Xeniades, he is said to have told Xeniades that he would have to obey his slave, just as in another case he would have to obey a pilot or physician. Di-og. 30 36 conf. Pint. An. Vitios. c. 3, p. 74 499 Stob. Flor. 3, 63 PMlo,
; ; ;
;
was always
Qu.
Omn.
333
CHAP.
2 dirtiest haunts.
The improvement of mankind, however, is no 3 He who will be saved must hear the easy task. truth nothing being more destructive than flattery. 4 Yet truth is always unpleasant; 5 none save either
;
an incensed enemy or a
it.
This
friendly service, the Cynics propose to render to mankind. 7 If in so doing they give offence, matters
not to them
8
;
a good kind of
9
;
man being always dis he who annoys no one is It was moreover a principle
in
demands both
word and
example above what they really wanted, because men 11 Thus they pressed only imperfectly conform to them. and strangers alike with their themselves on friends
exhortations,
1
12
in-
According to Epict. iii. 24, Diogenes read a lesson to the pirates who captured him. It cannot, however, have done much good, for they sold him notwithstanding and the story
66,
;
13,
26
ol /j.tv
&\\oi
/cui/es
Bpovs
8
Sdni/wo-iv,
p. 318.
4yu
See
is
altogether very uncertain. Diog. 63, and above, p. 332, 3. 3 Diog. 4, and p. 332, 3. 4 92 Stol). 51 Diog. 4 Antisthenes in Floril. 14, 16 Plut. Vit. Pud. c. 18, g, E., p.
2
; ; ;
Svapdo-raKTov eivai rbv Antisth. in Philo. Qu. Omn. Pr. Lib. 869, C. 10 In Pint. Virt. Mort. c. 12, g, E., p. 452, Diogenes says of
a<r-
reToi/.
Plato
t>s
rl 5 e/ce?ros ?*
%poj/oj>
ff^vbv,
536.
5
ToffovTOV
"
tyiXoffofy&v
Joan.
ou&eVa
12
AeAuTrrj/cei/
See
p. 308, 1.
dpoTjToTy.
aA7j0es -niKpov It
eVn
is
like
light to
eyes.
those
Compare what Diog. vi. 10, says of Antisthenes, and vi. 26 also 46 ; 65 of Diogenes
; ;
traits
manner, although more gentle are not altogether wanting. 2 At the same time
1
more
particularly excelled. They loved to clothe serious teaching in the form of a joke, or of poetry, 3 and to hurl sharp-pointed words 4 at the folly of man
kind
5
;
giving greater force to his utterances by symbolical 6 actions, and thus attracting for them attention.
No doubt
of their eccentricities, 7 and admired for their selfBecause Luolan V. Auct. 10. of his importunity, Grates re ceived the name of 6upiravoi86 Pint. Qti. KTijs.Dioff.
;
Hermofj.
Progym.
c.
Tlieo.
Progym.
c. 3.
c. 3 Nicol. Pro-
gym,
5
Abundant
examples
of
Conv.
1
ii. 1, 7,
4, p.
632
;
Apul.
;
Diog.
24
32
46
i.
Ex. e
Floril. Jo.
2
Damasc.
7, 43.
Pint. De Adul. 28, p. 69, relates that when Demetrius Phalerius, after his banish ment, fell in with Crates, he was not a little surprised at
being received with friendly words of warm comfort in stead of the violent language he expected. The attractive
ness of the conversation of Antisthenes and Diogenes is
also
these ways of the Cynics are to be found in the a7ro<p0e -}/icra of Diogenes, in his sixth book, See and in Stobeeus Floril. Antisth. also WlncJtelmann, Frag. Pint. Prof, in Virt. c. 11, Virt. Doc. c. 2, p. 439 p. 82 Coh. Ira, c. 12, p. 460 Curios. c. 12, p. 521 Cup. Div. c. 7, An. Exil. c. 7, p. 602 p. 526 Seni. s. Ger. Eep. i. 5, p. 783 De Alex. conf. Prsec. c. 26, 141 Virt. c. 3, p. 336 Epict. Diss.
; ;
iii.
2,
11
Gell.
xviii. 13,
commended, Diog. 14. Conf. Xen. Symp. 4, 61. 3 85 DeSee Diog. 27 83 metr. de Elocut. 170 259 261 Pint. Tranqu. An. 4, p. 466; Julian, Or. vii. 209, a Antisth.
;
39;
;
not to
; ;
6 See 39 64 Diog. 26 31 41 (the lantern) Stob. Flor. 4, This eccentricity becomes 84. a caricature in Menedemus,
;
svia
diet
rwv
[LvQcav
cnri^ yeAAe.
a.
;;;*
CHAP.
their time with the rude vigour of a resolute will, hardened even to in sensibility. Possessing the pungent, ever ready native wit of the plebeian, benevolent, with few wants, full
jokes, and national even to their very dirtiness, they resemble in many points the friars of of
whims and
J ;
nor can
it
withstanding
in
all their
many ways
beneficial.
little
For
that, philosophy
mendicant philo Not until it had been supplemented by other sophy. elements, regulated and received into connection with a wider view of the world in the Stoa, was Cynicism able to bear fruit on a large scale. The
this
from
Cynic School, as such, appears to have had only a very narrow extension, a fact which will not appear strange, considering the terrible severity of its demands.
Besides
it
and even
character.
its
and the
follies
of
It required independence and self-denial, but it separated man from man. It placed the individual
men.
entirely
by himself, thus
The Cynics really have a historical connection with the monks of Christendom. The
1
link between the two is the Cynicism of the time of the Caesars, and the late Pythago-
and cised, directly partly partly through the Essenes, so important an influence on eastern monasticism.
336
CHAP.
V_ not
most capricious whims, which were unindulged. The abstract sovereignty of the
personal will resulted ultimately in individual caprice, and thus Cynicism trenched on the ground of the
it
was
THE CYRENAICS.
337
CHAPTER
XIV.
1
THE CYRENAICS.
the Socratic
quite as
we
so,
possess
or
even
more
CHAP. XIV.
A. History
have touching the Cynics. Aristippus 2 of Cyrene, 3 the founder, had been brought to Athens 4 by a call from Socrates, whose extraordinary personal influ
ence had unusual attractions for him, 5 although his
See Wendt, De Philosophia Cyrenaica, Gott. 1841. 2 The accounts of ancient and the views of modern writers on the life of Aristip pus are found in detail in H. v. Stein s De Philosophia
1
his teaching from Ischomachus, and was at once so taken by it that he did not rest till he had made his acquaintance. See
Cyrenaica, Part, prior, de vita Aristippi (Gott. 1855), which ought to have proceeded some
what more
literature.
sceptically.
There
ffTUTTTOS.
4 ^Eschin. in Diog. ii. 65, says that he came to Athens Kara. K\eos and Plut. SuKpdrovs, Curios. 2, p. 516, gives full particulars how at the Olympic games he heard of Socrates and
Diog. ii. 78 80. 5 Aristippus is not only uni versally described as a follower of Socrates (Diog. ii. 47 ; 74 ; 80 ; Strabo, xvii. 3, 22, p. 837 IMS. Pr. Ev. xiv. 18, 31 Stein., p. 26), but he also regarded himself as such, and paid a tribute of most genuine respect to his teacher. According to Diog. ii. 76, he prayed that he might die like Socrates. Ibid. 71, he says that if anything
; ; ;
good Can be truly repeated of himself, he owes it to Socrates, and Arist. Rhet. ii. 23 1398,
;
b,
29,
says,
a>s
Api<rrnriros
irpbs
(Zero
aAAa
weak
From Gyrene, his luxurious home, which at that time was at the height of its wealth and power, 2 he had brought habits far removed from the simplicity and
Perhaps he had been already touched by those Sophistical influences which 4 may be observed in his subsequent career. At any rate we may assume that he had attained to a certain
ouSei/ craip6s 7 ri^Ssv, Xtytav Tbv ^(aKpdrrjV (which Steinhart, Plat. Leben, 303, 17, contrary to the natural sense,
e</>i7,
abstemiousness of Socrates. 3
escape
the
painful
interval
TO>,
pending the death of Socrates, cannot be ascertained. 2 See Thrige, Kes Cyrenensium, 191. 8 This may be gathered from Xen. Mem. ii. 1, 1, in addition to the proof afforded by his later conduct. That Aristippus belonged to a wealthy family would seem to be established
refers to Plato s too sanguine expectations of the younger also see from Dionysius).
We
;
Xen. Mem. i. 2, iii. 8, that he was on an intimate footing and Plato in with Socrates .blaming him, Phsedo, 59, C., for being absent from the circle of friends who met on the day
Socrates death, evidently reckons him as belonging to Conf. Stein., p. this circle. 25, who also, pp. 50 and 74, groups together the authorities
of
c.,
p.
340, 354),
Plato,
1.
c.,
who however
would not have been neglecte 1 by the Sophists, even if there were no express evidence to
prove
162,
it.
only says that Aristippus and had been in Cleombrotus ^gina; that on this fertile island they caroused on the day of their master s death, as Demetr. de Elocut. 288, asserts, The accu is barely possible. racy of Plato s statement is indisputable, notwithstanding but ii. 65.; Diog. iii. 56 whether Aristippus left Athens from excessive regard for his
;
It
is,
however, known
161, B.
;
from Plato,
A.,
Thesetet.
that
the
celebrated
From in Aristippus. the zeal with which Aristippus followed Socrates it may be further conjectured that the
met with
study of philosophy was to him no thing.
>new
own
safety,
or
339
CHAP. XIV.
whole so blindly following him as to sacrifice his own He is even said to have come forward peculiarities. as a teacher before the death of Socrates 4 that he
;
did so afterwards
a better established fact, and also that, contrary to the principles of his greatest friend, but quite in harmony with the practice usual
is
among
the Sophists, he required payment for his 5 In yet another point he followed the instruction.
The chronology of his life very uncertain. Neither the time of his birth nor of his death is known to us. Accor ding to Diodo? us, xv. 76, he was living in 866 B.C., and Pint. Dio. 19, tells us that he
1
is
met Plato on his third visit to Sicily, which is plac 1 in .361 But Diodorus probably B.C. derived from Dionysius his
anecdote about the interview with Plato. Its accuracy can not therefore be relied upon
;
have been from all that is known. See Stein., p. 29. 3 See Xen. Mem. ii. 1 iii. 8. 4 According to Diog. ii. 80, Socrates blamed him for taking pay for his instruction. How little dependence can be placed upon this story will be seen from the fact that Aristippus
;
less.
and as we are ignorant how old Aristippus was at the time, these accounts are anything but satisfactory. According
to
Ding.
ii.
83,
however,
it
out however bringing the two facts into closer temporal con
nection.
6
Phanias
;
in
Diog.
ii.
65
Ibid. 72; 74 80, where it is also stated in what way he de fended this conduct. Alexis in Pint. Edu. Atheti. xii. 544, e Pu. 7, p. 4 Stob. Exc. e Floril.
;
z 2
340
CHAP. XIV.
Joan. Damasc. ii. 13, 145 (that Aristippus is meant here ap pears from 146 conf. Diog. ii. Also Xen. Mem. i. 2, 60, 68).
;
The amount
of these fees is
estimated at 1000 drachmae by Plutarch, at 500 by Diog. 72. 1 He says of himself in Xen.
time the elder Dionysius, at another the younger Dionysius, at another simply Dionysius, is spoken of. Conf. Stein., p. 57. It is asserted by the Scholiast on Lucian, Men. 13, that Aris tippus was at Syracuse under
the elder statement
;
Dionysius.
is
This
Mem.
Doc.
ii. 1,
13
ou5 etsiroX/Tciai/
ctAAa
fvos
f/j.avrbv
Kara/fAefeo,
etjtu.
jravraxov
p. 2, p.
:
borne out by Hegesander in Athen. xii. 544, c for the Antiphon there men tioned was (according to Plut. De Adulat. 27, p. 68) executed
him
which he
to
bad
joke. He is mentioned by later writers, often no doubt bad authorities, as having been in in Megara, different places
:
It
first
can only
visit
belong
to
his
to
Athen.
xiii. 588,
conf. xii.
544, d, he every year took up his residence in company with and at Scillus, where Lais Xenophon read to him his Me morabilia, Ep. Socr. 18. Much in particular is told of his stay at the court of Syracuse, of his
:
island of Khodes. On this On the point see Stein. 61. other hand, Plut. Dio. 19, brings him into contact with Plato on Plato s third journey to Sicily, 361 B.C., in the time of the younger Dionysius. The notices in Athen. xi. 507, b; Diog. ii. 66-69, 73, 75, 77-82, are indefinite, although the stories there told harmonise better with the court of the
younger Dionysius than with that of his father. Nothing can however be laid down with
certainty respecting the visits
of Aristippus to Sicily. That he visited Sicily may be be lieved on tradition. That he
met Plato is not impos though it is also possible that the account of this meetthere
sible,
341
up we
his
first
CHAP. XIV.
permanent
hear of his
2 The heiress to his principles family and his School. was a daughter, Arete, a lady of sufficient education
4 younger Aristippus, in
his
ing was invented in order to bring out the contrast between In fact, both philosophers. Plato s journeys to Sicily were a favourite topic for later anec dote mongers. But any one of the above stories, taken by
itself alone,
have seen, uncertain. The twenty-ninth letter, which So crates is to have supposed addressed to his daughter from after his return, and Lipara
in expectation of death, is valueless as a historical testi
must be accepted
;
with caution
When
the
younger one came to the throne (368 B.C.) he was at least 60 years of age, and yet most of the stories which are told ap pear to have reference to him. On the other hand, Aristippus there appears in a character
better suited to his years of travel than to his later years. The supposed accidents of
mony, nor does it even render the existence of a correspon ding tradition probable and the hypothesis based on Diog. ii. 62, that Aristippus nourished at Athens in 356 has been with justice refuted by Stein., p. 82. Steinhart, Plat, Leben, 305, 33, proposes to read Apio-roreArj for AplcrTnnrov in Diog. ii. 62, but the chronology is against this
;
correction. be better.
2
2,-irevffnnrov
would
meeting between Aristippus and Plato probably went the round as anecdotes, without any attention having been paid
to their historical connection and when this was done by
;
more
3
xiii. 588, a.
^rj-
Who was
thence called
subsequent biographers,
came impossible what was fact. Whether this stay was shortened by frequent travels,
1
be to find out
it
whether Aristippus died in Gyrene or elsewhere, and how long he lived, are points un For the journey to known.
Sicily
Strabo, xvii. 3, 22, p. 837 Clemens, Strom, iv. 523, A. Eus. Pr. Ev. xiv. 18, 32 Theod. Cur. Gr. Aff. xi. 1 Diog. ii. Apiarnnros 72, 84, 86; Suid. Themist. Or. xxi. 244. If, therefore, jElian, H. Anim. iii. 40, calls Arete the sister of
4
;
; ;
Aristippus, it must be through Besides this an oversight. daughter he is said to have had
in
361 B.C.
is,
as
we
another son,
whom
he did not
grandfather
philosophy.
1
Besides
this
daughter,
^Ethiops and Antipater are also mentioned as pupils of the elder Aristippus. His grandson, the younger
Aristippus, is said to have instructed Theodorus, called the Atheist 2 the fruits of Antipater s teaching 3
;
own, Diog. 81 Stob. Floril. 76, Most likely this was only 14. the child of an kralpa, although Stobgeus calls his mother a
;
governor,
made him
What Diog. 103. particularly notori ous was his atheism. Indicted on this account at Athens, he
was rescued by Demetrius, but
obliged to leave the city (Diog. 101 The assertion Philo.}.
;
wife.
know Diog. ii. 86. further from Cic. Tusc. v. 38, 112, that Antipater bore the loss of sight with resignation. Cicero tells a somewhat tame
1
We
joke.
2
Diog. 86.
This Theodorus
appears to have belonged to the Optimates, who were driven from Gyrene in the party quarrels immediately after the death of Alexander, and took refuge with, the Egyptian sove reigns. Thrige, Ees. Cyren. 206. We hear of him as an exile in the last years of the fourth century (Plut. De Exil. 16, p. 606 Philo, Diog. 103 Qu. Omn. Pr. Lib. 884, C.), in Greece, and particularly at Athens (Diog. ii. 100, 116 iv. 52 vi. 97), where a friend of
; ; ;
;
of Amphicrates (in Diog. and Atheti. xiii. 611, a), that he was put to death by a hemlockdraught, is contradictory to all we know of him. According to Antisth. in Diog. 98, he was a pupil not only of Aristippus the younger, but also of Anniceris and of the dialectician
Dionysius.
cult to see
It is
however diffi
and Bryso
chers,
the
one
probably
others
with
Under
of Socrates, at the
Ptolemy
s,
he makes him a pupil same time confounding him with a mathe matician from Gyrene of the
same name
is
and 306
at
B.C.,
and subsequently
known
In Diog. ii. 102, iv. 52, he is called a Sophist, i. e., one who took pay for his instruction.
Tusc.
2,
i.
43,
102;
1.
Voter, vi.
3;
PMlo,
c.,
;
An. Vittos. 3, p. 499 At last he Stob. Floril. 2, 33). returned to his own country, and was there held in great
84:5
and Anniceris. 2
These three
men
established separate "branches of the Cyrenaic School, which bore their respective names. 3 Amongst the
4 pupils of Theodoras were Bio the Borysthenite, and the well-known Greek rationalist, 5 perhaps Euemerus,
CHAP. XIV.
1 A cotemporary of Ptolemy Lagi, who is said to have pro hibited him from lecturing, because he described the ills of life so graphically that many were led to commit suicide. Valer. Max, Cic. Tusc. i. 34, 83 viii. 9, 3; Pint. Am. Prol. 5, Suicide was also the p. 497. subject of his book AiroKapHence his Cio. 1. c. Tepuv,
;
he appears as a cotemporary of
Menedemus
the
Stoic
Stoics, fore, to
c.). He appears, there have lived to the middle of the third century. Accord ing to Diog. iv. 51, he left the which he first fre Academy,
name
Sllid.
2
HeunOdvaTos,
ApiffT.
Diog.
86,
Probably also
I.,
under Ptole
my
ii.
places ander.
88.
3
For the eo8cf>peioi and their Calliteaching see Diog. 97 machus in Atken. vi. 252, c for the HyrjcriaKoi, Diog. 93 for the Strabo, AvviKepeioi, ibid. 96 xvii. 3, 22, p. 837; Clemens, Strom, ii. 417, B. Suid. AW IK. Strabo calls Anniceris 6 SOKUV
;
quented, and joined the Cynics (which reads in our text of Diogenes as if he had deserted the Academician Crates, in order to become a Cynic, but this is not possible in point of time perhaps the original text meant that by the agency of Crates he was brought over from the Academy to Cynicism). He then turned to Theodore, and at last to Theophrastus, Diog. iv. 151. His free thought and the instability of his moral
;
principles {Diog. iv. 49, 53) recall the School of Theodore, in which Numenius in Eus. Pr.
eTravopOcacrai
fftv
TT)I>
Kvp^vaix^v aipe<XUT
Kal irapayaye ii
aurfjs TTJV
Avi/i/cepeiW.
To the Annicereans
E v. xiv. 6, 5, actually places him. In other respects he is rather a literary wit than a philosopher. See Diog. iv. 46-57, various sayings of his in Plutarch. 5 Euemerus of Messene, ac cording to the most numerous and approved authorities ac
;
cording
to
gentum,
Sieroha,
De Euhemero. K6-
nigsbg. 1869, p. 27), is often mentioned in connection with Theodorus, Diagoras, and other
Atheists (Sieroha, 19, 31).
The
XIV
Cyrene.
B. Teachl
",
ff
,f ^-^
teaching, the leading traits of which 2 undoubtedly belong to Aristippus, like the Cynic,
notion that Theodore was his teacher rests solely on hypo thesis. For we have no busi ness to write EiWjjuepoj/ in Diog. ii. 97 instead of EirL-fivpov (with Nietzsche, Rhein. Mus. N. F. xxv. 231). Epicurus derived his views respecting the Gods
The Cyrenaic
undertaken by Ennius, or of a
revision of this translation in
17, 22,
1.
c.
169.
mostly from Theodorus trea A connection tise wepl Qeuv. with the Cyrenaic School is not in itself probable, since this was the only School which at that time busied itself with combating the popular belief.
Doubtless, too, that tame reso lution of the myths into history,
for which Euemerus is known, is also quite after their taste ; in
Shorter notices of the con tents of his treatise in Cic. N. D. i. 42, 119, followed by Minuc. Pel. Octav. 21, 2 also in Strabo, ii. 3, 5 4, 2 p. 102,
; ; ;
104;
\.
vii.
;
3,
6,
p.
299; Plut.
;
Atlien. xiv. 658, e Sext. Math. ix. 171, 34; Aug. C. D. vii. 26; Ep. 18; Serm. 273, 3;
c.
42, D.
Higgin. Poet. Astron. ii. 12, 13, See also Sierolta and
deed, the Cynics who, together with the Cyrenaics, were at that time the representatives
of free thought, did not resort to natural explanations, but to In point of time allegory.
Steinkart, Allg. Encykl. v. Ersch. d. Gr. i. vol. 39, 50; Miiller, Frag. Hist. Graec. ii. 100. 1 According to Diog. ii. 113, president of a philosophical School in the time of Stilpo, Dio apparently at Athens. genes there calls him Kvpriva iK.6s.
Euemerus may easily have been a pupil of Theodorus. He lived under the Macedonian Cassander (311 to 298 B.C.), the latter having sent him on that journey on which he
visited the fabulous island of Panchasa, and pretended to have discovered in a temple there the history of the Gods, the account of which is given in his lepa avaypacp-fi. Diodor. in Ens. Pr. Ev. ii. 2, 55 Pint. De Is. 23, p. 360. Copious extracts from this work are found in Diodorus,v. 41-46, and fragments of the translation
;
x. 3,
his, calls
him
Kvprjvaios.
He
is
probably the Cyrenaic, who, according to Diog. v. 35, wrote a treatise Trepl ironjTiK&v. A say ing in Stob. Floril. 63, 32, be longs to him according to some MSS., but to Aristippus accord
ing to Cod. B. 2 The thing is not altogether undisputed. Eus. Pr. Ev. xiv. 18, 31, f, says of the elder Aristippus, without doubt on the authority of Aristocles oAA ovSh wet/ OVTCOS eV Ttf
:
O,
5ui a/u.t
345
CHAP. XIV.
crates.
up the practical side of the philosophy of So Of Aristippus too, and his pupils, it was
rfyv
/celaScu.
TTJS
ev5ai/J.ovias
rjftovaus
irepl
del
^So*/f)s
ITOLOV/J.-
works
\eyeiv re\os eli/at and of the younger fjv Kal (ratyais wpicraro re Aos one, eTpeu rb rjv, rjfiovijv eVrar-
ras rb r)S4o)s
t>s
TOI>
a\>T(f
pompus knew
his, for
7)5ea>s
508,
c,
Ttav
rV
Kara
Kivnaiv.
This
testimony appears to be further corroborated by the fact that Aristotle, in refuting the doc trine of pleasure, Eth. x. 2,
does not mention Aristippus, but Eudoxus, as its representa To this must be added tive.
plagiarism from the diatribes of Aristippus. Allowing then that subsequent additions were made to the writings of Aris tippus, it cannot be supposed that the whole collection is spurious. Perhaps in ancient times, and in Greece proper,
these writings were less diffused than those of the other fol lowers of Socrates. This fact
what
Sosicrates
and
others,
Sia\6yd)V
Soice?
irava iTios
aXrjdf is elvai
Eej/ocpcDj TOS,
:
may easily be explained, sup posing the greater part of them not to have been written till Aristippus had returned to his native country. It may also be the reason why Aristotle never
mentions Aristippus perhaps he omitted him because he in cluded him among the Sophists, Metaph. iii. 2, 996, a, 32. The remarks of Eusebius can only be true in one sense, viz., that the elder Aristippus does not
;
TOVS FIAaTCOJ/os,
for,
ac
to 84 in our text, Panastius is quoted as an au thority for a number of dia logues of Aristippus. It may therefore be asked with Brandis, ii. a, 92, whether in 64,
cording
make
TeA-os,
use of
the
expression
Aristippus
omitted by some oversight on the other hand, AiaTpifial were hardly dialogues cf. Susemihl, Khein. Mus. N. F. xxvi. 338. For these reasons Ritter, ii. 93, supposes that the views of Aristippus were not reduced to a connected form till a later
:
and does not put his sen tences in the form which sub
sequently prevailed in the Schools. That he recommended pleasure, that he declared it to be a good in the most decided manner, that thus the leading features of the Cyrenaic teach ing are due to him, cannot be doubted, taking into account the numerous witnesses which affirm it, nor would the unity
time. The assertion of Sosi crates however appears to be without foundation ; for Dio
__
(l) Their
asserted, as well as of the Cynics, that they neglected questions touching nature and logic, giving to the
s ^ U(jy J
o f ethics
exclusive value.
Nor is
this assertion
general
position.
own exclusive
2 pursuit of ethics. The end to be secured by philosophy is the happiness of mankind. On this point Aristippus and Antisthenes agree. Antisthenes,
of
his School be otherwise Doubtless comprehensible. Plato wrote the Philebus with
OiOV
s,
TfKTOVlKfj
iv. 5.
:
afy(<navTo
TT?"
5e
TOS Se
6ai
fj.a6r}fji.aTiKas
ovOeva
iroie ia -
Kal
Sia
TUV
T);I/
(pixriKuv 5:a
/j.(paivo-
euxpTjfTT/aj/ TJTTTO^O.
.
Me-
\4aypos 5e
.
.
ffOai
fyavlv avrovs &xp"n&Ta riy.fiTO re (pvaiicbv /j.epos Kal rb 5taA.e/CTi/coV. 8vvu(r6ai ydpev Aeyetf
.
sage Schol. in Arist. 609, b, 1 Ps. Alex, on Met. xiii. 3 1078, Ibid. 817, a, 11 a, 33 /SyrmTi
; ;
889, b,
;
19.
Compare the
11
ayaBcav Kal KaKcav \6yov Sext. Math. vii. SoKovtri Se Kara rivas Kal ol
5e rb
language of Aristippus in Diog. ii. 71, 79 Plut. Ed. Pr. 10, 7. 2 According to the sense in
TO \oynibv ws
Trpbs
jU7]5ei>
which it is understood, it is equally true to say that they set logic aside and that they made use of it. See p. 347, 2. Of what was afterwards called
logic, they appropriated just as
5e TT?
(pv(Tio\oyiav
as was necessary for their theory of knowledge, but they assigned no independent value to it, nor did they extend their
much
study of
rb
it
"OTTI
rot
eV
fjLeydpouri
/ca/cJj/
hyaQ6v re rervKrat, which is also told of Socrates and Diogenes. Arist. Met. ii. 2, 996, a, 32 &0-T6 Sia Tavra r&v
:
for their purposes. Conf. Sen. Ep. 89, 12 Cyrenaici naturalia cum rationalibus sustulerunt et contenti fuerunt moralibus, sed hi quoque, quae removent, aliter inducunt.
wanted
347
CHAP. XIV.
else as
means
very
to enjoyment. 2
diverge in opposite directions, their divergence, however, not preventing their subse quent approach to a greater extent than might seem
at first sight to be possible.
commencement
irif/s
(2) Feelthe
Aristippus in Xen.
:
Mem.
ii.
teal jSot Aojiiei/os 17 pacrrd T Oio. Acad. iv. ^Sierra jSioTeueii/. alii voluptatem sum42, 131
:
9 TOVS
1,
f/jLavrbv roivuv
rdrrci)
ets
shown in respect of the Phile bus, and it is therewith proved for the Republic, which refers
to the Philebus. 2 Diog. ii. 91
ayadbj>
mum bonum
Ibid.
Diog. re Aos
Fin.
esse
6,
voluerunt
;
quorum princeps
ii.
Kal ^5oj/V elvat, 88 r] ySovri 81 avTyv Kal aya96v. Athcn. xii. cuper$7
: :
87
rr]v ^p6vr\aiv /JLCV elvat Xeyovtriv, ov Si Se alper^f, aAAa Sio rb e | laurel/ 92 Kal auTTjs irfpiyiv6/j.i/a.
:
rl>v
trXovrov 5e
oi
Si
jroirjriK^i
r)5o/Jjs eTi/oi,
aurbv aiperbi
:
ovra.
Cic.
wal
j>
eA7ja-0cu.
I.
Euseb.
1.
c. p.
296,
116 Cyrenaici atque Annicerei philosophi nominati omne bonum in voluptate posuerunt virtutemque censuerunt ob earn rem esse laudanOff. iii. 33,
;
491, E.
Eep.
vi. 505, B.
<i>iA7)j3os
dam, quod efficiens esset volTo this sentence of Aristippus, Wendt, Phil. Cyr. 28, and Ast refer the passage of the Phaedo, 68, E., but without
uptatis.
clvai
(f>t](Ti
TO
xa
KOI T$)V
f]8ov)]i/
reason.
It refers
to
common
T]l/iv f]8ovT)v
Math.
vii.
11 TOW-TOW
evioi vevop-ittaffiv
W
CHAP,
We may be
unknown to
us.
thing often produces an entirely different effect upon How then can we be sure, that in different persons.
any given case, whether owing to the nature of our organism or to the circumstances under which we
receive the impression, things do not appear to us entirely different from what they are in themselves ?
is limited to our own feelings we are never mistaken but of thinggjn themselves we know absolutely nothing. Just as
Knowledge, therefore,
as to these
&v rb
irepl
T)QiK.ov
Siaipovffiv els re
rbv
rwv
els
aiperwi
irepl
Kal (pevicrwt/
rccv irpdj-euv alriotv, Kal
Triff-
and universal the division is. That it was not made by Aristippus may be gathered from
the statements as to his wriIn the division rrepl irifftings. rewv probably the theory of
rbv
els
rbv
irepl
iwv
ev rovrois
/,
rov \oyiKov.
Cic.
Acad.
ii.
46, 143
aliud
in quinque enim partes moralia dividunt, ut una sit de f ugiendis et expetendis, altera de adfectibus, tertia de actionibus, quarta de causis, quinta de argumentis causas rerum ex naturali parte sunt,
said, p. 346, 2)
:
argumenta ex
ones ex morali. We cannot, however, tie our faith to this account, not knowing how the subject was divided among these several parts, nor how old
rationali,
acti-
judicium Protagorae est, qui putet id cuique rerum esse, quod cuique videatur aliud Cyrenaicorum, qui prseter permotiones intimas nihil putant esse Ibid. 7, 20 de tactu, judicii. et eo quidem, quern philosophi interiorem vocant, aut doloris aut voluptatis, in quo Cyrenaici solo putant veri esse judi: :
cium. 1120
/cat
2, p.
irddrj
KvpiivaiKol~\
ra
res
349
CHAP. XIV.
There
irlffriv
do we know of the feelings of other people. may be common names, but there are no come/Vcu SiapK?) irpbs
ras
inrep
T&V aAA
just as a diseased eye or a mad brain always sees things different from what they
y\vKat>6^vai,
are.
effrt
/UTjSej/
ovrta Kal
f)/j.as
ir\4ov
ruv
olKeicav
v\oyd!)rar6v iraOwv
If,
rb 8
Trepl
eo~rl
jUr/
irpoo~aTro<paiv6/j.ei
.
oi
Aa^ijSaj/etv
8vva<r6ai.
y\vKaii/fa6ai yap \eyovo~i Kal jriKpaiveo dai Kal Kal aKOTOvadai rtav (fxari^eaQat
.
.
rwv fKrbs
therefore,
(paivo/LLeva
we understand by
KO.QWV rovruv tuaarov TTJJ/ evfpyeiav eV avrcp Kal d^epio-traarov fl 8e yAvKt; rb /xeAt Kal
irtKpbs 6
6a\\bs
/f.T.A.
v-rrb
iroXX&v
ai/Ti/j.aprvpe iadai
Kal
individual impressions must be said irdvra, ra Kal Karao.\i]Qr\ ATJTTTO. If, on the contrary, every name means the thing by which the impression is produced, all are false and cannot <()aLv6fji.va
(7ra077),
it
tya.iv/>ij.f:va.
be known.
Strictly speaking,
[add rb
rr]v
VTTO TTJS
/X6^]
T&V
Kal
6aX\iai>,
xaAci^s, Kal
Kal Trpbs
rdxa
Se
/ueV
vj/jLiv.
anv
Kal
t>v
ov
<paiv6}j.fvov
o&ev
ejUjuej/oucra
Trepl
/u.tv
ra
<r/j.tv
irdQri
rd y*
ra^rrj oiKela
T^>
irdvres
6o|a
SiaTTjpe?
vb aca8e Kal
fKfiaivova a
rep
/uLetia
KaKtlva
p.iv
eari KaraA-rjTrra,
Kpiveiv Kal TUV cKrbs, avr^v a,TTo<paivfn6ai Trepl re TroAAcxKts rapdffffei Kal iJ.dx.frai Trpbs ertpovs airb rwv avrwv evav-
ria
irdOrj
rovro 8e a.Kard\r]irrov, rr\s ^vx^s ndvv dffOfvovs KaGecrraxrris irpbs tiidyvtaffiv avrov -rrapa rovs T^TTOKS, Trapa TO Siaffr^j^ara, irapa ras Kivrjfffis, Trapa ras ^erajSoAas, irapa
a"AAas
KapRdvovras. Sext. Math. vii. 191, who gives the most detailed account, but probably to a great extent in his own language
:
ira/j.Tr\T)6e is
;
alrias.
:
See
KvprjvaiKol Kptrrjpia eli/ai ra irdQt] Kal fjiova KaraAajtifidvfffBat Kal dtyevcrra rvy\avsiv, rwv Se iriroi r}K6r<i)V ra itd9r] yU.TjSei
(pourlv
ofiv
ol
rd Pyrrh. i. 215 Dwg. ii. 92 T6 Trd6r) KaraXrjirra, e\eyov olv )v yivtrai. Ibid. avra, OVK ras alaQfiasis /AT) Trdvrorf 93 aArjfleyeij/. Ibid. 95 of the School of Hegesias, which does not in this respect differ from others
d<p
elvai
<rrov
Karo\r]inbv
^.rjSe
aSia^ey-
wypovv
8e Kal ras
ala-B-fja-eis
OVK
6n
i
fj.V
yap
tevKaivo/jifQa,
aKpijSoucras
1
rV
eiriyvuffiv.
Aris
Svvarbv
. .
e|f}s
rb
ra
irdOr)
?TTOJ
5 &/ elev ol htyovres p.6va rovro 5 Kara\r)irrd. tVioi rcav eK rrjs lfvp-f]vr}s defi
a.iro(f>aiva6ai.
eiKbs
TIVO.
virb
A^ \evKOv
i
Kal
inrb
y\vKeos
nite statements of Cicero, Plu tarch and Sextus, does not prove
rnon feelings, and when two persons say that they have felt the same thing, neither of them can be cer tain that he has experienced the same feeling as the
other, since he is only conscious of his own state and not of that of another. 1
2 Thus, like Protagoras, the Cyrenaics regard all notions as relative and individual their view differ
;
ing from his in this respect only that they refer notions more directly to internal feelings, and leave
out of sight
Heraclitus
that this doctrine did not be long to the whole School, nor can this be intended. Conf. c. Ka.6/jLfi/oi. yap e\eyov 18, 31)
. . .
TOUTO rb
verai
os
irdOos airb
rb Se et \CVKOV eyyiire\as,
oi/r
ai/raJ
Kal
T<p
Kal re/xj/^/iefOi
<r%otej/
ri
/j.ei
rb rov TreAas
/XT?
.
vvp
$)
rb
re/J-vov
ou/c exeii/
TreAas,
.
.
a"a5ex;o^c6z/o?
fiTTf tv.
Sextus,
Ma^h.
vi.
53,
Ka\
Ta%a yap
ajs
eya)
ovria
virb
^tvHaivecrQai
irddr],
aAAo
8e
aAAct
r&v But this is inaccu rate. The Cyrenaics, we gather from the above, cannot have denied the existence of things, but only our knowledge of their This whole theory existence. probably belongs to the elder Aristippus, as will be probable from a passage in Plato soon to be mentioned. Against Tenneniaii s notion (Gesch. d. Phil. ii.
Trd9ovs
,
/m.r)
yivecrOai
erepwy SiareS^j/at,
in support of which the example of a jaundiced or diseased eye sight is adduced. It follows
then
e^ei*/
2
Koiva
pen
f]/j.as
ovo/j.ara
ndevai TO?S
irpdyjj.avi., irddrj
Se
*yt
d. Griech,
i.
869.
3
The
much
1
]()6)
that
it
first
came from
Phil.
Theodoras,
Cyr. 45.
1
see
Weiidt,
vii.
Se,rt.
Math.
,
195
flv
(Plato s Werke, ii. 1, considers the de scription of the Protagorean teaching in the Theastetus to be chiefly meant for Aristippus,
3),
macher
who
u8e
KpiTiipi6i
(paffi
oi/o/xara 5e
K.OIVO.
ride(rdai
yap
Ka\ov<ri
ri
KOIVMS TrdfTes,
f)
5e rt \evKov
y\vKv OVK
whose view does not absolutely coincide with that of Protago ras. See Wendt, Phil. Cyr. 37. On the other hand, the differ ence between them is exagger-
351
CHAP.
XiV
on the one hand that it would be absurd to seek for a knowledge of things, such know and thus the ledge being once for all impossible
feelings, it follows
;
sceptical attitude
to
assumed by the Cyrenaics in respect knowledge, was the ground of their conviction of
all
2 On the physical enquiries. other hand, for this very reason feeling only can give
the worthlessness of
ated by
the
Academician in
who
ascribes
to Protagoras a view entirely different from that of the Cy renaics, and by Ens. Pr. Ev. xiv. 19, 5, who after discussing the
eVerou TOVTOLS
a.pQ6rt]s
(Z(ittei
sPhil. d. Griech.
alad^for Protagoras only asserted the truth of all perceptions in the sense that they were all true for him who
<Tdafj.ct.Tos
rais rov
opiaa/jitvovs,
what is the use names when the things differ ? The Cyrenaics are only more accurate than
933, 1), but of agreeing in
i.
perceived them, that things were to each one what they ap peared to him to be. In this sense the Cyrenaics, as Sextus lias rightly shown, declared all to be true, but both they and Protagoras said nothing about
Hermann s truth. objective objection here to Ges. Ab. 235, on the ground that Prota goras was far more subjective than Aristippus, since Aristippus presupposed an agreement amongst men in describing their
impressions, is still more at variance with the statements of Cicero and Eusebius, to which
Protagoras in asserting that perceptions which are called by the same name are not the same in different persons. But there is no disagreement in the teach ing of the two. Had they acted consistently they must have regarded as such every attempt at a natural ex
1
planation of our perceptions. We must, therefore, not be mis led by Pint. N. P. Suav. Vivi
Sec. Epic. 4, attribute to
5, p.
1069, so as to
352
CHAP. XIV.
hence
the best thing for us will be what is most gratifying to our feelings. 1 Here from the Cyrenaic theory of
knowledge follow those ethical principles, which in other ways also it was their main object to establish.
(3) Plea
sure
and
pain.
All feeling, as Aristippus assumes, following Pro tagoras, consisting in an emotion in him who experi
ences
it, if
of pleasure
1
if
if
again
avd\oya
Kal
rcav
rV
yap
8e flvcu So/eel rots irepl Kpir-rjpiojv Aeyo/ieVois Kara rovrovs rovs av8pas Kal TO. Trepl reAdV \ey6fj.va Soj/cei yap TO. irddr] Kal eirl TO
Ibid. 200. Euseb. Pr. Bv. xiv. 18, 32, says of the younger Aristippus on the authority of Aristocles
reATj.
2
:
Tpe?s yap
e(prj
/j.av TO?
Kara 6d\a(T(rav
fca0
uvi
rip ai yap
krtpov 5e
K.v.uari.
\yei. Math. vii. 199 TO /j.ev ICTTIV ^Se a, TO. 5e a\yeivd, ra 5e /jLtra^v. That these statements come, on the whole, from the elder Aristip pus, appears to be established by several passages in the Philebus. After Socrates (p. 31, B.) has there shown that pain consists in a violation, and pleasure in a restoration, of the natural connection between the parts of
re\os
elvai
irddoov
\ei<f>
(p.
\eiof KL5e
VTJfflV
TT]V
tivai
Diog. ii. 86, says almost the same thing of the older Cyrenaic school 5vo
:
Kal T]0ovr)v,
K(vt}ffiv.
question: What would happen neither of these changes were to take place ? The representative of the theory of pleasure having answered in a way afterwards repeated by Plato, Hep. ix. 583, C., that in this case there would be neither pleasure nor pain, he continues
D.)
the
if
TTJV
)Uej/
ctAAirrr
elires
aAAa yap,
ri
ffv/j-Paivfiv,
olfj.ai,
rpa^lav
:
To5e
Ae-yets,
us aei
ael
pe?.
^ffas
Pyrrh.
re
i.
KaraKal
avayKa iov
re Kal
v)/uui>
wvofjia^ov
arjSoviav
(Totyoi tyaffiv
airoviav.
Sext.
215:
rjdovijv
Kara)
is
aywyii] rr)v
the answer
PLEASURE AND
we
PAIN.
is
353
so
weak
as to be imperceptible, there is no feeling either of Of these three states, only that pleasure or pain. of pleasure is absolutely desirable. Hereto nature
CHAP. XIV.
bears witness
all
end, and avoiding nothing so carefully as pain, unless indeed their judgment be perverted by unfounded 2 To put freedom from pain in the place of fancies.
that
great changes produce pleasure and pain, but small ones neither. To the same view
tion
is felt or produces plea sure. Perhaps it is in reference to this that Arist. Eth. N. vii.
he comes back (on p. 53, C.), with the words apa irepl ?j8oi/T?s
:
Stb K al ov
OVK
aKTjKOcxjuey,
us
del
yeveais
-napairav rives av
Nor can
is
ecm rb
Srj
we allow
yap
5e?
r?/xiV,
ols
a dis crepancy (as Susemilil, Genet. Entw. d. Plat. Phil. ii. 35, note, 720 asserts) between the lan
that there
guage of Plato, p. 42, D., and the statements which attribute to Aristippus the assumption of an intermediate state between pleasure and pain. Hence we cannot countenance the con
jecture that Aristippus acquired from Plato the more accurate limitation of his teaching. Why did not Aristippus say are at all times in a state of gentle or violent motion, but pleasure or pain only arises, when we become conscious of this motion ? Yet this is exactly what he did say according to and what Plato Diogenes, makes his representative say,
:
We
him best, it is most pro bable that both this passage and the passage connected with it on the two kinds of motion
suits
and
same
that
1
.
sion.
small changes make no impres Likewise, Diog. ii 85, re Aos 5 says of Aristippus
:
Diog. 88
11, B.
2
airocpaive
ataQ-ntriv
TTJV
\siav
Kivi\<nv
els
(an
KOI
TT]V
r)$ovr]v
TIVO.S
p.)}
at>ai8oM.evr]i>,
according
mo.-
to
A A
354
CHAP, XIV.
is
no
emotion, enjoyment is as little possible as pain, the condition being one of insensibility, as in sleep. Thus
the good comes to be identical with what is agree able with pleasure ; the evil, with what is disagree able, or unpleasant ; what affords neither pleasure nor
2 pain can be neither good nor evil. From this view it follows, as a matter of course, that individual feelings of pleasure must, as such, be
the ends of all actions. Simple repose of mind, that freedom from pain, in which Epicurus at a later time
placed the highest good, cannot, for the reason just 3 It also appeared to the Cyrenaics given, be this good. unsatisfactory to make the happiness of the whole
life
make
Ka.8d
it
the
77
SeroD
fyv
/ieVrot
r^v rov
eli/at,
uTre^aipeffis
(o>s
Kovpcp)
5oK?
Ka: reAos
ouSe
ffei
r/
ayKovia
eTi/cu
eV Kivi]jj.}]
7/5ov7ji/
yai>
ourrrjs
eV
focuptfftl
a\
yrfi&v(ai>
Kal
TTJS aTTOj/tas
<T6O)S.
^
rj
eVet
5ovr6s
earl
KaTacrraffis.
Such
Perhaps the words in do. Fin. ii. 6, 18 (after his having said
similar things, i. 1, 39), are taken from a similar passage aut enim earn voluptatem tue:
long to a later time, and are due principally to the School of Amiiceris in contrast to Epi curus, according to Clemens, Strom, ii. 417 B. 2 ra /ue/ Sext. Matt, vii. 199
:
retur,
quam
.
Aristippus,
i.e.
qua
KO.K.C.
fyatfiv slvai,
e
u>v
re Aos
voluptatem
dicit, in
summum bonum
:
TO.
??i
re Aos
s
ra
dolere.
KO.KO.,
iraQos
<rri
^U6ra|u
renaicorumque omnium quos non est veritum in ea voluptate quag maxime dulcedine sensum
moveret, summum bonum ponere, contemnentes istam va-
6.\y>-}6vos.
See
ii.
p.
352,
3
2.
See
p. 300, 1.
Diog.
87
cuitatem doloris.
355
sum
total of
to procure for themselves the highest enjoyments that can be in this life.
CHAP. XIV.
Such a principle requires the past and the future as well as the present to be included in the pursuit,
afford
neither of which are in our power, and which certainly no enjoyment. A future feeling of pleasure is
;
1
an emotion which has not yet begun a past one is one which has already ceased. The one only rule of
life
is
moment.
to cultivate the art of enjoying the present Only the present is ours. Forbear then
for that
Dioff.
s
87
o/ce?
8 avrots Kal
vQai/j.ovi
e?i/cu
yap
Kara
Se rb
eft
eppw/ueVws
rcav
ew/cei
\*yiv
Api-
ffrnnros,
Traptyyi. G)]s,
^tTjre
eu6>u,ut
as
yap
rb TOLOVTO,
Kal
Aeco Std-
evSaLfjiovia
Si
jiiepos rjSoj/as.
/n
aAAa
89
:
eV
eKfivca TO?
aAAa
/J.TJV
otSe Kara
rpocrSoKLav ri^ovi)
oirtp
fipscrKs
Tt
^ 4vvofl
elvat
(jLovov
yap
71/J.frepov
Kovpa).
K\va6ai yap rw
:
rb
Ibid. 91 TTJS ^VXTJS Kivr)fj.a. apK6? 5e kav Kara /miav \7]Sov f]i
:
rb rb
TIS
AOJ/ eTj/at eiTrep o-rat. There can be no doubt that Aristippus had already propounded these views, his whole life presup posing them, and his other views immediately leading to them, p. 352, 2. The precise for
mal arising
of
Tcais
T}\V e ATriSa
vl
/j.6f(a
aya6bv Kpivwv
Tea irdpovTi,
rb rb 5e
ri^ovr\s
,
ruv
irapov-
OVK tOypa Se
ov
ir
ir6v(a
rriv a.ir6-
A A
356
CHAP. XIV.
feeling of
any difference between one enjoyment and another. They may spring from various, even from opposite
sources,
all
alike, one
as
good
emo
natural object of desire. 1 The Cyrenaics therefore can never allow that there are pleasures not only declared by law and custom
tion,
and
as such always a
to be bad, but
In their
view pleasure may be occasioned by a disreputable action, but in itself it is nevertheless good and de
sirable.
(5) Modi fied form of this ex
2
At the same time this principle received several limitations by means of which its severity was con-|
siderably toned down,
treme
den
In the
first
and its application restricted. the Cyrenaics could not deny that place,
TTUS Xeyeis tarchus replies 2wrpaT6s o^ yap rtva avyx^p-ha"e(T0at, OCJJLSVOV r^Sovriv eh Oi raya: ;
3>
avrov.
1
Diog. 87
8iO(>epetj>
re
ri
-flSoi/V
eli/oi.
riSovris,
jiojSe
tyi6t>
Plato,
Phileb.
12,
D.,
where the champion of plea sure answers the objection of Socrates that good pleasures
66v, erra ave^fffOai aou \4yovros ras /xe*/ tlvat Tivaf ayaOas ySovas, TOS 5e Tivas erepas avruv Kaitds. Just as little will Protarchus (36, C.) allow that there is
p.
347,
1.
:
tvavriai
yu.??
irais
yap
rjSopr}
a.v
7^
r\$ovrj
Diog. 88 civcu 5e TTJV ^o^v a,yaQ})v kav a-Trb TWV aa"^rifji.OTdr(av yevriTai, naQd (prjffiy ITTTT^OTOS 4v
Tea
Trepl
ovx
fip-oioTarov
efrj,
ruvro
atpeffeoav.
et
yap Kal
5
f)
avrb eaurw, irai/rajj/, ^p-rj^.drwv ; IlAd. 13. A.: Ae 76is- yap ayaOa fravra dvat TO, 7,5eor, how is this possible in the case of the worst pleasures ? to which Pro-
Trpa^is
rjSoir] 81
aroiros
ei ry,
aAA
ovv
TJ
To the same effect is the pas sage quoted from the Philebus
on
p.
358,
1.
&
CHAP.
_
all: as
than another, and therefore deserves to be preferred Just as little did it escape their notice, that to it.
1
many enjoyments
greater pain ; 2 is so hard to gain. They therefore required the consequences of an action to be taken into account ;
are only purchased at the cost of hence they argue unbroken happiness
thus
method the contrast between good and evil which they would not at first allow to attach to actions An action should be avoided when there themselves. from more pain follows than pleasure hence a man
;
con-
degrees of pleasure, but this is undoubtedly a mistake. Diog. ii. 90, says that they taught that bodily feelings of pleasure and pain were stronger than mental ones. See p. 358, 3. 65 E., Plato too, Phil. 45, A. in the spirit of this School, talks of jue 710-Tcu ruv rjSovwv, nor is there the slightest reason
:
allow of different kinds of pleasure, those of the body and mind for instance. Ritter s remarks on Diog. ii. 103, do Just not appear conclusive. as little can those of Wetidt
(Phil. Cyr. 34, Gott,
Aug. 1835,
for equalising all enjoyments in their system. They could not allow that there was an absolute difference of value be-
tween them, some being good and others bad but they had no occasion to deny a relative difference between the more or less good, and they might even
;
Accord789) be entertained. ing to Diogenes the Cyrenaics only denied that any object taken by itself and independently of our feelings was more pleasant than another, z Diog. 90 Sib [?] KCU a0 afaV TO iroi-nalpeTTJs ofays rris T)Sovr)s TO\TLKO. eviwv ^ovwv 6x^7p us 8u<r/coA.w\OLKIS evavrioi/ffdai
:
T&V
^ovS>v
evSaipoviav
Trot-
ovvrwv.
See
p. 355, 1.
mental pleasures. 2 and pleasures to be more pun Holding bodily pains 3 perhaps even attempt gent than those of the mind
bodily and
;
ing to show that all pleasure and its opposite are in the last resource conditioned by bodily feelings ; 4
1
KaXbv r) alff^p^v, the value of every action de pending on the pleasure which Kal e#et, follows it, aAAcfc
<f>vffi
93 : Dioff. SiKaiov 3)
jurjSeV
ri
flvat
oiKovofjiiav wept
Qarspov tiroiovvro.
vop.<a
indicated by the ex pression oiKeiorepov in the above See p. 359, 2. passage also. To say that not all pleasure and
is
This
Kal
25)
5o|as. calls
Wendt
this
(Phil.
statement
Cyr. in
pain
states,
question without reason. It is quite consistent in Aristippus, and is met with in Epicurus
Zeller,
Stoics,
&c.
but he
is
ing Schleiermacher s hypothe ii. 2, 18), sis (PL W. ii. 1, 183 that in the Gorgias Aristippus is being refuted under the name of Callicles, and in the Cratylus 384, Diogenes under that
;
of
Hermogenes. Which, strictly speaking, they could only have done by saying that one portion of our
2
connected with bodily may be harmonised with this statement by taking it to be their meaning, that not every feeling has its immediate object in the body, without, however, denying more remote connection between such feel ings and the body. Joy for one s country s prosperity might in their minds be connected with the thought that our own hap piness depends on that of our country. It can only be con sidered an opponent s exagge
is
impressions appears to us to come from the body, another not; for they had long since given up all real knowledge of But their consistency things. hardly went so far as this. 3 TroAi; yueWot Diog. ii. 90
:
ration for Pansetius and Cicero to assert that the Cyrenaics made bodily pleasure the end of life. Cic. (See p. 354, 3.) Acad. iv. 45, 139 Aristippus,
:
ras ffcafj.ariK.as a/xefvovs flvai Kal ras ox^ 645 X f P 0vs ras ffw/jLariKas o6ev Kal ravrais KoXa^soQai fj.aX\ov rovs a/uaprarfav
tyv%iK<t)v
"
habeamus, corpus solum tuetur. The highest good Aristippus de clared consists not in bodily pleasure, but in pleasure gene If he regarded bodily rally. pleasure as the strongest, and
quasi
in this sense as the best, it by no means follows that he ex cluded mental pleasures from
animum nullum
vovras.
359
CHAP.
how unequal
impressions are
:
the sight, produced by perceptions altogether alike for instance, of the sufferings of others, if they are
real, gives
a painful impression
if
They even allowed that and pains of the mind which have
The
with as
prosperity, for instance, of our country fills us much pleasure as does our own. 2 Although
therefore pleasure is in general made to coincide with the good, and pain with evil, the Cyrenaics are far from expecting happiness to result from the mere
For a true enjoy instincts. not only need to weigh the value you and the consequences of every enjoyment, but you
satisfaction of
animal
ment
of
life,
to a pleasant life
is
teaches
how
to
make
Indeed, his
ras ^vxiKas ySovas Kai a\y-r)$6vas firl ffu^ariKous -rjSova is /ecu 01X777-
86<n
yivecrQai
Kal
yap
eirl
$i\fj
&<nrep
rfj TTJS
irarpiSos
euT^iepia
r rj
3 4
I8ia
xaPa
"
eyyiveaOai.
yivetreai -rjSovas,
pivwv
6pi]vovs
T&V
8e
same
See p. 347, 2. See the anecdotes and proverbs in Diog. 68 73 79 82, and what Galen. Exhort, c. 5,
; ;
vol.
i.
8,
K.,
and
Vitruv.
vi.
Conv. v. 1, 2, 7, p. 674. Here belongs Cic. Tusc. ii. 13, 28. a irda-as ^eWoi Diog. 89
:
oi>
say of his shipwreck. Conf. Exc. e Floril. Joan. Da-. masc. ii. 13, 138.
Pragf.
i.,
30
CHAP.
dependence on present enjoyment; and guaranteeing that freedom of soul of which we stand in need would
we
lot.
at every
3
moment
rest contented
Hence the cultivation of the mind is urgently advocated by these philosophers, 4 and philosophy in particular pointed to as the way to a truly human
life.
5
They even
condition of happiness ; for although mankind are too far dependent on external circumstances for the
wise
man
1
be invariably happy, and the foolish 6 Nor invariably miserable, yet as a rule so it is.
to
pus in Diog.
Pu. 74.
ii.
man
72
Pint. Ed.
tioiis as
He
is
also
mentioned
xp^ara
5e
Xpflffo^vr\v avrols.
is Socratic.
2
The thought
p. 141, 2.
ffotybv
See
91
:
Diog.
riv
^re
(on
re-
<p6ov^jffiv
(ji.-f)T
fpaff6-f](Tf<r9ai
by Diogenes ii. 68 (Conf. Exc. e Floril. Joan. Damasc. ii. 13, 146) as the author of the saying, which Cic. Eep. i. 2 Pint. adv. Col. 30, 2, p. 1124, attribute to Xenocrates, that the conduct of the philosopher
;
this
point
would remain the same, supposing all laws to be abolished, c apeoKei 5 avro ts Diog. 91
s
:
irdvra
<$>av\ov
a\Aa
/card rb irXzlffrov.
In the
quences. 3 See p. 355, 2. 4 Many expressions to this effect are on record, particularly those of Aristippus, Diog.
ii.
same way the Cyrenaics would were not deny that the
&<[>povfs
Plut.
Frag,
of certain virtues, Probably this was only expressly stated by later members of the School in agree-
capable
9, 1,
ment with
Stoics,
the
Cynics
and
361
CHAP.
XIV
might at first have been expected. Herewith agrees all that is further known as to tice views and conduct of Aristippus. His leading
o
c.
Prac
li
tical
fe
of the Cyrenaics.
thought is comprised in the adage, that life offers most to him who, without ever denying himself a
self
pleasure, at every moment continues master of him and his surroundings. The Cynic freedom from
He lived not only 2 A good table he comfortably, but even luxuriously. 3 4 enjoyed, wore costly clothing, scented himself with
a greater art
l
than abstinence.
Nor were
;
;
ySovrjs
Sc.
ovx
&
aire^fjifvos,
fj.}]
:
aAA
/cpore? 5 6
Xpcijuevos
fj.ev
TrapfK(f>ep6[j.evos
rb Kparetv Kal
^
rJ>
xpy&QaL-
Xen.
Mem.
calls
him
ii. 1, 1,
npbs TO. roLavra [irpbs eiridv/jLiav fipuTov nal TTOTOV Kal Acryi/eiay], etc. He says himself then. 1, 9, that his object is y ftaara ri Kal
66 Ibid. ii. 69, iv. 40 Lucian. V. Auct. 12 ; Clemens, Paedag. ii. 176, D. ; Eus. Pr. Ev. xiv. 18, 31 EpipJi. Exp. Fid. 1089 A. ; Steele, p. 41 71. 3 See the anecdotes in Diog.
Diog.
;
ii.
ii.
4
and Socrates VlSia-ra fiioTevtiv asks whether he depended for his homelessness on the circumstance that no one could like to have him even as a
slave
/
Max. Tyr. Diss. vii. 9 Lucian, 1. c. Ibid. Cic. Ace. 23 ; Tatian adv. Grac. c. 2 Tert.
; ;
Apol. 46.
TIS
yap
rrj
avOpuirov
/njSej/
That he made use of fragrant perfumes, and defended this practice, is told by Seneca, Clem. Psed. Benef vii. 25, 1
5
. ;
oiKta
%eij/ irovtiv
fjifv
0eAo^TO,
l
Se
>
TroAureAetrTaTT;
this picture SICUTT? x a P OVTa was afterwards more deeply coloured by later writers, and
176 D., 179 B., Diog. 76, all from the same apparently source, the others mentioned by
ii.
Stein, 43, 1, probably doing likewise. 6 His relations to Lais are well known. Hermesianax in
the means neglected by which this mode of life was rendered possible. On the contrary, he argued that the more of these you possess, the better for you.
Riches are not like shoes, which when too large can He accordingly not only demanded not be worn.
1
payment
for his
instruction
2
;
to enrich himself
by means, and for this purpose to submit to things which any other philosopher would The fear of have considered below his dignity. 3
Athen.
xiii. 599, b, 588 c xii. die. ad Fam. ix. 26 544, b, d. Pint. Erot. 4, 5, p. 750 Diog. 74, 85 Clemens, Strom, ii. 411, C. ; Theod. Cur. Gr. AfL xii. 50, p. 173 Lact. Inst. iii. 15. A few other stories of the same kind
;
is
found in Stob. Floril. 3, 46, and in a somewhat different connection, Diog. 70 and 81. Yet ScJileiermaclier on Plato s Republic, vi. 489, has no busi
t
may
81;
1
be found, Diog. 67
69
iv. 40.
tippus stay at the court of Dionysius. According to Diog. 77, Aristippus is said to have
arrival, that
19
a.afya.Xias
/ue7oAdi|/i;%oj/
yttej/
flvat
Aiovvffiov
avrols
-yap
announced to Dionysius, on his he came to impart what he had, and to receive what he had not or, according to a more probable version, Ibid. 78, when he wanted in struction he used to go to So
;
Dionysius at first refusing to give him any money because the wise man, on his own show ing, was never in difficulties, he replied, Give me the money
this once,
crates
for
it,
now
that
he
why philosophers ap peared before the doors of the and not the contrary, was rich, knew because philosophers what they wanted, whilst the rich did not. The same story
reason
and I will explain to you how it is but no sooner had he got it, than he exclaimed, Ah was I not right 1 Diog. 82, Diog. 67, 73, and Athen. xii. 544, tell further, on the author
;
!
ity of Hegesander, that once having been placed at the bottom of the table by Diony sius because of some free ex pression, he contented himself
CHAP. XIV.
liver,
could face danger with the composure of a Socrates. 2 It would, nevertheless, be doing Aristippus a to consider him an great injustice ordinary, or at
most a somewhat more intellectual pleasure-seeker. Enjoy he will, but, at the same time, he will be
above enjoyment. He possesses not only the skill of adapting himself to circumstances and making use of
3 persons and things, not only the wit which
is
never at
ests.
He
is
represented as a
and parasite of Diony sius, by Lucian V. Aut. 12; Parasit. 33, Bis Accus. 23 Men.
flatterer
;
13.
man must
put up with more moisture, to catch even a smaller fish. Once, when begging a fa vour for a friend, he fell at the
feet of Dionysius, Diog. 79, and when reproached for so doing,
See Diog. 76 at the same the Cyrenaics consider fear to be something natural and unavoidable. See p. 360, 2. 2 On the occasion of a storm at sea he was charged with dis
1
:
time
Wherefore, he asked, has Diony sius ears on his legs ? It is a common story that Dionysius once asked him and Plato to appear dressed in purple Plato refused to do so, but Aristippus acceded with a smile. Sext.
:
playing more fear than others, notwithstanding his philoso phy, to which he adroitly re
plied ov yap irepl 6/j.oias \l/v%rjs aywi ico/j.ev afj.<p6Tepoi, Diog. 71 J Gell. xix. 1, 10 ; JElian, V. H.
:
ix. 20.
3
Diog.
66
-t)v
8e
luavhs
204, i. 155 Diog. 78 Pyrrh. Suid. Apicrr. Sto b. Floril. 5, 46; Greg. Naz. Carm. ii. 10, 324 the latter unskilfully places the incident at the court of Archelaus. The Stein, 67. observation in Diog. 81, is like wise referred to Plato, that he
iii.
;
ap/J-ocraffOai
Kal T^TTW
Kal
XP^ V V
Kal irpoauirw, KOI iraaav irepia ra(nv 8ib Kal irapa. ap/jLoSiws viroKpivavOai
a\\cav ei/So/a/xet Aiovvcricf T&V ael rb Trpoffirea bv eu Smrt/xaAA.oi>, 0e few instances of this
;ue><Qs.
skill
allowed himself to be abused by Dionysius for the same reasons that others abused him a preacher of morals after all is only pursuing his own inter
:
Vi(see p. 340), that after having suffered shipwreck, and lost everything, he immediately contrived in Syracuse or Rho-
what
told
by Galen, and
truv.
of spirit, which can forego pleasure without a pang, bear loss with composure, be content with what it hath, and feel happy in any position.
His maxim
is
and under
:
all
circum-
cm des to procure an ample supply dish of fish 6pas ovv of necessities. Further, it is avv 670; tyofydyos, aAAa av ffiXapstated in Plutarch, Dio. 19, yvpos. Another time he argues that he was the first to notice that if good living were wrong, it would not be employed to the growing estrangement be tween Dionysius and Plato. In honour the festivals of the gods. Ibid. 68. Another time, wLeii Diog. 68, he answers the ques tion, What good he has got some one took him to task for from philosophy, by saying: his good living, he asked him TO 5vva.(rOoLi iraat dappovvrus 6/j.i\- to dinner. The invitation being clv and Diog. 79, relates that accepted, he at once drew the when brought as a captive be conclusion that he must be too fore Artaphernes, some one stingy to live well himself. 76. When Dionysius asked him how he liked his Ibid. ottered him the choice between situation, to which he replied, that now he was perfectly three mistresses, he chose them at rest. Well-known is the all, with the gallant observa answer which he is reported to tion, that it had been a bad have given to Diogenes (which, thing for Paris to prefer one of however, is told of others), three goddesses, but bade them Diog. vi. 58, ii. 102 cnrep ??5ejs all farewell at his door. Ibid. When attacked for his re 67. 6/j.i\eiv, OVK TJ.V \dxava Diog. 68 Hor. Ep. i. lations to Lais, he answered Valer. Max. iv. 3, Ext. 4. with the well-known ex u Ka * 17, 13 Bee p. 362, 1 363, 2. In a OVK exo/J-ai. The same relation similar way he could defend is said to have given rise to his luxuriousness. When blamed other light jokes it was all the for giving fifty drachmas for a same to him whether the house partridge, Aristippus asked if in which he lived had been he would have given a farthing occupied by others before he The reply being in the did not care whether a fish liked for it. affirmative I, said Aristippus, him, if he liked the fish. The do not care more for fifty Cynicism is betrayed by the drachmas than you do for a far anecdotes in Diog. 81, p. 341, thing. Diog. 66, 75 or with a 4, although they are not other wise at variance wi f h Grecian different turn in Atlien. viii. 343, c., where the story is told morals. pf him and Plato apropos of a
.
365
HAP.
XIV.
the beggar s rags and the robe of state with equal 3 Pleasure he loves, but he can also dispense grace.
therewith. 4
He
will continue
master of his
desires. 5
His temper
6
shall not
passion.
Some importance
but hardly any independent value, 7 and therefore the want of them is never felt. He is lavish of them
because he does not cling to them. 8 If necessary, he can do without them, 9 and is readily consoled for
See pp. 355 and 360. Hor. Ep. i. 17, 23 omnis Aristippum decuit color et sta tus et res, tentantem majora
1
a saying of the same kind which Aristippus uttered on paying a visit to his mistress, to the effect that there was no need, to be ashamed of going there, but there was of not
tells
ir6vois
owrjve-
Dioff.66.
163, 3;
355,
3
2.
ot
KuTirai Kal
ou5e
du.i\e iv
is
said to have
:
<rol
him
SeSorat
/cat
xAaznSa
re
STTOJS
jU.^
TO.
e^SwAa T^S
Sta
TTJS
The same
avaXa/j./Sdvova a
evepycas ej/ avrfj TJ Sidvoia TroAAaKIS avaKair] rrjv upeiv. The same
6n
and Hoi: Ep. i. 17, 27, on which passage the Scholiast tells how Aristippus carried off the surcoat of Diogenes from the bath, leaving his piirple cloak in stead, which Diogenes refused
to
way of thinking is expressed in his definition of pleasure as a gentle motion of the mind. The storms of passion would change this gentle motion into a violent one, and turn pleasure into pain.
7
1
4,
was carrying a heavy burden of gold cast away what was too
wear at any
4
5
Dwg.
much
3,
for him.
;
Hor. Serm.
ii.
99
9
Dwg.
77.
Diog. 69,
To him no
lives
avarice. 3
He
an easy
life,
but he
is
not on that
account afraid of exertion, and approves of bodily His life is that of the flatterer, but he exercise. 4
often expresses himself with unexpected
candour. 5
all things, and hence will neither rule nor be ruled, nor belong to any com munity, being unwilling to forfeit freedom at any
7
price.
pirate
vessel,
:
money
words
TITTKOV
by Diog,
fy
airo\ffeai. Dioff. 77; Cic. Invent. ii. 58, 176; Auson. Idyl. iii. 13 Stob. Floril, 57, 13, takingcare to read with Menage and Stein, p. 39, rb apyvpiov for d ypb?.
;
73, 77 ; Stol). Floril. 49, 22; conf. Greg. Naz. Carm. ii. 10, 419, vol. ii. 480 Codd. ;
not to mention the anecdotes in Dwg. 75, repeated Ibid. vi. 32 Galen. Exhort, ad Art. c. 8,
;
i.
18, k.
6
On
InPfarf.Tranq. An. 8, p. 469, Aristippus having lost an estate, one of his friends expresses
l
by Hor. Ep.
Aristippi
bor, et
now
2
72
ii.
to the context, however, the principle should not be conlined to Aristippus relations to outward possessions. Here, too, the saying belongs Pliit. in
6v-
Hes.
yarpl
rtwaffKuiv
avrrjv
lov\ov
7
rov irXs iovos flvat. story in Ep. Socrat. 29, the compiler of this late and miserable counterfeit
virfpoirriK7]v
irpoaairelv.
Xen. Mem.
to Socrates,
having used the earlier genuine letters to Aret. mentioned by Suid AptW.
not
3
the number of those who rule, or those who are ruled, Aristippus slates: 7^7 ouS o\ccs 76
rrjv
avp.$a\Xs<rQa.t
rwv apx^iv For, as is explained here and p. 17, there is no man who is more troubled
rdrra) e^airov
et s
r-hv
^ovKo^vuv
ra^iv.
than a statesman
e/j.avrbv roi-
367
did
lie
have at religious considerations or traditions. least every reason for asserting this both of Aristippus 1 Theodorus was pro personally, and of his School.
bably the
attacks
first
We
CHAP. XIV.
to
on the popular
between the Cyrenaic philosophy and the insipid rationalism of Euemerus 3 is far from certain. Nor ought
it
make
life
to be forgotten, that Aristippus strove to not only for himself, but also for easy
57
T KOL jSioreveij/. When Socrates met this by ob serving that those who rule are better off than those who are
pacTTa
ij8i<TTa
vernment, a good one is natu rally preferable to a bad one ; and accordingly the saying
attributed
Floril.
49,
to
18,
him
in
Stob.
ruled, he rejoined
ovfie
is
dAA.
rts
rjf
cyca roi
e/j.avrbv fj.oi So/ce?
TT\V
SouAeicu/ av
elvai
ciAA
rovruv
iir,
65bs,
St 5t
ovre
SouAei as,
aAAa
And
after further
rot, *Lva
fj,r]
objections
7rdo"xw
dAA iyu
ravra, ou5 els TTo\LTfiav f/jLavrov KaraKAetoo, dAAd |eVos Tra^rayou fl/M. Quite in keeping with this
touching the difference between a despotic and a monarchical form of go vernment has about it nothing Nevertheless, at improbable. a later period Aristippus may have relaxed his views on civil life to a certain extent. At any rate he formed a connection with a family with which he would previously have nothing to do. Certainly Diog. 81, proves nothing. Seep. 341, 4. It was a natural conse quence of their scepticism, that they followed Protagoras in his attitude towards religion and
1
;
by means
of
their practical
country; from every country the way to Hades was the same. His address to Dionysius in Stob. Floril. 49, 22, is also quite in harmony with Xenophon s
description
:
turn that freedom from reli gious prejudices was decidedly promoted, which they espe cially required in the wise
Diog. 91, see p. 360, 2. Clemens, Strom, vii. 722, D., says more generally that they rejected prayer. 2 Particulars of this below,
3
man.
Had you
learnt
aught from me, you would shake off despotic rule as a di sease. Being obliged, however, to live under some form of go
See
p. 343, 5.
Possessed of pleasing and attractive man an enemy of vanity and boasting, 2 he could ners, comfort friends with sympathy, 3 and bear injuries with calmness. 4 He could avoid strife, 5 mitigate
others.
1
The most
is
extraordinary
said
to
man
shown by
that he congratulated himself on having become, thanks to Socrates, a man capable of being praised in all good conscience. In a word, with all his love of enjoyment, Aristippus
may
therefore be
true,
is
the
name which
4 5
6 7
Greg. Naz. 307, gives him, and Ibid. 323, he commends him for rb tv\api<iTOv rov rp6n ov /ecu arpa)2 See Arist. Ehet. ii. 23 See also p. 363, 3. JHog. 71, 73. 3 Athen. V. H. vii. 3. men tions a letter of sympathy ad dressed to some friends, who had met with a severe misfor tune. He quotes from the in
;
take, refers to the brother of Aristippus. 8 Stob. Floril. 37, 25: Apt(rrnnros
effriv eV
elTre,
e pwrTjflels
T<p
troduction
67:076
the
irpbf
words
fyias
aAA
yaw
ovx
&s
9
ov
In theory, AuTTou^ueVous. v/uicis Aristippus could only estimate the value of friendship by its utility, as Epicurus did at a later time. Diog. 01 Ka rfjs XP e as * v * Ka
:
Which
of
is
told
-l
(TUfAO-TOS,
e<rdai.
jU.e%p*S
&
Something similar is also found in Socrates, see pp. 151, 3 222, 3 and he employs the same argument Xen. Mem.
; ;
anecdotes about Aristippus rest on good author ity. Agreeing, however, as they all do, in portraying a certain character, they have been used as the material for a historical sketch. They may be spurious in parts, but on the whole they give a f aithf ul representation of
the
the man.
Few
by Diog.
71.
i.
2, oi.
CHAP.
change of human affairs, how to govern his passions and inclinations, and how to make the best of all the
events of
The strength of will which can beard life. the earnestness of high feelings intent upon destiny, great ends, and strictness of principles may not be
his
;
but he
is
and the cheerful brightness of his manners attract far more than the superficial and effeminate character of Nor are these traits purely his moral views repel,
1
in the very nature of his system, personal ; they requiring as it does that life should be directed by
lie
prudence.
quite as much with Aristippus as with Diogenes, and in the case of each one may be explained by the
other.
indeed both are far enough D. Posiwas a theory of a knowledge of con- their removed. His ty* tem to ceptions ; theirs a most downright subservience to
Socrates
From
the senses.
1
for
know-
socrate*.
Even Cicero, who is not generally his friend, says (Off. i. 41, 148), that if Socrates or Aristippus placed themselves in
antagonism with tradition, they ought not to be imitated therein magnis illi et divinis bonis hanc licentiam assequebantur and he also quotes (N. D. iii. 31,
:
qui bene dicta male interpretarentur posse enim asotos ex Aristippi, acerbos e Zenonis schola exire. The same is attributed to Zeno by Ath. xiii. 566, d, on the authority of Antigonus Carystius those who misunderstood him, might become vulgar and depraved, Ka.Qa.irep ol
:
TTJS
Apia-T nnrov
iv
B B
70
CHAP.
;_J
theoretical enquiries.
tiousness, an unconditional submission to moral re quirements, an unceasing toiling of man upon him
theirs was a comfortable theory of ; never going beyond enjoyment, and treating even life, the means thereto with indifference. On his side
self
and others
were self-denial, abstemiousness, moral strictness, on theirs were luxurious indul patriotism, piety
;
gence, mischievous versatility, a citizenship of the world needing no country, and a rationalism needing
no
Grods.
it
was only a degenerate pupil of Socrates, or that his teaching had only been touched surface-deep by that Not only was he classed among fol of his master.
lowers of Socrates by the unanimous voice of antiquity, which, no doubt, had more immediate reference to
his external connection with
him ; not only did he of Socrates and regard his always call himself a pupil a proof stronger teacher with unchanging devotion l than the former, and showing that he was able to
appreciate the greatness of his friend ; but his phi losophy leaves no doubt that the spirit of his teacher
had
in
at work.
The
intellectual
See above,
p.
337,
Hermanns
remarks
(On
;
Kitter s Dar. d. Socr. Sys. 26 Gesch. d. Plat. Phil. 263), intended to bring the intellectual
teaching of Aristippus into closer connection with that of Socrates, do not appear satisfactory, even when supported by the additional arguments in
371
CHAP. XIV.
mann
thinks
that
Aristippus
was only lacking in the reli gious and moral tone of So crates, but that he steadily ad
hered to his logical principles. Socrates declared all judgments to be relative, and only concep tions to be universally valid in the same way, the Cyrenaics denied only the universal va lidity of judgments, but not for they that of conceptions allowed that all men receive from the same things the same
v
;
declared the corresponding con ceptions for instance, that of the good to be relative. In the next place it is equally un true to say that the Cyrenaics only denied the universal va lidity of judgments but not that
conceptions for they de clared most emphatically that all our notions only express our
of
;
personal feelings. They did not even allow that all feel the same impressions in the same way unless in this passage we are to understand by impres sions, feelings themselves, in which case this language would
:
impressions, as to the names of which they were agreed. These names, however, were identical with the conceptions of So
crates, conceptions
be as unquestionable as it would be unmeaning but they main tained that we cannot know whether others have the same
;
having been
by them
by the Cynics and Megarians reduced to empty names and deprived of all real There is indeed a substance.
as
noticeable advance in entirely separating conceptions from appearances, and in more pre cisely definingthe highest good as the first judgment univer But in the first sally valid. place it never occurred to So crates to deny the universal
validity of judgments and it is as certain that he allowed uni versally valid judgments as that he allowed universally valid conceptions such, for instance, as All virtue is knowledge,
;
feelings as ourselves. And that they practically admitted the common meaning of names the use of which they could not of course deny, is of little ac count for they left it an open
;
question, whether common im pressions and notions corre sponded to these names. It will be seen at once what has be come of the advance which Hermann finds in Aristippus. A decided distinction between
every one piirsues the good and ifhe called some judgments
;
relative
it is
such
as,
conceptions and appearances can least of all be attributed to the Cyrenaics, seeing that they know of nothing but appear ances and it will appear, after what has been said, to be equally a mistake to say that Pleasure is the highest good is the first judgment univer
;
<
sally valid.
B n 2
372
CHAP.
_J
Still
he was in a great measure indebted to his teacher which we can readily credit
2 him, and for that unprejudiced sobriety which cha racterises his whole bearing.
and
How
he was below So
crates is obvious.
Yet
On
ground of moral duties. Might not Aristippus then believe that he was not deviating from Socrates as to the end in view, if he in some respects held a differ ent opinion from his instructor as to the means to a On the other hand, there was about pleasant life ?
final
utility the
Aristippus
much which
is
truly Socratic
that
com
posure with which he rises above circumstances, that independence with which he is master of himself and
his surroundings, that unbroken cheerfulness which engenders a kindliness of feeling, that quiet assurance
which grows out of confidence in the strength of mind. Knowledge is with him the most important element. By culture and prudence he would make
Phil.
ii.
a, 96,
who
says
Ari-
appears to have held firm to the view that the imfound pulses to action must be within the sphere of knowledge; and, in investigating what can
stipptis
See Xen.
Mem.
ii. 1
iii. 8,
and the stories told by Diog.ii. 13 compare AtJien. xi. 508, c, on the form of dialogue obser;
-373
CHAP. X TV
Both Schools pro internally connected with theirs. to philosophy the same problem, how to acquire pose
practical culture,
2
Both, therefore, neglect logical and physical enquiries, justifying their procedure by theories, based it is true
on different principles, but leading in the end to the same sceptical results. Both in their ethics compass
the emancipation of man by means and the raising him above outward things and events. One thing only makes them opponents their pursuing this common end by means the most
The Cynic school follows the path of selfthe Cyrenaic that of self-indulgence; the Cynic denial, dispenses with the outer world, the Cyrenaic employs
opposite.
The object of both Schools being, however, one and the same, their principles come back again to the same point. The Cynics de
it for its
own
purposes.
Ari-
in stippus dispenses with property and enjoyment, 4 order the more thoroughly to appreciate them.
This relationship appears in the tradition which attributes the same utterances at one time to Aristippus, at another to
1
Wendt (Phil. Cyr. 29) quotes the contradictory statements of Antisthenes and Ariclearer,
Diogenes. 2 The standing expression is irafieia, and what they say in favour of it is much to the same effect. See what has been said, pp. 294 and 360, 4, 5.
3
stippus in Diog. ii. 68, vL 6. Antisthenes says that to philosophy he owes rb 5iW<r0cu eavT$ 6fu\eiv, Aristippus, rb SvvaaOat
irao-t
4
Qafyovvrws 6fj.i\e iv. Hegel, Gesch. d. Phil. ii. See above pp. 308 and 127.
To make
this
difference
364.
r4
CHAP.
XTV
_!__
of his countrymen; and troubling himself far too little about others to attempt any moulding in fluence on either the sphere of politics or that of
religion.
is
Thus, despite their sharp differences, there a family likeness between these Schools betraying
their
common
Certainly it must be granted that Aristippus diverged far more from the original ground of the The utili Socratic teaching than did Antisthenes.
tarian view of
life,
auxiliary notion in order to commend to the reflecting mind the practice of morality, was here raised to be
a leading thought, the knowledge of Socrates being pressed into its service. Philosophy became with
Aristippus, as with the Sophists, a means for further ing the private objects of individuals. Instead of
scientific
knowledge, only personal culture was pur sued and regarded as consisting in knowledge of the The scanty world and in the art of enjoyment.
remarks of Aristippus on the origin and truth of our impressions, borrowed for the most part from Pro
tagoras and ultimately leading to a wholly un-Socratic destruction of all knowledge, were only intended as
If not altogether annihi helps to moral doctrines. the deeper meaning of the Socratic philosophy lated,
375
CHAP.
x v
who
master
real teaching.
Side by side with this foreign element, the genuine Point Socratic teaching cannot be ignored in the Cyrenaic school. In that school there are in fact two elements,
the combination of which constitutes
its peculiarity.
the doctrine of pleasure as such, the the limitation of that doctrine by the Socratic other, demand for intellectual circumspection the principle
of these
is
One
that prudence
is
The former element, taken alone, would pleasure. lead to the conclusion that sensual enjoyment is the
only object in life ; the latter, to the strict Socratic doctrine of morals. By uniting both elements Ari which is stamped arrived at the conviction stippus
on
all his
is
racter
cha language, and on which his personal the surest way a standing comment that
to happiness is to be found in the art of enjoying the freedom of soul. pleasures of the moment with perfect
all,
indeed possible, whether the two in his system can be harmonised at leading thoughts which it seems never occurred to is a
Whether
this is
question
Aristippus.
it
in the negative.
That freedom of
1
independence
d. Phil. 87.
376
CHAP.
.
happiness becomes independent of these surroundings and feelings. Conversely, when the enjoyment of the
moment
felt in
the highest object, happiness can only be proportion as circumstances give occasion to
is
agreeable feelings; all unpleasant impressions being disturbers of happiness. It is impossible to abandon
the feelings freely to the enjoyment of what is pre sent, without at the same time being disagreeably
by what is unpleasant. Abstraction, whereby alone this might be done, is distinctly forbidden Aristippus requiring the past and the future to be ignored and the present only to be considered. Apart therefore from other defects, this theory suffers from
affected
;
contradiction in
jurious effects
its
not
fail
of which for the whole system could As a matter of fact they soon to follow.
appeared in the teaching of Theodorus, Hegesias, and Anniceris hence the interest which the history of
;
E.
The
"
the later Cyrenaics possesses. About the same time that Epicurus was giving a new ^orra ^ ^ ne philosophy of pleasure, Theodoras,
Hegesias, and Anniceris, within the Cyrenaic School, were advocating views partly agreeing with those of Epicurus, partly going beyond his doctrine of plea
sure.
Theodorus, on the whole, adhered to the prin as ciples of Aristippus, not hesitating, unscrupulous he was, to push them to their most extreme conse-
377
action depending upon he concluded that any and every action might under circumstances be allowed.
to the doer,
The value of an
CHAP.
If certain things pass for immoral, there is a good reason why this should be so, if the masses are to be
kept within bounds the wise man, tied by no such prejudice, need not, in suitable cases, be afraid of
:
If things exist for use, adultery, theft, and sacrilege. beautiful women and boys are not made only for
ornament. 2
Friendship, it seemed to him, may be with ; for the wise man is self-sufficing dispensed and needs no friends, and the fool can make no
sensible use of them. 3
Devotion to one
;
considered ridiculous
man
is
country he a citizen
of the world, and will not sacrifice himself and his wisdom to benefit fools. 4 The views of his School
respecting the Gods and religion were also expressed
Bpaa-vraros is the term used of him by Diog. ii. 136; and this epithet is fully justified by a passage like that, vi. 97.
1
That Theo-
and similar things, cannot be doubted after the definite and explicit testimony of Diogenes. It is true that, in Plut. Tranq. Anim. 5,
567, Theodorus complains that his pupils misunderstood
p.
and robbery.
1.
Diog. 98, and Epiphaniutt in still stronger terms : a.ya.Q bv povov t\*ye rbv euSaijuo3
c.
vovvra, tyevyetv
Sva-Tvxoiitna,
(1.
0aCAoy)
y
5e
rbi>
alperbv
tiva.i
him
application
life
of
his
He may have
than
led
a more moral
Bio
(Dioff. iv. 53 ; Clemens, Psedag. 15, A.), and yet have expressed
This aireiGri (a?ra0r) ?) statement, likewise, seems to be rather in the nature of a hasty conclusion, for Theodorus makes happiness depend on intelligence, and not on things without,
tvro. KOI
4
1.
c.
Bio
The atheism of Theodorus, which, besides bringing down on him an indictment at Athens, gained for him the standing epithet &6eos (he was called 0ebs according to Diog. ii. 86, 100, in allusion to a joke of Stilpo s, but probably /car avrityao-iv for &0eos), will be fre In Diog. quently mentioned. 97 he says
:
testimonies, the assertion of Clemens (Paedag. 15, A.), that Theodorus and others had wrongly been called atheists, and that they only denied the popular Gods, their lives being
avaipiav
Kal
ras aurov
irepl
e|
Qt&v
ov
OVK
fyaaiv
Aa/Soj/ra
/.
The
last
otherwise good, can be of little Theodorus no doubt weight. denied the Gods of the people in the first place, but it was not his intention to distinguish between them and the true God. The anecdotes in Diog. ii. 101, 116, give the impression of in
sincerity.
only apply to the criticism of belief in the Gods generally, for Epicurus peculiar views about them were certainly not shared by Theodorus. Sext.
iii. 218; Math. ix. 51, mentions him among those who deny the existence of the Gods, with the addition 5ta
Diog. iv. 54 : iroXXa. 5e /col adf&repov Trpo(T<f)peTo roTs o^u\ovcrt TOVTO eoScopeioi/ atruXavaas but in his last illness he
Pyrrh.
55,
TOV
irapa
irepi
Qswv
crwray/xaTOS T&
6eo\<>yov/j.va
rots
"EAATjaj
7roiKi\<0s
dj/ao-/ceucuray.
:
D.
i.
1,
2) says
esse omnino Diagoras Melius et Theodorus Cyrenaicus putaverunt. Ibid. 23, 63 Nonne aperte Deorum naturam sustu:
lerunt
? lUd. 42, 117 Omnino Deos esse negabant, a statement which Minuc. Fel. Oct. 8, 2, and
:
Lact. Ira Dei, 9, probably re peat after him. Likewise Plut. Comrn. Not. 31, 4, p. 1075, says Even Theodorus and those who
:
shared his views did not de clare God to be corruptible, a\\* OVK Tri(rTv<ra.v (as ecrri TI Epipli. (Expos. Fid. &<pdaprov.
was overcome with remorse, and had recourse to enchant ments. The argument quoted by Sen. Benef. vii. 7, 1, to prove that every one and that no one commits sacrilege is more a rhetorical and intellec tual work of skill. 3 The view of Euemerus re specting the Gods is briefly as follows There are two kinds of Gods heavenly and incorrup tible beings, who are honoured by men as Gods, such as the sun, the stars, the winds and dead men, who were raised to the rank of Gods for their benefits to mankind. Diodorus To in Em. Pr. Ev. ii. 2, 52. the latter class of beings Eue merus referred the whole of Mythology, and supposed it to be a history of princes and
:
37
He was Aristippus did not altogether satisfy him. admit that pleasure and pain do not merely depend on ourselves and our inner state, but also in
;
CHAP,
a great measure on external circumstances and he therefore sought such a definition of the highest good as should secure happiness to the wise man,
and make that happiness dependent on his prudence. This result, he thought, would be reached if happi
ness were
made
and con
versely evil, not in individual feelings of pain, but in an unhappy tone of mind ; for feelings being the effects
mind
are in our
own power. Accordingly, Theodoras asserted that in themselves pleasure and pain are neither good nor bad ; goodness consists in cheerfulness, evil in sadness ;
the former proceeds from prudence, the latter from and justice, eschew folly; therefore pursue prudence
Uranus, Cronus, princesses, For further Zeus, Ehea, &c. particulars respecting this rationalising history of the Gods,
consult Steinhart,Mlg. Encyclo. V. Sieroka, Art. Euhemerus.
Cyrenaic doctrine belongs to Theodoras that not every evil engenders sorrow, but only un:
De Euhemero.
These reasons are not mentloned in so many words, but they follow from Theodoras positions about the highest good, and also from the stress
1
which, according to Diog. 98, he laid on the avrdpKeia of the wise man, and the difference he made between wisdom and
f ll
2
v<
foreseen evils, that many precautions can be taken to prevent sorrow by familiarising ourselves with the thought of future evils. What control of outward impressions he considered possible by prudence, appears also from the explanatory remarks in Stob. Floril. the wise man has 119, 16 never sufficient reason to put
;
life,
and
it
Probably what
13, 28
;
iii.
Cic.
evil, and then to put an to life to avoid the suff erings of life.
only
end
30
CHAP,
J,
which would have done honour to a Cynic. of pleasure was therewith sur but the older setting of that theory was rendered, changed. In place of individual pleasures, a state
life
of
mind was
mere
Instead of a feelings of enjoyment and pleasure. cheerful resignation to the impressions of the mo ment, the highest good was made to consist in rising
superior to circumstances. Hegesias went a step further.
to the general
2) Hege-
He,
too, adheres
maxims of
Aristippus.
With him
good
ness
:
is
all
identical with pleasure, evil with unhappithat we do, we do only for ourselves ; if are rendered to others,
it
services
is
only because
But on looking
Dwg. 98
Kal
5e
re Xos 5
5
eirl
uTreAtS/xflaj/e
AUTTTJJ/
TTJV
^\v
tirl
<ppovli<Tei,
T^V
acppoa-vvrj
Pint. Exil. 16 ; Phil), Qu. Pr. Tib. p. 606, 884, C.) that Lysimachus threatened to
;
102
Omn.
ayaOa
<pp6vr}<riv
8e T)8oj/V Kai ir&vov. That justice should be reckoned among good things may be brought into agreement with what is quoted p. 266, 3. It is to be recommended, because it protects us from the unpleasant consequences of forbidden ac-
crucify him, upon which Theodorus uttered the celebrated saying, that it was indifferent to him whether he went to corruption in the earth or in the air. Cic. Tusc. i. 43, 102 Valer. Max. vi. 2, 3 Pint. An.
;
;
Vitios. 3, p. 499
2, 23,
titob. Floril.
tions,
attribute another saying to him on the same occasion, attributing to Anaxarchus the above passage in Stab. Floril.
2, 23.
Diog. ii. 93 ol Se Hyriffiaicol A ey<fyiej/ot CTKO-KOVS /uev (lx ov 70 ^ s avrovs ^ov^v Kal irovov, /j.-f)re 5 Te ia.v /x^re x^P iV ri f ^vai
:
<$><.^
evepyto-iW, 5id rb
p.rj
5t
aura rcwra
33
CHAP.
body
peace fortune in numberless ways crosses our wishes man cannot reckon upon a satisfactory state
;
Even the upon happiness. which Aristippus relied, af practical wisdom, upon
of mind,
in a
word,
mind no security ; for perceptions, accord to the old Cyrenaic maxim, not showing us things ing as they are in themselves, if we are always obliged to
fords to his
act according to probabilities, who can be sure that our calculations will come true ? 2 And if happiness cannot be had, it is surely foolish to try for it ;
enough
is
if
we can but
life
;
sufferings of
freedom from pain, not pleasure, Yet how may this goal be reached in
much
^,ucis aura, aAAa Std ras Xpems aurcxy [probably airrcoc], &v airovrcav jwrjS eKelVa vTrdp\i".
p.
1.
I)iofj.
currfir/creis
95
avypovv 8e Kal
rots
eairroO
a"o<f>bi/
irdvra Trpdrrfiv.
We
QaivofMevtav
insert this
eTvoi vapd rov Kapirovadai, avrdia &v avrbs irapd(rxjl- Ep\ph. Exp. Fid. 1089, B., says the same, but less accurately.
TT)V evSai/j.oviav Dioff. 94 o\us afivvaroy elvai rb /uez/ yap
1
:
Sony
sentence in the connection of the doctrine of Hegesias, where it most probably belongs, without, however, unconditionally guaranteeing for it this relation.
cru/J.0.
iro\\uv
ai aTTTr\TJTQai 7ra0rj-
Dioy. 95 r6v re oofybv ovx ovrca TrXeovdfftiv eV rrj ayaQwv alpe trei, cos Iv rrj rwv KO.KCOV
:
rG>v
^ivx)]v ffv/airaOe iv
reAos n6f[J.vov rb
fiTjSe
Tot>
ju/fy
rvx^v
AvTTTjpws
&
877
aSia^opTja-a
TJ8oj>fj$.
K<a\vLV
&(rre
Sia
ravra
avv-
TTJS
irapKrov rrjv
euSat/uoi/taz/ el^ot.
See
82
CHAP.
contentment
is
when we
are indif
These, as Hegesias observes, depend ultimately, not upon things, but upon our attitude towards
in itself nothing is pleasant or unpleasant, things but makes a varied impression, according to our
;
happiness happier than the poor. Neither freedom, nor slavery, high nor low rank, honour nor dishonour, are condi tions of the amount of pleasure we receive. Indeed,
;
of
life
to the wise
man
No
more
the pupil of Aristippus here does. With these prin ciples is connected the noble and thoroughly Socratic
maxim
human
what and as
good pleasant, everyone desires man does not allow his peace of mind to depend on things external, neither does he allow it
is
:
wrong what
desiring
ouSei/ rjSv
the
sense
1.
Similarly
^
/j.ev 3
inreXdfj.fBa.i oi
5ia
8e
c.
conf. p. 343,
ov
0-Trcwej/
K6piv robs ijSerrflcu TOUS 8 ar;5ws eX lJ/ Ibid. 95 Kal /uev &<ppovi
^fVKTfjibv
77
:
r<3
Ibid.: e\eyov
TO. a/j.apTf)iJi.aTa
crvyy: WUTJS
Ttry^ai/eii/
fKovra
TraOei
fj.io-r)ffiv,
a/j.apTcii fiv,
>
a\\d
Kal
yap nvi
rb
rjv
AufTireAes,
a5id<popov
elVat,
rw 5e which pro-
K.o.rr\vo.
yK.a.ff^vQV fj.a\hov 5e
383
CHAP.
It is even expressly ad pleasure is unsatisfactory. mitted that human life has about it more of sorrow
than joy, and hence a perfect indifference to things outward is insisted upon. But what right has Hege
sias to identify pleasure
evil ?
After
all,
the good
with the good, and pain with is that which is the con
dition of our well-being; if this be indifference rather than pleasure, indifference and not pleasure is the good the doctrine of pleasure has come round
;
to its opposite
external.
position ; still it is distinctly avowed within that school that pleasure is not in all cases the highest motive. Anniceris indeed maintained that the aim
own
(3)
Anni-
of every action is the pleasure resulting therefrom ; and, like the older Cyrenaics, he would not hear of a
ceris
from pain general aim of life, nor substitute freedom 1 He observed too that by in the place of pleasure.
can be understood pleasure only our own pleasure for of the feelings of others, according to the old
;
1
Clemens, Strom,
p.fv
ii.
417, B.
. .
of 8e
AvvtKfpeioi KaXoii^voi
rov
6\ov
fiiuv
r4\os
ovSei/
statement in Diog. ii. 96 of 5 /car& Ai/j/tKe peioi r& p*v &\\a ravrh rofoois the School of
:
&pifffj.tvov
era^av,
eKacmjs
Se
TV
TOJ>
|
i
TTfpiyivofjLfvnv Trpalews ouroi oi KvpnvaiKol TOUT5poi/ TTJS rjSoi/fjs EiriKofyov, ToG aXyovvros vir^aico-Tt pfviv, o.eTovffi veKpov KardffraffLv
and also the assertion (Suid. AvvlK.) that Anniceris, although living, according to Suidas, in the time of
Hegesias
Alexander, was an Epicurean. Cicero and Diogenes likewise affirm that his School declared pleasure to be the good,
rV
would
justify the
1. This inaccurate
384
CHAP.
Hence, Anniceris allowed to friendship, gratitude, family affection, and patriotism an independent value, quite apart from the benefit He even went so resulting from these relations.
far as to say that the wise
fices for
honourable pursuits. 2
sacri
them, nor would his happiness suffer from his so doing, even if there remained to him but little
actual enjoyment. 3 This admission brought him round to the ordinary view of life, to which he ap
still further by attaching less value to the second element in the Cyrenaic doctrine prudence, of morals, than Aristippus had done. In fact, he
proximated
denied that prudence alone is sufficient to make us safe and to raise us above the prejudices of the
masses
Diofj.
96
r^v re rov
<pi\ov
7rpaetj/.
(rets
odev, 8ia
5i
aurV
fjd]
eli/cu
yap alffO^r^jv TIJ? /. See p. 350, 1. Clemens, 1. c. contirmes yap r)juas /x)j fj.6vov 7rl ?rt 6/xiA^ois real is, aAAa /cal
:
ireptytvrirai
re
(f>i\ov
p.}]
a7ro5e%eo
0at,
V7ro\nrov(r<av
/u^
ciriffTpeffrfcrdai
a\Aa
firl <pi\on^iais.
Comp.
Cic. Off.
iii.
116.
r4\os
/cat
&yQ6iJLevov ei
e/c
r^s
7rpa|cos
TrepLyivo/j.evrii
arepecrdai
inro/jLtvelv
rjSov^i;
aurrjs 5ta
opus
irpbs
f ^ai
rV
/u^?
riv
<pi\ov
to the pleasure resulting from an action, but to the pleasure immediately bound up there-
ffropy^i/.
4
Ibid. 96
re avrdpicn
dappriffai
96
j8ia?
aire\nrov
"X,aoiv
5c Kal
5eTi/
8*
Kal
Kal Trpbs
iro\\ov
Siddeffiy.
yoveas
r/*V
<pav\T)V
385 CHAP.
and, joyment, and not mere freedom from pain moreover, making the pleasure of the moment, and not the state of man as a whole, to be the aim of
;
all action.
after another these limitations were Theodorus denied the last one, Hegesias abandoned. the second, and even the first was assailed by Anni-
One
It thus appears how impossible it is to com bine the Socratic demand for prudence and indepen dence of the external world, with the leading thought
ceris.
The Socratic element of the theory of pleasure. that theory and brings it round to its disintegrates
The process, however, taking place with opposite. out intellectual consciousness, no new principle
results therefrom.
whom
this result is
c o
CHAPTER XV.
RETROSPECT.
CHAP.
XV.
INCONSISTENCIES appear to have been common to all It was, without doubt, an in the Socratic Schools. the part of the Megarians to confine consistency on
knowledge to conceptions, and at the same time to do away with all possibility of development and with
anything like multiplicity or definiteness in concep
tions
;
same
to declare that being is the good, and, at the time, by denying variety and motion to being,
to deprive it of that creative power which alone can justify such a position ; to begin with the Socratic
wisdom, and to end in unmeaning hair-splitting. It was an inconsistency on the part of Antisthenes
to endeavour to build all
human
life
on a foundation
of knowledge, whilst at the same time destroying all knowledge by his statements touching the meaning
It was
no small
in
yet to attribute an exaggerated value to the externals of the Cynic mode of life ; to declare war against pleasure and selfishness, and at the same time to
pronounce the wise man free from the most sacred moral duties to renounce all enjoyments, and yet
;
387
CHAP.
contradictions appears the unsatisfactory nature of the principles from which all these Schools started. It is seen how far they were removed from the per fect moderation, from the ready susceptibility of
versatility
of Socrates, all
clinging to particular sides of his personal character, but unable to comprehend it as a whole.
The same
~
art.
is
The captious reasoning of the Megaphilosophers. the indifference of the Cynics to all speculative thanofthe rians, knowledge, and their contempt for the whole theory
of conceptions, no less than the doctrines of Aristippus relative to knowledge and pleasure, savour more
of the
Yet all these Sophists than of Socrates. schools professed to follow Socrates, nor was there one of them which did not place some element of the
It Socratic philosophy at the head of its system. is therefore hardly correct for modern writers to find
plemented and corrected by what is Socratic, and, instead of deducing their differences from the manysidedness of Socrates, to refer
them
to the diversities
sides towards
With decided
228, who, amongst other things there says that the agreement in matter bet ween these schools
.
to be regarded as a corrective, modifying more or less strongly their fundamental views de-
and the
c c 2
88
CHAP,
Y"\T
must have been conscious that to him they were first indebted for an intellectual centre, and that from him they had first received the living germ of a true
philosophy
;
indeed this
may
be clearly observed in
it is
their philosophy.
In their case
wrong
to speak
of the ennobling influence of Socrates on sophistical principles ; we ought rather to speak of the influence
of sophistry on their treatment of the teaching of Socrates. Socrates, as it were, gave the substance of
the teaching, sophistry being only a narrower limita for this reason a School like that of the tion of it
;
end
of the Cynics.
With Aristippus the case is somewhat different.. Yet even in respect of him it has been already
established, not only that he professed to be a fol lower of Socrates, but that he really was one, although he penetrated less than others into the deeper mean
ing of the founder s teaching, and showed the influ ence of sophistical views most plainly. If then,
sophistry, endeavouring to act as an equipoise to Socratic teaching, &c. Yet this remark agrees ill with those steps in advance of Socrates which Hermann thinks to discern in many sophistical assertions of
with the proof of the difference in principle between the Eristic of the Sophists and
f.)
that of Megara. (Ges. Abh. 250, Far more correct and more
in keeping
Antisthenes
and
;
Aristippus
370, 2),
and
3
CHAP.
the imperfect Schools from entering so deeply or into the spirit of their master as Plato did, it fully should also be remembered that Socrates himself
gave occasion to this variety in the Schools whicli were connected with him. On the one hand, his
personal character afforded so rich a field as to invite investigation in the most opposite directions ; on the
scientific form of his philosophy was so imperfect and so unsystematic, that it gave scope for many diverging modes of treatment,
1
This disintegration of the Socratic Schools is .accordingly not without importance for the further
progress of philosophy. Bringing out the separate elements which were united in Socrates, and connect
c.
1m-
f ^f^^
school*.
ing them with the corresponding elements in the preSocratic philosophy, it held them up for more careful
observation.
set for
all
sub
sequent thinkers to discuss. The logical and ethical -consequences of the Socratic maxims were brought
to light.
On
it
separation of the various elements in the teaching of Socrates, and their combination with other
theories,
J
would lead
iii.
to,
d-c.
de Orat.
16, 61,
:
somewhat
superficially
Cum
essent plures orti fere a Socrate, quod ex illius variis et diversis et in omnem partem diffusis disputationibus alius aliud apprehenderat, proscminatas sunt
>0
CHAP,
mind
of Socrates.
In this way
___L_
was indirectly instrumental in enforcing the demand for a comprehensive treatment which should connect
the different aspects of the Socratic philosophy more closely with each other and with earlier systems, and decide the importance of each one relatively to the In both ways these Schools influenced Plato rest.
and
for
and Aristippus the groundwork for his theory of the highest good. Of greater importance is the fact that those fol
his theory of ideas, Antisthenes
lowers of Socrates prepared the way for the course taken by philosophy after the time of Aristotle.
True
not
immediately
connected
with
those
the
imperfect
Socratic
systems
would
have been impossible without Plato and Aristotle ; still it must not be forgotten that these thinkers
are also deeply indebted to the Socratic Schools. The predominance of practical over intellectual
interests
plays
which the post- Aristotelian philosophy dis the moral contentment with which the wise
man, withdrawing from everything external, falls back upon the consciousness of his freedom and virtue; the citizenship of the world which can dis
all these pense with a country and political interest of later times are foreshadowed in the peculiarities
principles of the Cynics almost in their entirety, only in applicasoftening them down and expanding them
39
looks for
to the
CHAP.
From
the School of
xv
Megara too the scepticism of Pyrrho and the Academy branched off, albeit in a somewhat different direction. The teaching of Aristippus reappears in Epicurus, In short, tendencies, only changed in some details.
which at an
lified
supplemented by other
Yet even this was not possible until the intellec tual strength of Greece had abated, and her political condition had become so far hopeless as to favour
the view that indifference to everything external could alone lead to peace of mind. Previously the
intellectual sense
had been too quick, and the Greek too keen, to allow the hard-won results of the spirit That Socratic philosophy to be thus frittered away.
philosophy according to its deeper bearings must needs issue in a science of conceptions such as was
by Plato and Aristotle. Only by separating the various but inwardly con nected elements of the Socratic teaching, only by confounding the form in which Socrates clothed his teaching with that teaching itself, and mistaking
set forth
defects in
manner
and losophy be limited to metaphysics so abstract to morals so a criticism so empty as the Megarian, unintellectual and absolutely negative as those of
the Cynics
;
CHAP,
not without
importance
for
the progress
of
Greek philosophy,
not be valued very highly. A truer understanding and a more comprehensive treatment of the Socratic
philosophy, was the work of Plato.
INDEX.
ACA
ANT
269 can make a world out of matter, 42 teaching known to Socrates, 57; extravagant theories of, 135 his view of God as the Keason of the world, 176 his atheism charged on Socrates, 221 Ancient morality, relation of So crates to, 226 Anniceris, a Cyrenaic, pupil of Antipater, 343, 375, 379, 385 Antigone of Sophocles, 13 Antipater, a Cyrenaic, pupil of the elder Aristippus, 342 Hegesias and Anniceris his pupils, 343
spirit alone
;
; ; ;
CADEMICIANS,
Accusation, the, of Socrates, 193 ^Eschines, view of Socrates, 76 assigns the reason for the con demnation of Socrates, 211; a disciple of Socrates, 245; his prose preferred by some to that of Xenophon, 245 JSschylus, illustrating the state of thought in the fifth century, B.C., 6 on the boundary line between
; ;
periods, 9; difference be tween, and Sophocles, ] 2 con trasted with Euripides, 16 jEthiops, a pupil of the elder Aristippus, 342
;
two
of,
fascinated by Socrates, 183, 184 his connec tion with Socrates, 207, 214, 219, 221 Alexinus, a native of Elis, notorious for his captiousness, 253; two arguments of his known, 268 attacked by Menedemus the Ere;
; ;
seem rude, 80
Antisthenes, theory of, dangerous to the popular faith, 229 founder of a Socratic School, the Cynic, 247, 284, 291 ; a native of Athens, 284 rejects every combination of subject and predicate, 277 ; holds that the One alone exists, 279; the teacher of Diogenes, ex his character, 291 286 presses himself in favour of cul his nominalistic ture, 293; theory, 297 prefers madness to how led to his pleasure, 305 allows that some views, 307 kinds of pleasure are good, 308 ; makes virtue consist in know ledge, 310, 311 ; considers mar riage unnecessary, 320 censures
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
394
INDEX.
ANY
ARI
;
popular faith, 327 assails my makes happiness steries, 329 the end of philosophy, 346 de viates from teaching of Socrates, 374 inconsistencies of, 386 Anytus, the accuser of Socrates, his dislike for Socrates, 193 based on some supposed 203 personal injury, 205, 206, 207 a leading democrat, 211 a vio lent opponent of the Sophists, 218 supposed to uphold ancient morality, 231
; ; ;
doctrine his, 344 studied Ethics exclusively, 346 ; thinks happi ness the end of philosophy, 347, considers enjoyment 375, 385 an end in itself, 347, 376 theory of highest good, 391 develop ment of his leading thought, 348 considers feeling produced by internal motion, 352 con duct and views of, 352, 361 a
;
free-thinker, 367; greatly in debted to Socrates, 368 not a degenerate pupil of Socrates, 370, 375 ; has many Socratic
;
the language of Socrates in, 79 sifting of men described in, 125 cautious lan guage of, on a future life, 153 moral considerations dwelt on by Socrates in his, 185 proves that popular opinion about So crates agreed with the picture
;
; ; ; ;
Archilaus, teaches that the spirit returns to the ether, 19 falsely said to have been a teacher of Socrates, 57
280
Arete, daughter of the elder Aristippus, 341 Arginusae, state of public feeling after battle of, 207; Socrates hazarded his life to save the
victors at, 225 Aristides, the time of, 231 ; sup posed relationship of, to So crates, 62, n. Aristippus, connection of his teach ing to that of Socrates, 155 ; doc trine of, 392 founder of a Socratic School, the Cyrenaic, 247, 337
;
372 traits, dispenses with property and enjoyment, 373;. deviates further from Socrates than Antisthenes, 374 his scanty remarks on the origin of im his principles pressions, 374 adhered to by Theodorus, 379 and by Hegesias, 380 teaching reappears in Epicurus, 392 Aristippus the younger, grandson of the elder Aristippus, 341 ;. his pupils, 342 Aristophanes, illustrating the pro blem of philosophy, 29 an enemy of innovation, 29, 108,. his play of the 114, 217, 218 * Clouds supposed to have been, suggested by Anytus, 203, 206 considered So [see Clouds ] crates a dangerous teacher, 207 opposes him on patriotic grounds, 209 charges Socrates with So phistic display, 221
; ;
Aristotelian
distinction
between
philosophy and convention, 312 Aristotle, his physical discussions, 45 subordinate to metaphysics, 40 expands the conceptional philosophy of Socrates, 42, 47, 128 adheres to Idealism, 41, 49 his criticism of Plato s Ideas, 49 his ethical views, 46 the ripe fruit of Greek philosor phy, 50 ; influenced by imper;
;.
INDEX.
ARI
introduces in ductive method, 129 his notices of Socratic philosophy, 101, 104, 137 agree with those of Plato, and supplement those 181, 182 of Xenophon, 183 his view of the chief merit of Socrates, 132 attacked by Eubulides, 251 ; de nies that any propositions are false, 301 gives logic to the Stoics, 391 Aristotle of Gyrene, a contem porary of Theodore, 344 Aristoxenus, account of Socrates,
; ; ;
395 CLE
feet Schools, 50
Attic prose, models of, 245 philo sophy, 32 Authorities for the philosophy of Socrates, 101, 105, 181, 184 for
; ;
of Euripides, 17
Bacchylides illustrating the pro blem of philosophy, 21 Bacchus, story of birth of, 17
disparaging, 70, 2 Asceticism of Neoplatonists, 46 of postof Antisthenes, 305 Aristotelians, 45 Asclepiades removes Elean School
58, n.
;
Xenophon an
;
A. kingdom, 244 Aspasia, teacher of Socrates, 57 a friend of Socrates, 166 Athenian polish, 73 taste, 80 de
; ;
mPTIOUSNESS
\J Gate
s view of the of Socrates, 205
[see Eristic].
mocracy, 169, 194, 223 popular men, 29 people victims, 30 tragedians, 4 Athenians, 198, 211, 228 guilt of, 233, 234 repentance of, 201 Athens, central position of, 3 legendary history of 28; plague their ad citizens of, 31 of, 28
; ;
condemnation
Cebes, 246
intellectual
at, 54, 55,
movement going on
;
183 the abode of So crates, 193, 230; state of public opinion, 234 political intrigues of, 51; not governed by Sophists, 204 fall of, 218 old constitu tion re-established by enemies of Sophists, 219 ancient glory of, 219 Gods of, 214 Aristippus led to Athens, 337 Atomists, views of, known to Socra tes, 57 Atreus, story of house of, 8
; ;
;
Character of Socrates, greatness of, 70 peculiar features in, 77 Grecian peculiarities in, 74, 95 Characteristics of the Socratic phi losophy, 102 Charges, unfounded, against So crates, 220 charges against his against his political views, 213 moral and religious views, 214 Charmides, a disciple of Socrates, 212
; ; ;
;
Chronology of the
53, n. I
life of Socrates,
Chrysippus,
Civil
165
renunciation
of,
by Cynics, 319
Cleou, 210, 30
396
CLI Clinomachus, 251
INDEX.
CYE
Cynics, 284
;
teach
suggested by Anytus, 203, 206 attack Socrates as a Sophist, 210, 215 scope of, 214 portrait
;
blem
of philosophy, 29
Conceptions, theory of, characte ristic of the Socratic Era, 39, 40, 109 importance of, for So crates, 131 denned, 41 com mon to Plato and Aristotle, 42 formation of, developed, 47 128 proof by, 128, 130; rejected by Euclid, 259 developed to Nominalism by Cynics, 297 [see Dialectic ] Condemnation of Socrates, 198 causes of, 202 ; not the work of the Sophists, 202 not due to real personal animosity, 205 causes of, 213 justice of, 220 Connus, reputed teacher of So
;
;
crates, 56, 1
Contemporaries, relation of Socra tes to, 231 Conviction, personal, insisted on by Socrates, 227 Corinth, 251 Corybantic mysteries, 33 Crates, a pupil of Diogenes, 288 speaks approvingly of culture, 293 displays art, 334
:
Critias,
;
<
Sophistic moralising of, 211 fascinated by the wisdom of Socrates, 183 a pupil of the most unscru Socrates, 221 pulous of the oligarchs, 211 Crito, the, of Plato, 152
; ; ;
Cronos, surname of Apollonius, 251 and of Diodorus, 252 Custom, distinction between, and philosophy, 312 Cynicism, traces of, in Stilpo s
morality of, 160, practice of, 314 influence on the world, 331 go back to Eleatic doctrine, 248 depreciate Nominalism knowledge, 295 declare contradiction of, 300 impossible, 301 negative side of morality, 310 positive side, 312 good and evil, 301 virtue, 310 wisdom and folly, 313 re nunciation of self, 315, 358, 370 renunciation of society, 319, 379 the family, 320 civil life, 322 immodesty, 326 rejection of religion, 276, 327 their views combined with those of Megasaid rians by Stilpo, 275, 284 to have studied Ethics exclu sively, 344 Cynic School, a development of the Socratic, 50,162,247 follows the path of self-denial, 373 Cyrenaics, 337; history of, 337; teaching of, 344 go back to Protagoras, 248 practical life of, 361 position of their system, 369 relation of their philosophy of their to Socrates, 369, 374 of their moral teaching, 372 political views, 374 later, 376 view general position of, 346 of happiness, 45, 346 importance attached to feelings, 346, 352, 358 doctrine of pleasure, 160, 352 the highest good, 354 ; modified view of, 356 consider as all notions relative, 348; sumed a sceptical attitude to wards knowledge, 348, 351 deny that any pleasures are bad in admit degrees themselves, 356 of pleasure, 357 happiness not the satisfaction of animal in stincts, 359 philosophy how connected with Euemerus, 367; employ outer world for their own ends, 373
of,
; ;
;
ing 301
291
INDEX.
CYR
Cyreiiaic School, a development of the Socratic, 50, 247 separate
;
397
ELE
Dialectical tendency Socrates, 39
supreme in
views advo
of
Xenophon,
245
Cyrus, expressions of the dying.
179, 242 intimacy of with, 212
;
Xenophon
A AIMONION, of
81
;
Socrates, 66, n.
;
1,
not a
genius, 82 ; regarded as a pri vate oracle, 84, 89, 96 its field limited, 90 ; instances of its in tervention, 86 not the same as conscience, 91 philosophical view of, 94 said to be substi tuted for God, 220 ; its position in relation to the popular belief,
; ; ; ;
illustrating philo sophy in fifth century, B.C., 21 Dike, ^Eschylus conceptions of, 8 Dioclides, 251 Diodorus, captiousuess of, 269; views on Motion, 269; on De struction, 272 on the Possible, 272 surnamed Cronos, 252 teacher of Philo, 254 Diogenes, initiates Stilpo into Cynic doctrine, 253 a native of Sinope and pupil of Antisthenes, 287 uses expressions in favour of culture, 293 recommends
; ; ; ;
;
Didactic poetry
justice,
;
229
his asceticism, 308; 320 averse to marriage, 321 allows marriage of relations, 322; Plato s view of, 331 theory and practice overlap with, 369
; ;
testimony
of, to line of
of
So
;
ment pursued
argu
in Euclid s time,
Death of
re
Socrates view of, 179 Defence of Socrates, 196, 197 Delos, sacred ship, delays the execution of Socrates, 201 Delphic oracle confirms Socrates in his course of life, 60, and n. 3, God, 108 122, n. 1
;
of Socrates, 55,
n.
56,.
Depreciation of knowledge by Cy limits to, 293 nics, 291 Destruction, views of Diodorus on, 272 Details of the trial of Socrates, 194-200 Dialectic, a criticism of what is, 133; the art of forming con a characteristic ceptions, 39 of Socratic period, 40 the foun dation of Plato s system, 39 [see
; ;
1,3 Egyptian priestesses in Herodotus, 26 Elean-Eretrian School, 279^283; history of, 279 teaching of,
;
281 Eleatic doctrine of the One and difference be All, 264, 265; tween sensual and rational knowledge, 260; revived by Cynics, 248 also by Megarians,
;
250
Eleatics, subtleties of, 255; doc trines of, 284 Electra of Euripides, 16, 17
Conception*, Knowledge}
398
LI
Elis,
INDEX.
GOD
for the
253
notions
of,
One
of Parmenides, 262
;
Elysium,
received specting, 24
Socrates, 57
re to
by analogy,
denies
mo
Empedocles, views
known
tion, 272
makes virtue
consist
in prudence, 304
;
Epicharmus, 21 Epicurean view of happiness, 45 apathy, 46 an outcome of Epicureanism, Cyrenaic School, 50 Epicureans, on the attainment of knowledge, 45; make personal conviction the standard of truth, 116 fond of slander, 70 Epicurus, placed the highest good in freedom from pain, 354 gave a new form to the philo sophy of pleasure, 376 doctrine
; ;
Eumenides
of JSschylus,
9,
13, 16
Eristic,
of Aristippus reappears in, 391 that of Megarian, 285 Euclid, 266 of Eubulides, 268 ; of Alexinus, 268 of Diodorus, of Stilpo, 269 ; of Philo, 273
; ; ; ;
274
Eros,
a
;
passionate
attachment
grounded on
76
Eretrians, 283 Ethics, the substance of the teach ing of Socrates, 132-148, 172, 242 [see Morals] ; exclusively studied by Aristippus, 345 Eubulides, captiousness of, 267; writes against Aristotle, 251 ; the teacher of Demosthenes, 251 Euclid, an intelligent thinker, 156 fascinated by the attractions of founder of a Socrates, 183 Socratic School, the Megarian, 247, 249, 266; makes use of Eleatic doctrines, 259, 265; influenced by Heraclitus, 259; sees true being in incorporeal a counterpart to species, 259 Plato, 259 ; rejects the Platonic Ideas, 260 denies that capacity exists beyond the time of exer cise, 261 ; substitutes the Good
; ; ; ;
FAMILY, Cynics,
renunciation of, by 320 Fichte, idealism of, not the ideal ism of Plato, 43 criticism of Kant, 158 Freret, view of the condemnation of Socrates, 203, 204 Friars, resemblance of, to Cynics, 335 Friendship, 163-165 [see Eros] Frogs, 215
;
<
GOD, by
the oneness of, recognised conceived Socrates, 175 as the Keason of the world by Socrates, 176 forethought of, 177; identified with the Good by Euclid, 263
;
;
INDEX.
GOD
Gods, Socrates charged with re jecting the, of his country, 213 Cynic views of, 327 Good, the object of knowledge, 147 practically determined by custom and utility according to Socrates, 149; Megarian doc trine of, 262 placed in apathy by Stilpo, 277 identified with God by Euclid, 263 Cynic doc trine of Good and Evil, 301 Cyrenaic view of the highest good, 354 Gorgias, Plato s, 152 doubts of, 189, 218, 255 criticism of, 265 a teacher of Antisthenes, 285, 295, 327 Grecian peculiarities in the teach ing of Socrates, 74, 320 Greece,, sweeping changes in, 2 free states of, 3 gods of, in
; ;
;
390
IDE
by Persian expedition, 8 mental development of, 35 change in inner life of, 184 moral life of, 226 attention of, directed to logical criticism,
sulted
;
;
265 Greek,
229
mode of, thought, 186, 230 morality, 226, 229, 242; faith,
problem proposed to phi losophy in Socrates time, 2 life involves a contradiction, 7
;
morality debased, 76 peculiar ity, 166 progress of, 392 pre judice against manual labour,
;
;
Hegesias, a Cyrenaic pupil of Antipater, 343, 376; adheres to the maxims of Aristippus, 380 considers life full of trouble, 381 identifies pleasure with the good, 383 denies the position of Aristippus, 385 Helen, story of, 26 Hellas united, 3 Heraclitus, doctrines of, conveyed to Sicily by Sophists, 4 views idea of, known to Socrates, 57 of God, 176 early scepticism of, 243 view of the phenomenal world, 259 his doctrine of the perpetual flux of things, 350 Hercules, patron saint of the Cy a doubter in Euri nics, 306 pides, 18 mutilation of, 207, 214 Hennas, Herodotus, exemplifying the state of culture in Greece in fifth century, B.C., 24 piety and credulity of, 25, 27 a friend of Sophocles, 24 but a doubter, 26 Hesiod, verses of, quoted by So crates, 222 Hiero, the, 244 Hipparchia, a Cynic, wife of Crates, 288 Historians, illustrating the pro blem of philosophy in the fifth century, B.C., 24 Homer, verses of, quoted by So
;
crates,
212;
stories
;
criticised
242
Grote, view of Socrates Sophists, 187, 188, 189 Gyges, story of, 26
and the
explained
Euripides, 17; 18 Hegel s view of the Sat^j/toi/, 96 view of the relation of Socrates to the Sophists, 187, 190; con siders attitude of Socrates op posed to old Greek morality, 226
in
TCHTHYAS,
J_
the
successor
of
Idealism, 39 crates, 42
beginnings
of, in So of Aristotle, 43 of
;
400
IDE
Plato, 48
;
INDEX.
MEN
s
Fichte
subjective,
43 Ideas of Plato, 48, 137 Ignorance, consciousness of, the first result of self-knowledge, 121 Immortality of the Soul, Socrates view of, 178
178
at,
of,
view
TUSTICE
proves
immortality
of
sition, 138, n. I
story of, 8 LAIUS, Leonidas, 77 Life of Socrates, 52 Literature, the problem of philoso phy solved by, 4
274 Means, relation of, to ends in na ture, 172 Megara, plunder of, 277 Idealism of School of, 42 an Megarian School, 253, 284 imperfect expansion of Socratic principle, 50, 247 founded by Euclid, 249 primarily critical, 253 history of, 249 doctrine of, 255 approximated to Cyni cism, 279 merged in Cynicism, 283 teaching, 255, 258, 269 starting point of, 259 develop ment in, 264 Megarians, go back to Eleatic doctrine, 248 captious logic of, 160, 265, 266; their views of Being and Becoming, 259 of the Good, 263; agree with Plato, 260; attack popular notions, 264; fond of fallacies, 267; later, indebted to Cynics, 275, 277 inconsistencies of, 386 Meiner s view of sources of So cratic authority, 99 Meletus, the accuser of Socrates, said to have 193, 203, 205, 206 suggested the Clouds to Aris tophanes, 203 hesitates to ac cuse Socrates of Sophistry, 221; a defender of ancient morality, 231 * Memorabilia, the, of Xenophon, 72, 75, 78, 102, 132, 167, 183 Menedemus, 281 attempts of
;
INDEX.
MEN
Alexinus to entangle, in falla removes Elean School cies, 269 to Eretria, 280 directs atten tion to moral questions, 281 Menedemus, a later Cynic, 290 Menippus, a later Cynic, 290 Meno s question whether virtue is obtained by exercise or instruc tion, 313 Method of Socrates, 113 Metrocles, brother of Hipparchia, a Cynic, 289
; ;
401
PER
pre-Socratic
46
philosophers,
3J>
Nominalism of Cynics,
297, 300
Military service of Socrates, 66, 2 Miltiades, time of, 231 Mirror, the, of Cebes, 246 Moderation, the, of Socrates, 72, 74, 161
.
cles,
Coloneus of Sopho13
of,
derided,
Modesty
326
self in
suppressed by
Cynics,
Orphic traditions, 19 33
S,
mysteries,
rejected
writings
JL
of
Socrates, 160 Morality, practically determined, according to Socrates, by cus tom and utility, 149 inconsis tency of Socrates, 151 ; super ficially treated by Socrates, 151 relation of Socrates to older morality, 226; relation of So crates to cotemporary morality,
;
;
231 Morals of the Cynics, 301 Moschus, an Elean philosopher, 280 Motion, view of Diodorus on, 269 Myrto, the supposed wife of So
crates, 61, 62, n.
pides, 17; in Herodotus, 26 Parmenides, teaching known to followed by 58 Socrates, reduced action Euclid, 260 and passion to the sphere of the Becoming, 260; discovered a contradiction in the Becoming, 261 attributes assigned by him to real being, 262 proved his position directly, 265 Party, Socrates not the victim of a political, 211 Pasicles, a Megarian, younger than
57,"
view
of,
NATURE, Socrates,
135, 137
;
-Socrates, 172-175
Eubulidcs, 251 Pelopomiesian War, Thucydides" history of, 27 increasing spread of mysteries about time of, 32 views of Socrates fixed about time of, 61 fall of Athens in, 218 period after, 231 Pericles, art in the time of, 3, 10 ; the age of, 28, 54 Peripatetic School, 50 connected
;
D D
402
INDEX.
PER
PLI
;
with Aristotle, 51 strictures on Socrates, 70 Persian War, achievements of, 3 unexpected result of, 8 Socrates born in last years of, 53
; ;
Persians, battles with, 6 Phaedo, Plato s, 59, 137 Phsedo, the founder of a Socratic
School, the Elean-Eretrian, 247, 279 a native of Elis, 279 the favourite of Socrates, 280; his opinions, 281 Phaedrus, the, 79
; ;
Philo, a
shallowness of his discourses,. 80; speaks of the 8ai^6viov of Socrates, 84, 85, 87, 89 ; speaks of Socrates attitude towards natural science, 137 veils the shallowness of Socrates theory of virtue, 155 mentions what told most against Socrates at the trial, 205, 207, 217; asso ciates Socrates with Aristo phanes, 210, 216; his language about Anytus, 203, 205, 206; value of Plato s testimony con sidered, 91, 92 his agreement
;
;
Philolaus,
with Xenophon, 92, 154, 171, with Aristotle, 137 181, 188 Philosophy of, considered So crates a deep thinker, 96 his system the fruit of Socrates, 138, 187; but more developed,
; , ;
Philosophy, problem proposed to, in fifth century, B.C., 2 problem solved by politics, art, and reli gion, 2-34 progress of, in fifth century, B.C., 35 seq. Physical Science not dispensed with by Plato, 45 Physics, ethics substituted for, by post- Aristotelian philosophy, 43 Pindar, illustrating the problem of philosophy, 22, 23 respect for natural talent, 23 Plato, Writings of, 99; his dia logues, 100, 181, 183 ; most his
;
; :
influenced by im 41, 141, 392 perfect Socratic Schools, 50, 51 ; regards species as living forces, 260 dialectic, 270 the founda tion of his system, 40 his
;
;
phon as
,
257 agrees with, 260 and Xenoauthorities, 99; de scribes Euclid s method, 265
;
;
Socrates, 101 Socrates the wisest and best of men, 73 praises his social virtues, 75 describes him as a perfect thinker, 105 speaks of his peculiar moderation, 75 ; his use of the term Eros, 76 his singularity, 77 his outward
;
His portrait of
calls
essential concep beauty, 46 tions found in all things, 131 ; his teaching concerning the his physical in State, 46, 169 reality of concep quiries, 45 difference between tion, 47, 59 him and Aristotle, 49 the bloom of Greek philosophy, 49 ; influenced by imperfect Socratic Schools, 50 ; his description of Simmias and Cebes, 246 ; of Cynic definition speaks knowledge as tautological, 312 r his view of Diogenes, 331 Platonic distinction between cus
;
312; ideas,
to
Menedemus said
283
have
been
a,
Plistanus,
appearance, 78;
the apparent
INDEX.
POL
Politics, little
to,
403
soc
importance attached
by Socrates, 228
Reisig, his view of the character of Socrates, 215 Keligion, the position of Socrates
Poseidon, intervention
Possible, the
of,
2G
denied by
Rousseau
272
wild fancies, 32
Post-Aristotelian philosophy, sub stitutes Ethics for Physics, 44 one-sidedness of Schools, 47;
of
Socratic
16,
extreme individualism
era,
of,
117
Predicate, combination of subject and, rejected by Stilpo, 275 Pre-Socratic philosophy resting on tradition, 38 a study of nature, 39, 46 ; aided by Plato, 51 Prodicus, teacher of Socrates, 57 Progress, rapid intellectual, of Socratic age, 2, 3 Prometheus of ^Eschylus, 9
;
negative teaching of, 248 makes man the measure of all things, 116; considers all notions rela considers feelings the tive, 350 result of internal motion, 352, 374 Providence, belief in natural, 174 Providential care of God, 177 Prytaneum, Athens the, of the wis dom of Greece, 4 Socrates de served to be publicly entertained in the, 200 Pyrrho, his philosophy of doubt, 255 branched off from the School of Megara, 391
; ; ;
despair of knowledge, 45 imperturbability, 46; resolve truth into probability, 116 Schleiermacher, his view of the Sai/j.6viov 84 protest against the preference shown for Xenophon, 99 canon of, 100, 104 his ob jections to Xenophon as a sole discovered Me authority, 183 garian views in Plato, 256 Self-knowledge, the Socratic, 43, 121 Self-renunciation, the, of the Cy nics, 315 Sextus criticises the arguments of Diodorus, 271
, ; ; ; ;
Sicily visited by Sophists, 4 Sifting of men, the Socratic, 124 Socrates Silenus, appearance of compared by Alcibiades to, 78, 184 Simmias, a Theban, described by Plato as a philosopher, 246
164
blem
of philosophy, 21
his epi
by Plato
into,
taph on Leonidas, 77
Sinope, the birthplace of Diogenes,
298 Keason, God conceived as the, of the world, 176, 262; the only thing which gives a value to life, 310
287
Society, renunciation of, by the Cynics, 319 influence of Cynics on, 331
;
D D
404
soc
INDEX.
SOC
quire independence from wants, 315 Plato s description of,
;
ties for,
104 Character of, 52, 212 respected , by antiquity, 70 greatness of character, 70 supposed mental ab struggles, 71 ; purity, 72 161 stemiousness, 72, 74, courage, political courage, 73 201 composure, 201, 363 pious faith, 235 greatness, 235 sen love of society, 74 sible, 83
;
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
155
Socrates, followers of, one-sided followers, 44, 45, 51, 236, 375; favourite follower, 280 , language of, 151, 152, 163, 184, 185; apparently ridiculous,
79 Life of, youth and early man hood, 52, 53 date of birth and death, 53, n. education of, 55
, ; ;
;
love of friends, 194, 211, 164, imbued with Greek pecu 76 abstraction, liarities, 74, 76 not an insipid ideal of 78, 81
;
108
many-sided sympa
;
thies, 45
cultivated tact, 94 inward con centration, 81, 96, 97 a Greek eccen and Athenian, 74, 95 meditativeness, 78 tricity, 77 absence, 81 modesty, 67 sim plicity of, 338 consciousness of ignorance, 121, 122, 126 flexi inner life, 94 bility, 317 strength of will, 292 import
; ; ; ;
ance attaching to his person, 52, 116; his 8aifjL6viov, 81, 66, n. 1, his aim to train 82, 84, 89, 96
;
men,
troduced systematic education, 55 life begun in trade, 159 contentment and simplicity of, 64 married relations, 61, 62, 63 avoided public life, 66 his detractors, 70 respected by Xenophon, 72 military service, 66, 2, 70 personal habits, 105 dis simple teaching, 230 courses, 102, 184; society, 210; enemies, 207; attacks on, 393, 206, 210, 211, 232; charges against, 210, 211, 220, 229; most fatal, 217 his trial, 196, 213 condemnation, 200, 202 fate, 235 greatness guilt, 202 of, 236; death, 200, 235, 285; place in history, 186 Philosophy of, 250, 253; ap pearance at a philosophical
: ;
lenged, 135
,
comedy
contemporaries of, 185 Ethics of, 134, 172, 240 amoral ethical princi reformer, 114 ples derived from the Sophists, doctrine of scientific 149; defends friend morals, 174 utility highest ships, 163, 164 standard, 147, 372 value of in struction, 222 highest object of knowledge, the Good, 147, 262, 263 ; the oneness of virtue reand knowledge, 113, 312
,
,
;
;
from preto take a comprehensive view of science, 4 had no system, 47, 119, 160
crisis,
different
;
Socratic,
;
38
able
begins with self-knowledge, 43 aims at life, 52; philosophical platform, 104 breaks away from previous philosophy, 112; how led to the study of philosophy, 92 ground occupied by, 104, 240 understood the tendencies of the age, 114 breaks away from current opinions, 112 ; value assigned to them, 111, 129;
; ; ;
INDEX.
soc
restricted to ethics, 134, 139; 131 ; opposed to doubting, 123; his deviation from original ground of Greek thought, 231; free enquiry of, 291 ; new mode of thought, 182 did not discourse on the All,
analytical,
;
406
soc
134 explanation by analogy, 265 maxim that virtue consists in knowledge, 241; makes the highest business of man know ing the Good, 248 few definite opinions, 139 ; method, 120, 182, 240, 241 methodical pursuit of
;
;
40; different from what had preceded, 39; developed by Plato, 42, 391 leads to Idealism, 42 peculiar character of, 43 imperfectly represented in So cratic Schools, 51; different aspect* of, 390, 389; scanty notices of, in Aristotle, 101; knowledge the centre of, 44, 106; disputes about the cha racter of, 117; moral views of, 45, 109 comprehensive cha
;
knowledge, 106, 124, 169, 259, 372 narrowness of position of, 240 enunciated a new truth to his contemporaries, 165 con vinced men of ignorance, 206 246, 248 spirit of, always goes back to conceptions, 93, 120, 121, 48, 264, 292, 295: overrated knowledge, 260; in troduced dialectic, 39; ideal ism of, 42 view of injuring others, 170 theory of proof,
;
:
united
by
Socratic School, a loose association of admirers, 68 a branch of, established by Euclid, 250 Cyrenaic branch of, 337 Socratic Schools, imperfect at tempts to expand Socratic prin ciple, 50, 391 ; starting points for Stoicism, 50, 1, 247 diverge
; ; ;
131 chief merit, 131 ; philo sophical greatness, 191 Socrates, Political views of, 228 anti-republican sentiments, 168, 211 ; high ideas of the State, 167
;
;
Plato, 49, 169 pupils of, 211, 236, 237, 370 , relation to the Sophists, 55, 67 169, 187, 188, 189, 190, 203, 216, value of , natural science, 124 ;
,
disintegra tion of, 389 ; cover the same as Socrates, 50 doctrine ground of pleasure finds a place in, 160 friendship defended by, 163; founders of, 247 ; inconsisten cies of, 386; followers of So crates, 387; their importance, 389, 390; doctrine of oneness of virtue and knowledge, 312; independence of wants, 315 Socratic dialogues, 159, 184; doc trine of morals, 159 ; education,
;
geometry, 134; science foreign relation of means to, 137, 172 and ends, 137
;
Theology of, an appendix to ethics, 139 Reason of the world, 175 providence, 177 ; divine element in man, 178 , Writings of, 98 Socratic philosophy, 374; asks What things are in themselves,
,
; ;
124, 126; Ethics, of a ruler, 242; knowledge of self, 121 ; method, 125 ; mode of teaching, 241 search for conceptions, 48
243; 240;
Eros,
idea
thoughts, 244; teaching, 159, 182, 245; view, 48; type of doctrine of virtue, virtue, 74 140 conception of virtue, 147 traits in Aristippus, circle, 327
;
;
;
372
406
soc
INDEX.
STO
teaching, various ele ments in, 391 Solon s constitution re-established, 31 Sophist, Socrates taken for a, 210 meaning of the term, 190; Antisthenes in the cajmcity of,
Socratic
;
name, 296; required pay ment for instruction, 339 views on knowledge and pleasure, 387;
;
liar
dency
to,
387
285
Sophistes, the, of Plato, 266 practical Sophistic tendencies, eifect of , 2; teaching, 2, 114; 2 ; influence of, enquiries,
Sophocles, illustrating problem of philosophy, 6, 10; difference between, and jJEschylus, 12 Sophroniscus, father of Socrates,
54,1
Sorites, the, of
views, 311, 338 Sophists call everything in quesEuripides related to tio^ 1 the :yl-tter, 16; rationalising
;
Megarians, 266
attributed to Eubulides, 268 Sparta, 230 Spartan education, 243 Spartans, Cyrus the friend of,
230
State, the, views of Socrates on,
Stilpo,
education, 55 public teachers, 67 little dependence placed in, by Socrates, 66 doginatism overthrown by, 112 believe
; ;
; ;
real
113
165-168 a Megarian philosopher, 260 friend of Thrasymachus, 252 placed highest good in his captiousness, apathy, 277 277 rejects every combination of subject and predicate, 276
;
;
travellers, 4 impart an electri cal shock to their age, 186 ; their relation to Socrates, 187, 188,
;
333 190
denies that general conceptions can be applied to individual things, 260 an object of won der to his contemporaries, 253 learnt Cynicism from Diogenes, 253 united teaching of Mega rian and Cynic Schools, 284 his free views on religion, 283 Stoa, Stilpo the precursor of, 253, 284 took the Cynic principles,
;
; ; :
philosophy away from nature to morals, 191 failure of, 191 their hatred of Socrates, 203 did not take part in his accusation, 203, 205 small political influence of, 204 rhetorical 216 of, display Schools of, 218 pernicious in fluence of, 218 corrupt ers of the people, 218 arguments of, 265 hold that every object can only be called by its own pecu; ; ; ; ;
;
draw
words of Dio
50
Stoics,
hold a standard of know ledge to be possible, 45 their apathy, 46, 117 later philoso consider Socrates phers, 105 the inaugurator of a new philo declare sophical epoch, 100 personal conviction the standard
; ;
; ;
INDEX.
SUB
of truth, 116
407
XEN
Tragedy, Greek, involves a con
;
views of indi vidual independence, 161, 382 comprehensive system of, 283 secure freedom by suicide, 319 in advance of Cynics, 381
;
tradiction, 7
analysis of, 5
of, 3
TTXITY,
tue,*
the
Clouds, 216
of Plato, 101, 210; of
74,
Symposium
Xenophon,
79
Plato
de
is
o"
73
npALTHYBIUS,
in Euripides, 18
ctue atic
Tartarus, received notions re specting, 24 Teiresias explains birth of Bacchus, 17 Test science of truth, 44
Theastetus, the, 125
and
Folly,
Cynic
Worship of God,
75
Thebans, Simmias and Cebes two, 246 Theodoras called the Atheist, a pupil of Aristippus, 342, 376 not altogether satisfied with Aristippus, 379 his pupils Bio and Euemerus, 343, 378 wontonly attacks popular faith, 367
;
:
XANTHIPPE,
wife of Socrates,
61,
166
Xenophanes, his doctrine of the One, 278 Xenophon, 179, 239; a pupil of his account of Socrates, 212
;
considers pleasure and neither good nor bad in selves, 379, 383
pain
them
Socrates, 72, 73, 76, 89, 91, 137, 170, 171,181, 182, 184, 185,155, of the Satrfviov, 116, 159, 161 84 ; his Memorabilia, 72, 75,
;
Thessaly, visited by Sophists, 4 Thessalian legend of Poseidon, 26 Thrasybulus, 211, 225 Thrasyrnachus of Corinth, 251,
78, 102, 132, 167, 183 objection raised by, 80 Symposium, 79, 74 ; and Plato as authorities, 98,
;
252 Thucydides illustrating the pro blem of philosophy, 27 a mat ter-of-fact writer, 27 Timams of Plato, 137 Timon, 255 Titan in ^Eschylus, 9, 13 Tragedians, illustrating the philo
;
98
phy
sophy
of,
of, 99 description chal lenged, 135, 183 true, 161, 181 on nature, 1 34 agreement with Plato and Aristotle, 181 vindi cated against Schleiermacher, 183 Apology of, 205 reply to charges, 221 sketch of an ideal ruler, 243
;
;
408
INDEX.
ZEN
ZEN
branches of Socratic pnilosophy, 253, 283, 284 Zeno, JSschylus conception of, 7, Sophocles conception of 11 Euripides conception of, 18
;
270;
the
criticism
Stoic,
of,
265,
266 Zeno,
united
two
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:
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