ISOCRATES, ARISTOTLE, AND DIOGENES
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Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes
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Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes
Hippocrates
Isocrates
Aristotle
Aristotle's Rhetoric
Aristotle's Ethics
Aristotle's Politics
Diogenes
Hippocrates
Mentioned by
Plato
for treating the body as a whole, the traditional founder of scientific
medicine, Hippocrates, was born about 460 BC on the island of Cos and died about 377 BC at
Larissa. His teacher Herodicas emphasized gymnastics even for cases of fever, but Hippocrates
used a gentler approach without harsh measures or drastic drugs. His writings show that he was
extremely observant, and he recommended prudence, kindness to all, fairness, and good moral
character. He advised physicians not to begin by discussing fees, believing it was better to have
to reproach a saved patient for not paying than to extort money from those at death's door. He
recommended sometimes giving one's services for nothing to those in need, for where there is
the love of humanity there is also love of the art. He found that many patients recovered simply
because they were happy with the goodness of the physician. It is good to make the sick well,
care for the healthy so as to keep them well, and to take care of oneself so as to do what is right.
Hippocrates believed that the physician is only Nature's assistant in the healing process. He paid
attention to diet, fresh air, and environmental factors.
The writings attributed to Hippocrates apparently were collected at Cos from early scientific
observations by Hippocrates and other physicians of his era. The Hippocratic Oath has had a
tremendous influence on the ethics of medical practice from that day to this. Although
Hippocrates criticized traditional beliefs that the gods cause illnesses, the oath begins by
swearing to the gods of health. In the Hippocratic oath physicians promise to benefit patients and
abstain from whatever is harmful, to give no deadly medicine nor give a woman a pessary to
induce an abortion. In entering homes to benefit the sick they must abstain from any voluntary
mischief including seduction.
Hippocrates recommended that physicians study nature and the whole subject of medicine that
shows what people are in relation to food and drink and other occupations with the effects of
each. He noted that large quantities of undiluted wine make one feeble, although he occasionally
prescribed some wine. General rules often have exceptions. Cheese, for example, is not equally
injurious to everyone. The physician should know the effects of fasting or eating various
amounts or drinking soups, and so on. His most famous aphorism is the very first one:
Life is short, and art long;
the crisis fleeting; experience perilous, and decision difficult.
The physician must not only be prepared
to do what is right oneself,
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but also to make the patient,
the attendants, and externals cooperate.1
Hippocrates also wrote that the noble art of medicine was behind the other arts. To gain a
competent knowledge of medicine Hippocrates believed one needs natural ability, instruction,
favorable circumstances for study, early learning, love of labor, and leisure.
Isocrates
Isocrates was born in 436 BC before the
Peloponnesian War
and did not die until after the Greek
allies lost their independence to Macedonia at Chaeronea in 338 BC. His father manufactured
flutes and was wealthy enough to give his son an outstanding education. Isocrates studied with
the famous rhetorician Gorgias in Thessaly. After the
Peloponnesian War
during which he lost
all the money his father gave him, for ten years or so Isocrates wrote speeches for use in the law
courts. About 392 BC he began teaching as a sophist, and in spite of his higher fees he claimed
he had more students than all the other sophists combined, though he spent most of his wealth on
public services to Athens. His students included the Athenian general Timotheus; the orators
Isaeus, Lycurgus, and Hypereides; the historians Ephorus and Theopompus; the philosopher
Speusippus; and Nicocles who ruled Salamis on Cyprus.
His lawyer speeches were quite persuasive, but he later considered them unworthy of him. His
speech for Nicias against Euthynus argued that Euthynus returned only two talents out of the
three Nicias had deposited with him. This speech was written shortly after the fall of the
oligarchy of Thirty, which is described as a time when it was more dangerous to be wealthy than
to engage in wrong-doing, because the oppressive government was seizing their property. In a
speech against Callimachus in 402 BC Isocrates argued that the amnesty of the previous year be
upheld. In a speech against Lochites for assault and battery Isocrates mentioned that 1500
citizens were put to death without a trial by the Thirty. Isocrates also wrote a speech for the son
of the famous Alcibiades, who was being sued because his father had allegedly stolen a team of
race-horses probably for the Olympics of 416 BC when Alcibiades entered seven teams and won
first, second, and fourth; the extant part of the speech justifies and praises the political career of
the controversial Alcibiades.
A speech on banking argues for the son of a wealthy man from the Bosporus, from where Athens
got much of its grain. The Athenian banker Pasion is a freed slave, and the case depends on his
not allowing his slave to be tortured when questioned, which was the standard practice for slaves'
testimony. Refusal to let one's slaves be so interrogated was considered an admission of guilt. In
another moving speech the adopted son of Thrasylochus claims his inheritance authorized in the
will is valid not only because of the written document but because of his services to the man in
undergoing dangers and caring for him when sick, while the illegitimate daughter claiming she
should have the inheritance did not care for her father at all.
When Isocrates began to teach professionally, he wrote a short tract against the sophists to
differentiate his approach to education from that of other sophists, whose reputation was bad
because of their false promises, which led some to prefer indolence to serious study. He wrote
they claim to search for the truth but begin by telling lies. They offer the greatest value of virtue,
but they only charge three or four minae; yet they do not even trust their students to pay but
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make them deposit the funds with a third party. They are vigilant about contradictions in words
but blind to their own inconsistencies in action. They claim to have knowledge about the future
but cannot even say anything insightful about the present. Others profess to teach political
discourse but have no interest in the truth. They promise to make their students clever speakers
even if they have no natural ability as though it were as simple as learning letters, whereas good
speech-making requires knowledge of the subject, style, creativity, and imagination. Isocrates
believed such teachers ought to pay out money for lessons.
Isocrates held that formal training can help those with natural aptitude who have practical
experience, but to those without ability it can do little more than offer them some self-
improvement and more knowledge of the subject. An able student can learn the different kinds of
discourse from a teacher, who can expound the principles and set an example of oratory; but
those who exhort others to study discourse while neglecting the values of what study affords are
merely meddlesome and greedy professors. Those who follow true precepts may move more
toward honesty of character than facility in oratory, though Isocrates did not claim to teach right
living nor to be able to implant prudence and justice in the depraved, although he believed that
the study of political discourse could help stimulate one to form good character.
Isocrates displayed his talent in a piece on the legendary Egyptian leader Busiris in which he
criticized Polycrates for making Busiris look bad in his defense of him while making
Socrates
look good in his accusation against him. Polycrates mentioned how Busiris sacrificed humans,
which Isocrates considered atrocious; but his criticizing
Socrates
for having taught Alcibiades
was denied by Isocrates, and if true he would consider it praiseworthy.
In 380 BC Isocrates published his Panegyricus in which he praised the culture of Athens and
Greece, suggesting that they stop fighting among themselves and unite in a war against the
barbarian Persians. Also in 373 BC he wrote a speech on behalf of the Plataeans asking for
Athenian military aid against the Thebans.
The oration to Demonicus by Isocrates is an exhortation to virtue filled with moral precepts.
Virtue is better than riches and more useful than noble birth. As the body is developed by
physical exercise, the soul may grow by practicing the moral precepts Isocrates recommended.
Isocrates applied the golden rule to parents, saying to treat them as one would want to be treated
by one's children. The body should be trained by exercises that lead to health rather than
strength. One should be thoughtful without violent laughter or presumptuous speech. Everyone
agrees on the virtues of modesty, justice, and moderation. One should fear the gods, honor
parents, respect friends, and obey the laws. Loving knowledge can lead to mastering knowledge,
and wisdom is the most imperishable possession.
Isocrates suggested being pleasant to everyone, but cultivating the best. Practice self-control in
everything that is shameful. Using money well is more important than possessing it. Be content
with present circumstances, but seek to improve them. Be affable and not proud; avoid drinking
parties, or leave them before becoming intoxicated. Isocrates valued culture and recommended
gleaning the best from the poets and other writers as a bee visits flowers. The greatest incentive
to deliberation is observing the misfortunes that result from lacking it. It is better to retire from a
public trust not more wealthy but more esteemed. Honest poverty is better than unjust wealth,
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because justice outlasts all riches even beyond death. Work hard with one's body and love
wisdom with the soul so as to have the strength to carry out resolves seen as good by
intelligence.
Isocrates wrote three orations related to the rulers of Salamis on Cyprus. The first one to
Nicocles suggested how the new king may rule best. Isocrates advised him to use education to
improve his nature, send for the wisest people, and study the best poets and sages. He should not
allow the people to do or suffer any outrage, but honor the best and protect everyone's rights.
Bad laws and institutions should be changed. He should not show favoritism but be consistent in
judging. Isocrates recommended being prepared for war yet peaceful in avoiding unjust
aggression. Once again he applied the golden rule to weaker states. Rather than emulating those
with the widest dominion, it is better to make use of the power one already has to enjoy
happiness with moderate achievements. The king should grant freedom of speech to those with
good judgment so that his friends can help him decide, his friends being not those who praise all
he does but those who criticize his mistakes. Nicocles should govern himself no less than his
subjects by not being a slave to any pleasure or desire so that his moderation will be an example
to all. It is more important to pass on a good name to his children than riches, for wealth can
never buy a good name. In finding the happy mean it is better to fall short than to go to excess.
The second oration concerning Nicocles was written for the king to his subjects. Isocrates again
urged education and the ability to speak well as the surest sign of good understanding. In this
speech the king is communicating to his people so that they will know what he expects of them.
He criticized democracies and oligarchies whose rivalries injure the commonwealth. These
governments honor those skilled in swaying the crowd, but the monarch claimed he honors those
skilled in practice. In war situations monarchy was considered more efficient. Isocrates noted
that the gods live under a monarchy. Nicocles claimed that he has ruled so mildly that no one has
suffered exile, death, or confiscation of their property during his reign. Isocrates pointed out that
courage and cleverness are not always good, but moderation and justice are. The king called on
his subjects to be diligent and just, and he asked them to deal with each other as they expect him
to deal with them. He warned against political societies and unions as dangerous to a monarchy.
The character of the citizens often affected the behavior of the rulers, as depravity has compelled
them to be more harsh than they wished. Nicocles concluded with the golden rule again and
exhorted them not to practice anything they condemn in words.
A third oration about Cyprus is an encomium to Euagoras, the father of Nicocles. Isocrates
praised Euagoras uncritically for taking the throne of Salamis by force and ruling there as a
tyrant for about forty years until he was assassinated in 374 BC, though Isocrates did not
mention how he died. He considered Euagoras even greater than Cyrus, who had ruled over the
Persian empire; Isocrates was the only Greek writer to mention that Cyrus killed his mother's
father Astyages. Euagoras gave the Athenian admiral Conon refuge from 405 until 397 BC,
enabling a remnant of the Athenian navy to come back after the disastrous
Peloponnesian War
.
Attempting to surpass a work by his teacher Gorgias, Isocrates wrote an encomium on Helen in
which he praised the power of her beauty that caused the Greeks to unite in a victorious war
against the Trojans in Asia. He also praised the heroics and wise policies of
Theseus
. In 368 BC
Isocrates wrote to
Dionysius I
of Syracuse, praising him as the foremost Greek with the greatest
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power, saying that Athens would surely ally itself with him in any struggle he would make for
the welfare of Greece. The lost letter that accompanied the extant introductory letter likely urged
Dionysius
to take up a Greek crusade against the barbarian
Persians
.
Two years later Isocrates wrote an oration for Archidamus, the prince of Sparta who had fought
well in the losing battle at Leuctra when Sparta lost its hegemony to Thebes. The Thebans had
razed Thespiae and Plataea and now proposed to settle their colonists in Messene, which
Isocrates considered a violation of the Peace of Antalcidas. What bothered him most though was
that this would not restore the true Messenians but the Helots, making these slaves masters.
Isocrates believed that justice is most important, which with the grace of the gods secured the
Spartan laws; but he did not seem to recognize the rights of the Helots. Many more people were
in exile from the Peloponnesian peninsula than ever before, as the whole region was in distress.
Isocrates had Archidamus recommend they send their parents, wives, and children to Sicily,
Cyrene, and Asia Minor so that the men could fight and plunder their enemies by land and sea.
For if they let the Helots settle on their borders and permitted Messene to flourish undisturbed
the derision at the hands of their foes would be worse than suffering annihilation. In this speech
by Isocrates Archidamus told the Spartans to take up the war, for it is disgraceful to tolerate
freedom of speech to slaves when before they did not even grant equal speech to free men.
Ten years later Isocrates wrote a letter to Archidamus, now king of Sparta, urging him to
reconcile the Greeks, stopping their wars with each other so that they could end the insolence of
the Persians.
At the end of the terrible Social War in 355 BC when peace was being negotiated, Isocrates, over
80 years old, wrote an oration addressed to the Athenian assembly entitled On the Peace and
called On the Confederacy by Aristotle. The important question of war and peace was to be
decided. Isocrates criticized the flatterers who had brought ruin to their public affairs; yet they
had blindly followed them into war expecting to recover their lost power, while counselors of
peace advised being content with what they had rather than crave possessions contrary to justice.
Many who possess great fortunes madly risk what they have grasping for more. Apparently the
Athenian assembly had not been willing to listen to anyone who disagreed with their desires, and
so Isocrates wrote this speech for the reading public, asking that both sides be given an unbiased
hearing. Those favoring peace have never caused misfortune, while those espousing war plunged
them into many disasters. Only the most reckless orators were given freedom of speech in the
assembly.
Isocrates recommended making peace not only with Chians, Rhodians, Byzantines, and Coans,
but with all humanity in the agreement (Peace of Antalcidas) made thirty years before with the
king of
Persia
and the Lacedaemonians that recognized independence of the Greeks and removed
foreign garrisons. Isocrates acknowledged that this appeared to give Thebans the advantage of
keeping Thespiae and Plataea, but he promised to persuade them that injustice is not an
advantage but results in disasters. He suggested that the blessings of security, abundance, and the
esteem of others are better than the loss of these in war which makes them poor and gives them a
bad name. In peace they will be freed from war-taxes and other burdens and be able to cultivate
their fields and sail the seas safely. The city's revenues will double; commerce will thrive; and
they will have all humanity as allies. Others will withdraw from Athenian territory because of the
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advantages of supporting the power of Athens to secure their own realms. They must realize that
peace is better than meddling, justice better than injustice, and attending to one's own business
better than coveting the possessions of others.
Wars had cost them great expense and reaped hatreds from interfering; but when they had been
just and aided those who were oppressed without coveting their possessions, they were willingly
given hegemony. Nothing contributes more to material gain and a good reputation than virtue.
Those who unjustly seize what belongs to others are like animals lured by bait who find
themselves in a desperate situation. Isocrates accused the warmongers of accepting bribes and
the assembly of appointing generals who were guilty of this capital crime. As a physician treats
ills, an unpopular speech that reproaches sins is needed to cure ignorant souls. Foreigners would
think the Athenians mad if they were to come and see them claiming to follow their ancestors,
who fought the barbarians to free Greeks, when they are now bringing Asians to fight Greeks in
their homes. Now Athens seemed to be waging war against the whole world, paying lawless and
violent mercenaries to attack their allies.
Isocrates blamed the empire of the sea for plunging them into disorders that overthrew the
democratic government. He argued that empire is neither just nor capable of being maintained
nor advantageous. When the Lacedaemonians held
hegemony
, the Athenians denounced it as
wrong and waged war against them until they got their independence back. Thus it is not just for
the stronger to rule the weaker. Even ten thousand talents could not help Athens maintain her
empire. How could they possibly acquire one now in their current poverty? They ought to
commend those who admonish them and reveal their evil policies with their consequent
disasters.
The
Peloponnesian War
that resulted from Athenian imperialism would have ended in their
slavery if the Lacedaemonians had not been more friendly than their former allies. Yet Athens,
while not even in control of its own territory, had tried to extend its power to Italy, Sicily, and
Carthage. In the Decelean war in Attica they lost 10,000 hoplite soldiers, in Sicily 40,000 men
and 240 ships, and in the Hellespont 200 ships. The great Athenian houses that had survived the
tyrannies of the sixth century BC and the
Persian Invasions
were wiped out under the coveted
empire, because they desired not just to rule but to dominate in order to provide pleasures for
themselves from the labors of others. Those who seek such despotic power must suffer the
disasters that result from that, and Athens suffered the distress of a siege.
Imperialism ruined Athens, and then it quickly ruined previously virtuous Sparta too. As soon as
they gained the power, the Lacedaemonians plotted against Thebes and the king of
Persia
, drove
the Chians into exile, and set up despotic regimes throughout the Greek world. Their arrogance
soon led to the end of their supremacy by land and sea. The meddling of Athens in her empire
had caused cities to become partisans of Sparta; then
Spartan hegemony
made them side with
Athens again. Does not such power cause a state to make war on all their citizens, suspect their
friends, hate those who have not wronged them, and hire mercenaries?
Now they believe the Thebans are in a bad way because they oppress their neighbors, but does
not Athens do the same? Rich Thessaly has been reduced to poverty, but stony Megara continues
to thrive even though it is surrounded by warlike cities. Isocrates concluded that arrogance
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caused misfortunes, but moderation is the source of blessings. States, like individuals, should
shun vice and practice virtue even more, because there is no escape from their consequences in
death. Peace and justice will make all Greeks happy and prosperous, and no one will dare
oppress them. Everyone will seek their friendship and alliance when they are just and powerful,
not taking from others but willing and able to help. In the midst of injustice and madness let
Athens be the first to adopt a sane policy and champion the freedom of Greeks as their saviors,
not their destroyers. They must cease from wars and abhor all despotic rule and imperial power,
when they reflect on the disasters that result from them. Isocrates concluded by urging those
younger to speak and write to turn states that would oppress others into the paths of virtue and
justice so that the conditions of learning and culture may improve.
In the same year as the peace concluding the Social War Isocrates also wrote an oration called
Areopagiticus in which he discussed the public safety and social issues. He noted that riches and
power often lead to folly, whereas poverty tends to encourage prudence and moderation. Once
again Athens by paying mercenaries has gained the hatred of Greeks and the enmity of the
Persian
king that previously led to disaster. Isocrates believed their democracy has been
corrupted, and he advised going back to the institutions founded by Solon and reformed by
Cleisthenes after the Peisistratid tyranny. They governed by electing the best to be officials
rather than relying upon a more democratic random lottery. The people should be the masters of
the state and punish those who rule badly. Isocrates exalted the oversight of the conservative
Areopagus, whose powers were greatly weakened by Ephialtes a century before. Isocrates
condemned oligarchies and special privileges while commending equal rights and democracy.
The richest 1200 Athenians paid heavy taxes and were often required to fit out a trireme for war.
A person assigned this task could challenge another citizen he thought had more wealth to take
over this duty or exchange property with him. Isocrates lost such a challenge in the only trial of
his long life. In response to this experience Isocrates wrote his Antidosis, defending himself as
though he were on trial for his life like
Socrates
. Although this trial was a fiction, he declared
that he wrote the truth. Once more he applied the golden rule to judges, who ought to judge
others as they would expect others to judge them. Isocrates wrote that he has endeavored not to
offend others nor to seek revenge in court but to settle disputes by conferring as friends. His
discourses were not about private conflicts but concerned affairs of state and all Greece, suitable
for Pan-Hellenic conferences. He presented the evidence of his previous writings. He defended at
length the behavior of the famous general Timotheus who had been one of his students, praising
him for respecting the rights of those he conquered in war. Isocrates having a weak voice did not
speak in public, hold office, or serve on juries, allowing those more needy to receive that dole.
Isocrates noted the importance of education to the fortune of the state, and he warned against
letting the sycophants control it. He recommended the study of discourse as well as gymnastics.
He believed that everyone acts for the sake of pleasure, gain, or honor, and he found that the
study of philosophy, by which he meant the liberal arts in general, was the best way to achieve
these ends.
In 346 BC when he was 90 years old, Isocrates wrote a discourse to
Philip
, king of Macedonia,
who had just concluded a ten-year war with Athens over control of Amphipolis. Isocrates
opposed the war as bad for both sides, arguing that it was to the advantage of Macedonia for
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Athens to possess Amphipolis but not for Athens to acquire it. He tried to persuade
Philip
that
friendship with Athens was worth more than the revenues of Amphipolis, while he hoped that
Athens would learn not to plant colonies in areas of conflict. By surrendering this territory
Philip
would still hold the power in the region while gaining the good will of Athens with hostages to
guarantee their friendship. The peace was concluded before Isocrates finished his discourse, and
he approved it.
Once again Isocrates urged all the Greeks to make peace with each other and launch a campaign
against the barbarians in Asia. Isocrates believed that
Philip
, having the highest position and
power in Greece, was the one to lead this effort. If he could reconcile Argos, Lacedaemon,
Thebes, and Athens to take a sane view, all the other Greeks would follow. He hoped that
friendly acts would help them forget past wrongs. Isocrates criticized those who were jealous of
Philip
and who found peace a state of war against their selfish interests. King Agesilaus of Sparta
had tried to invade the
Persian
empire after the
Peloponnesian War
but failed because he had not
first settled the quarrels among Greeks, and many resented the oligarchies Sparta set up at that
time. Even if
Philip
did not conquer all of Persia, at least he could liberate the Greeks on the
coast of Asia. Knowing
Philip
already had power and wealth, Isocrates appealed to his desire for
honor and lasting fame.
Four years later in a letter Isocrates again asked
Philip
to lead a Greek expedition against
Persia
,
and finally after the battle of Chaeronea when he was 98, Isocrates wrote his last letter urging
Philip to bring all the Greeks into concord and take up the conquest his son
Alexander
would
soon accomplish. Isocrates had also written a short letter to young
Alexander
in 342 BC warning
him against disputation and encouraging his study of rhetoric; this was probably about the time
that Aristotle began to tutor the Macedonian prince.
In his last oration started when he was 94 and delayed by three years of illness before he finished
it at 97 Isocrates praised Athens and criticized the aggressive ways of Sparta. In one long
sentence Isocrates summed up much of his life's endeavor.
Yet all know that most orators harangue not on behalf of the state
but for what they themselves expect to g ain,
while I and mine not only abstain
more than others from public funds
but also expend more than we can afford
from our private means on the needs of the state;
still they know these are either wrangling among themselves
in the assemblies over deposits of money
or insulting the allies
or falsely charging any of the rest who chances,
while I have led the way in discourses
exhorting the Greeks to agree with each other
and to strategize against the barbarians,
urging us all to unite in colonizing a country
so vast and vulnerable that those who have heard about it agree,
if we are sensible and stop the manias against each other
that we could quickly occupy it without effort and risk,
and that this territory will easily accommodate
all those among us in need o f the necessities of life.2
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Isocrates described as educated those who manage well their daily circumstances with accurate
judgment that is expedient; who are decent and honorable with all they meet, tolerating what is
unpleasant or offensive while being as agreeable and reasonable as possible; who are not
overcome by misfortunes but bear them bravely; and finally who are not spoiled by successes
and do not desert their true selves or become arrogant, but hold steadfastly to their intelligence.
Isocrates did justify Athens doing injustice as sensible when faced with the alternative of
suffering injustice from Sparta. Isocrates recommended listening to what people say and
watching what they do. When they do wrong, one should censure them and guard against their
ways; for things are only good or bad because of how they are used.
Aristotle
In Stagira, a Greek colony near the Macedonian border, in 384 BC was born Aristotle. His father
Nicomachus was court physician to Amyntas III, king of Macedonia and father of
Philip II
. Thus
Aristotle was probably educated by his father as advised in the Hippocratic oath until his father
died. When he was 17, Aristotle began studying in Plato's Academy and remained there for
twenty years until
Plato
died.
Plato
called Aristotle the "mind of the school." When
Plato
read
aloud the
Phaedo
, Aristotle was the only one to stay to hear the whole dialog. Unfortunately the
popular dialogs Aristotle wrote on the immortality of the soul and spiritual subjects did not
survive. Aristotle wrote an inscription for an altar to
Plato
that called him "a man whom it is not
right for the bad even to praise."
When Plato's nephew Speusippus became head of the Academy in 347 BC, Aristotle and
Xenocrates started a philosophical school at Assus where Hermeias, a former slave and banker,
was ruling the Troad. Aristotle married the niece of Hermeias, and after her death he had a son
Nicomachus by Herpyllis. Hermeias fell under the control of the Persians, and after refusing to
betray his friends under torture, he was killed. In his grief Aristotle wrote an elegy about his
friend, who had died for the beauty of goodness. In 345 BC Aristotle went with his friend
Theophrastus to Mytilene on Lesbos, where his interest shifted from politics to biology.
Three years later Aristotle returned to the Macedonian court at Pella to tutor Philip's son
Alexander
, who was 13 then. In 340 BC when
Philip
went to war against Byzantium,
Alexander
ruled as regent, giving Aristotle more time for his own studies at Stagira, now restored for him
after Philip had destroyed it in the Olynthian war. Aristotle introduced his nephew Callisthenes
to
Alexander
but warned him to be careful of what he said. Though Alexander later took
Callisthenes to Asia where he collected research materials, Callisthenes was eventually suspected
by
Alexander
of plotting against him with Hermolaus; he was confined to an iron cage in which
he became infested with vermin before being thrown to a lion.
When
Philip
died in 336 BC, Aristotle returned to Athens, where
Xenocrates
was now in charge
of the Academy. In the garden of the Lyceum Aristotle established his Peripatetic (so named
because Aristotle lectured while "walking around") school with maps and a large library.
According to Diogenes Laertius all of Aristotle's writings came to 445,270 lines, but the
surviving ones seem to be mostly his lectures. When Alexander died in 323 BC and Athens led
the revolt, Aristotle's friendship with Macedonian viceroy Antipater caused him to be charged
with impiety for the elegy that had called Hermeias divine. Aristotle fled to his mother's property
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in Chalcis, saying he would not let Athenians offend twice against philosophy. Alone there he
wrote Antipater that he had become fonder of myths; he died the next year of a stomach illness.
In his will Aristotle made provisions for his family, Herpyllis, and his slaves, some of whom he
freed. Aristotle's close friend Theophrastus took over his school at the Lyceum.
The biography of Aristotle by Diogenes Laertius recorded some of his remarks. When asked
what people gained by lying, Aristotle commented that when they speak the truth they are not
believed. Reproached for giving charity to a bad man, Aristotle said that he pitied the man, not
his character. The three things he found indispensable to education were natural endowment,
study, and constant practice. He believed the difference between being educated and uneducated
is as much as between the living and the dead. He said education is an ornament in prosperity, a
refuge in adversity, and the best provision for old age. Aristotle believed that teachers who
educate children deserve more honor than their parents, for parents give them life but teachers a
good life. Asked what a friend is, Aristotle replied, "A single soul dwelling in two bodies."3
When asked how we should behave toward friends, he answered with the golden rule: as we
wish them to behave toward us. He believed that philosophy enabled him to do without being
ordered what some are constrained to do by fear of the law. Aristotle found that the end of love is
not merely intercourse but also philosophy.
Aristotle's analysis of human knowledge is an amazing and comprehensive accomplishment, and
the influence of his ideas on western civilization has been immense. He first divided it into
theoretical, practical, and productive knowledge. The theoretical includes philosophy, physics,
and mathematics; the practical ethics and politics; and the productive the arts and rhetoric.
Propositions he divided into ethical, physical, and logical. Preliminary to the study of all subjects
is the analytical study of thought and language now called logic, which he called an instrument
of philosophy. Aristotle analyzed simple expressions into the ten categories of substance,
quantity, quality, relation, place, time, position, state, action, and affection. Aristotle made a
detailed analysis of syllogisms and logical fallacies. He analyzed deductive reasoning in the
Prior Analytics and inductive reasoning or scientific thought in the Posterior Analytics.
Aristotle believed that all people by nature desire to know. A sign of one who knows is that that
person can teach, while the person of experience without knowledge cannot. He defined wisdom
as knowledge of principles and causes. In his Physics and Metaphysics Aristotle discussed the
material and formal causes
Plato
used and also the efficient and final causes. The material cause
explains what something is made of (out of which), the formal cause how it is made (into which),
the efficient cause who made it (by which), and the final cause why it is made (for which
purpose). For Aristotle the final cause or purpose of anything analyzes the metaphysical cause
which is studied in teleology. Aristotle also perceived God in the beginning as well as the end as
the prime mover and in the present as completely actual in contrast to the concept of potential.
Aristotle also gave many lectures on the sciences of astronomy, meteorology, and biology.
Aristotle analyzed the faculties of the soul as nutritive, perceptive, and intelligent, and he also
discussed memory, sleep, dreams, and aging. At the Lyceum 158 Greek constitutions were
gathered, and Aristotle's work On the Athenian Constitution has been useful in understanding the
history of Athenian politics.
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Although Aristotle agreed with his teacher
Plato
that poetry and drama are imitations, he
disagreed in finding redeeming value for these arts and did not wish to censor or ban them. In his
Poetics he noted that tragedy tends to portray those who are better and comedy those worse than
people of the present day. Humans are the most imitative animal, delight in imitating, and learn
much this way. Aristotle believed that learning is the greatest pleasure and is not just for
philosophers but for all humanity. Thus the imitative arts are not just entertaining but educational
as well. Aristotle found that tragedy aroused the emotions of pity and fear in order to accomplish
a purification of those feelings. The six elements of a play he analyzed are the plot (story),
character, theme (thought), language, spectacle, and music. The plot, like a fable, conveys
meaning; characters portray moral qualities, and thought enunciates general truths. In a tragedy a
good man must not be seen passing from happiness to misery or a bad man from misery to
happiness, because these are morally repugnant nor does the falling of an extremely bad person
from happiness to misery arouse pity or fear. In tragedy a person of intermediate character
suffers misfortune not from vice or depravity but from an error of judgment. Aristotle held that
moral goodness could be shown in any personage, even in women and slaves.
Aristotle's Rhetoric
Aristotle defined rhetoric as the art of persuasion. Rhetoric can arouse emotions which may not
be related to the essential facts; thus many courts forbid discussion of what is not essential to the
case, because it is not right to pervert the jury by moving them to anger or envy or pity. To the
argument that rhetoric can be used unjustly, Aristotle answered that this is true of any art and of
all good things except virtue. Aristotle described the three modes of persuasion as the personal
character of the speaker, the frame of mind of the audience, and the argument of the speech.
First, people of good character are more readily believed than others. Second, when the audience
is pleased, their judgments are affected. Third, the speech may prove the truth by reasoning.
Thus the abilities needed to persuade are logical reasoning, understanding human character and
goodness, and understanding emotions. Statements can be persuasive because they are self-
evident or by using the inductive reasoning of examples or deductive syllogisms.
Aristotle divided oratory into three parts. Persuading members of the assembly about a future
action is political; convincing jurors about a past action is forensic; and winning a speaking
contest is ceremonial. Political speakers argue to do or not do something; forensic speakers
prosecute or defend someone; and ceremonial orators either praise or censure. In political oratory
the debate is whether the proposal is good or harmful; trial lawyers argue over what is just or
unjust; and display oratory deals with honor and shame. Political speakers in arguing for what is
expedient may ignore whether it is just or not. Litigants may not deny that something has
happened or that it has caused harm, but they will not admit their client is guilty of injustice.
Rhetorical propositions may be complete proofs, probabilities, or signs.
Political oratory combines logic and the ethical branch of politics. Aristotle described the five
main subjects of political oratory as ways and means, war and peace, national defense, trade, and
legislation. Thus the speaker should know the following: the state's sources of revenue and its
expenditures; the military strength of the country and its enemies; the means and installations of
defense; the needs and sources of the food supply and imports and exports, making sure his
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country does not offend strong states and trading partners; the constitution and the laws of the
state, internal developments, and in knowing the customs of other states history is useful.
One must know the aim of life which is happiness defined as prosperity combined with virtue,
independence, security, pleasure, and the good condition of one's body and property. Aristotle
noted that half of life among the Lacedaemonians is spoiled, because the state of the women is
bad. Doing good means preserving life and the good things of life, namely health, wealth, and
friends. Good is what is chosen for itself or for the sake of something else, such as the virtues of
the soul: justice, courage, moderation, magnanimity, etc. Faculties of speech and action as well
as arts and sciences are also productive of what is good. The political speaker will argue
relatively that good will be increased and harm decreased. Knowing the form of government, the
political speaker will appeal to the interests of the rulers. The end of democracy is freedom, of
oligarchy wealth, of aristocracy education and institutions, and of tyranny protection of the
tyrant.
In prosecution and defense Aristotle discussed the incentives to wrong-doing, the state of mind
of wrong-doers, and the kind of people and condition of those who do wrong. Aristotle defined
wrong-doing as injury voluntarily inflicted contrary to law. Law may be specific written laws or
universal laws based on unwritten principles. The causes of wrong actions are vice and lack of
self-control, and the wrong reflects a fault in one's character. Such actions may be due to habits
or desires. Rational desires are for some wish; irrational desires come from appetites and anger.
Aristotle differentiated revenge from punishment: punishment is inflicted for the sake of the
person punished, but revenge is to satisfy the punisher's feelings. Irrational desires are for food,
drink, or sex. Rational desires are for pleasure, what one consciously believes is good, and may
be for revenge, winning, reputation, friends, change, learning, and so on.
The state of mind of wrong-doers is that they believe the thing can be done by them either
without being found out, or believing they could escape punishment if found out, or that it would
be worth the punishment. Wrong is also done to people who have what the person wants, who
are accessible or in a place safe from being caught or prosecuted, or who are not likely to fight
back or prosecute, or those who are vulnerable, or those considered enemies or wrong
themselves. Aristotle divided unjust actions into those that affected the community and those
affecting individuals. The victim must suffer actual harm and against one's will. Criminal guilt
depends on a deliberate purpose. Aristotle recommended equity as follows:
Equity bids us be merciful to the weakness of human nature;
to think less about the laws
than about the person who framed them,
and less about what one said than about what one meant;
not to consider the actions of the accused
so much as the intentions,
nor this or that detail so much as the whole story;
to ask not what a person is now
but what one has always or usually been.
It bids us remember benefits rather than injuries,
and benefits received rather than benefits conferred;
to be patient when we are wronged;
to settle a dispute by negotiation and not by force;
to prefer arbitration to litigation---
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for an arbitrator goes by the equity of a case,
a judge by the strict law,
and arbitration was invented with the express purpose
of securing full power for equity.4
Aristotle described the unskilled means of persuasion as laws, witnesses, contracts, torture, and
oaths. One may argue that the written law is unjust and must give way to a higher principle.
Aristotle considered testimony under torture as unreliable because tough people can endure the
pain, while cowards may speak falsely to avoid it.
Aristotle noted that the character of the speaker is particularly important in political oratory,
while the mood of the jury is more significant in lawsuits. The orator may inspire confidence
with good sense, good moral character, and goodwill. Aristotle defined emotions as those
feelings attended by pleasure or pain that change people so as to affect their judgments. Anger is
a pleasurable impulse accompanied by pain directed for conspicuous revenge because of what
concerns oneself or one's friends. Anger can be used in slighting as in contempt, spite, and
insolence. People vexed by others, sickness, poverty, love, thirst or unsatisfied desires are easily
aroused to anger against those who slight their distress. An orator may manipulate the listeners
into a frame of mind disposed to anger toward the adversaries. The opposite of anger is
becoming calm, which may be caused by the object of anger admitting fault and being sorry.
Aristotle discussed friendship and differentiated hatred from anger, the latter being colder and
more lasting. Fear is defined as a pain due to a mental picture or expectation of some evil in the
future.
Aristotle defined shame as pain or disturbance in regard to bad things which seem likely to
discredit one such as cowardice, licentiousness, greed, meanness, begging, flattery, effeminacy,
and boastfulness. People feel shame before those whose opinions matter to them. Kindness is
helpfulness toward someone in need for the sake of the person helped, not for any advantage or a
return. Pity is a feeling of pain caused by some evil which befalls one who does not deserve it
and which we believe might befall us or our friends. We pity most those we know or who are
close to us or like us. We feel indignation at unmerited prosperity. The negative expressions of
these are delight in others' misfortunes and envy of any prosperity; such feelings can be used to
neutralize an appeal to pity. The positive expression of this is emulation, which takes steps to
secure the good which envy may try to stop someone from enjoying.
The types of human character Aristotle discussed are the young, the old, those in their prime,
those of noble birth, the wealthy, and the powerful. The young have strong passions, are hot-
tempered, love victory, but don't yet love money, not yet having learned what it is to be without
it. The youthful trust others easily, because they have not yet been cheated much; they are
hopeful, confident, and seek what is noble. Their mistakes tend to be from doing things
excessively and vehemently. The elderly have the opposite characteristics; tending to do too
little, they can be cynical and small-minded, because they have been humbled by life. They are
less generous because life has taught them how difficult it is to get money and how easy it is to
lose it. They care more about what is useful than what is noble, and their passions are weak and
often concentrated on the love of gain. Aristotle believed that those in their prime have the best
qualities of the young and old in moderation. Those of good birth are ambitious; the wealthy are
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arrogant, luxurious, and ostentatious; the powerful are ambitious, dignified, and made serious by
their responsibilities.
Aristotle analyzed the inductive arguments using examples and the syllogistic reasoning he
called enthymeme, in which he included the use of maxims which display the moral character of
the speaker. He noted that the uneducated, arguing from common knowledge and drawing
obvious conclusions, often are more persuasive than the educated who argue from general
principles. Unlike dialectic, rhetorical arguments can be based on probabilities as well as on
certainties. Aristotle also described how arguments may be refuted by using counter-syllogisms
and objections. Speeches need an introduction, must state the case, and prove it. Prejudices must
be removed; interrogation can be used; and the conclusion tends to end in short sentences.
Aristotle's Ethics
Aristotle's main ethical work, Nicomachaen Ethics, was named after his son Nicomachus, who
probably edited it from the lecture course. Aristotle began with the Socratic premise that every
art and investigation, even every practical pursuit, seems to aim at some good. All things aim for
what is good, although not all activities are ends in themselves, many being means to other ends.
The ultimate end must not only be good but the best. To secure the good for one person is an
achievement; to secure the good of a state or nation is nobler and divine. Political science aims at
what is fine and just. To criticize this subject one needs a comprehensive education and
experience of life and conduct which the young lack. The young are also more likely to be ruled
by their feelings rather than knowledge, but those who regulate their desires and actions by
reason can benefit from this study. Most people believe that the best thing they seek in all actions
is happiness, conceived as a good life or doing well.
Aristotle noted the view of
Plato
that there is a universal good, which is the cause of all specific
goods, though he dismissed it because it is predicable in all categories, which seems to me to be
more an argument that it is universal. Aristotle noted that the ideal good does not seem to be
practical in pursuing specific goods, but in my view he did not take into account the value of
praying for the highest good or best. Aristotle also criticized
Socrates
for saying that virtue is
knowledge, though I believe
Socrates
meant a form of wisdom that included action as well as
thought. For Aristotle virtue is a form of goodness and, as a pattern of right actions, is related to
habit.
Many identify the good with pleasure and are content with a life of enjoyment. Beyond this,
Aristotle found those who value honor and virtue in the political life, but he admitted that a
miserable life with virtue is hardly happy. Aristotle also mentioned the life of contemplation but
postponed its discussion. He considered the life of money-making constrained, because wealth is
only good as a means. Aristotle found that human good is the exercise of human faculties,
especially reason, according to the best virtues which, when done over a lifetime, results in
happiness. Aristotle repeated the Platonic division of goods between the soul, the body, and the
property of the body, and he emphasized the active exercise of the functions of the soul
according to virtue for happiness. Aristotle believed that virtuous actions are also pleasant or not
painful, though he acknowledged that happiness does seem to require external prosperity as well.
However, he did not base judgment on fortune, because it does not determine if we do well or
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not but is only an accessory. The virtuous person is more likely to be happy permanently. Even
with reverses of fortune nobility can shine through such circumstances when a good person bears
it with grace and not out of insensitivity. Happiness is not merely a potential good but actual.
Aristotle defined virtue as the excellence of the soul, and happiness is the virtuous activity of the
soul. In the moderate, self-controlled and courageous, everything is in harmony with the voice of
reason. Aristotle differentiated intellectual virtues from ethical virtues. Intellectual virtues are
developed by teaching; ethical virtues are formed by habit (ethos). Virtues are not implanted in
us by nature nor are they contrary to nature, for we are equipped by nature to receive them and
can develop them by habitual practice. Thus we become just by acting justly, self-controlled by
controlling ourselves, and courageous by acting bravely. Others may become undisciplined and
short-tempered by acting in those ways. Thus habits developed in childhood make a considerable
difference. Aristotle noted that the purpose of this study is not to know what virtue is but to
become good; thus we must act according to right reason.
Aristotle observed that ethical qualities are destroyed by defect and by excess. Just as too much
or too little food destroys health, the same applies to courage and moderation. The one who fears
everything becomes a coward, while the one who fears nothing acts recklessly. Whoever revels
in every pleasure is undisciplined, while those who avoid every pleasure are insensitive. Virtuous
behavior is reinforcing. Abstaining from pleasures results in moderation, and the practice of
moderation helps one to abstain from pleasures. Enduring fear makes one courageous, and acting
bravely makes one more able to endure fear. These pleasures and pains test virtue, which can be
developed or destroyed by whether it is practiced or not. Yet avoiding pleasures and enduring
pains must be of the right kind done at the right time and place and in the right manner.
Choice is determined by what is noble, beneficial, and pleasurable and their opposites of what is
base, harmful, and painful. Ethical action requires knowledge of what one is doing, choice to act
that way and for its own sake, and the action must spring from one's character; of these three
factors Aristotle believed that knowledge was the least important. He criticized those who do not
act virtuously but take refuge in argument, thinking that by philosophical discussion they will
become good; he compared them to sick people, who listen to their doctor but fail to do what is
prescribed.
Virtues are related to emotions, but Aristotle noted that we are not blamed or praised for our
emotions, as we are for virtues and vices. Also emotions like anger and fear do not involve
choice, as the virtues do. We are "moved" by emotions but are "disposed" by virtues and vices to
act in certain ways. Virtues cause abilities to function well in the right ways and circumstances.
There are many ways to go wrong by either extreme of lack or excess, but the mean is what the
prudent person determines. Such emotions as spite, shamelessness, and envy have no mean and
are simply base, just as some actions are bad such as adultery, theft, and murder. Such bad
actions do not have a right time or manner.
Aristotle found generosity to be a virtuous mean between extravagance and stinginess;
magnificence is a mean between gaudy vulgarity and niggardliness; high-mindedness is a mean
between vanity and small-mindedness; sincerity is a mean between boasting and self-
depreciation; wittiness is a mean between buffoonery and boorishness; gentleness is a mean
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between being short-tempered and apathetic; friendliness is a mean between flattery and
quarrelsomeness; modesty is a mean between being abashed and shameless; and just indignation
is a mean between envy and spite. In a similar ethical work, Eudemian Ethics, Aristotle also
listed justice as a mean between profit and loss; liberality is a mean between prodigality and
meanness; dignity is a mean between subservience and stubbornness; hardiness is a mean
between luxury and endurance; and wisdom is a mean between rascality and simpleness.
Aristotle advised us to watch the errors we are most attracted to personally, pleasure being the
most difficult to judge without bias.
Voluntary actions are praised or blamed, while involuntary actions may be pardoned or pitied.
Actions done under constraint or because of ignorance are considered involuntary. Actions done
out of fear of a greater evil, such as threat from a tyrant or throwing away cargo from a ship
during a storm, are mixed in regard to voluntariness. Such actions are voluntary, because the
agent is choosing, though they are somewhat involuntary in that no one would choose them for
their own sake. Some call actions impelled by appetites and passions involuntary, but Aristotle
asked if it is right to consider base actions involuntary while saying that virtuous actions are
voluntary; that he felt would be absurd.
Choice is critical in ethics, and our character is determined by choosing good or evil. We
deliberate about things which are within our power and can be realized in action. The ends are
most important but usually obvious; so we tend to deliberate most about the means to find what
is easiest and best. Since the end is based on a wish and the means are determined by
deliberation and choice, the resulting actions are voluntary. We may wish for an end such as
health or wisdom, but to achieve them we must act in a practical way. Thus virtue and vice
depend on our own actions. Private individuals and public officials chastise and punish evildoers
unless they have acted under constraint or due to some ignorance for which they are not
responsible. If the individual is responsible for one's ignorance, the penalty may be even greater,
such as in laws regarding drunkenness.
Aristotle defined justice as what is lawful and fair in not taking more than one's share. Justice is
considered the highest virtue, because it relates to others as well as oneself. Fairness in
distribution is described as what each one deserves and is usually based on equality, although for
Aristotle unequals should not receive equal treatment. He found that distribution depends on the
philosophy of government: democrats value freedom, oligarchs wealth and noble birth, and
aristocrats excellence or virtue. Justice can also be rectification in correcting what is unequal or
wrong. To go for justice is to go to a judge, who acts as mediator to help find the median or fair
result. Pythagoreans believed in reciprocity, which implied suffering that which one has done to
another. Reciprocal action holds the state together, though requiting evil with evil does not seem
as good to me as requiting good with good. Many Greek cities worshiped Graces (Charites),
because they believed in doing and returning favors. To balance goods by a single standard,
coins were invented as currency to facilitate equal exchanges.
Aristotle apparently did not see the injustice of slavery but considered slaves as property and
children as dependent until they are mature. No one wishes to be harmed or suffer injustice
voluntarily; but the uncontrolled may act against their own wishes for what is ethically good, for
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the uncontrolled do what they believe they should not do. Aristotle defined the equitable as a
form of justice. The equitable may rectify the law when the law falls short of universal justice.
Since right reason is what determines the virtuous mean to be practiced, Aristotle analyzed
intellectual virtue. He divided the intellectual faculty into the scientific part that relates to
unchanging truth and the calculative faculty that works with changing circumstances. The three
psychological elements that control truth and action are sense perception, intelligence, and
desire. He further divided the faculties into art or skill (techne), science or knowledge (episteme),
prudence or practical wisdom (phronesis), wisdom or theoretical knowledge (sophia), and
intelligence or intuition (nous). Things which change include action and production. Production
depends on art and skill guided by reason. Scientific knowledge can be learned and taught. The
prudent person has the ability to deliberate. The task of intelligence is to apprehend fundamental
principles and demonstrate certain truths. Theoretical wisdom combines scientific knowledge
and apprehended intuition.
Practical wisdom includes ethics and politics, which is divided into legislative and judicial
deliberations. Prudence requires understanding that results in good judgment. Another quality
(gnome) translated good sense involves sympathetic understanding and forgiveness in knowing
what is fair and equitable. Aristotle reminded us that prudent actions are acquired more by habit
than by knowledge.
Aristotle distinguished vice from being uncontrolled and from brutishness. The opposites of
these are virtue, self-control or more precisely inner control, and superhuman virtue, which goes
beyond the normal human range as brutishness falls below it. Aristotle considered excessive
folly, cowardice, indulgence, and ill-temper brutish or morbid. If being self-controlled means
having strong and base appetites, the moderate person will not be self-controlled nor the self-
controlled be moderate, for the moderate person does not have to strain for control. The opposite
of the moderate person, the undisciplined, believe in pursuing pleasures of the moment and
choose them, while the uncontrolled do not think they should but pursue them nonetheless. The
undisciplined feel no regret since they are choosing the pleasures, but the uncontrolled always
feel regret. Aristotle considered inner control of great ethical value and being uncontrolled as
bad.
Friendship (philia) for Aristotle involved all human relationships with any affection including
marriage and family and business associations. He believed friendship is an indispensable good,
because no one would want to live without any friends. The best works are done for one's
friends. Nature implants friendship in parents even of other species. Concord is valuable in
society, which does its best to expel faction, the enemy of concord. Aristotle found that we love
what is good, pleasant, and useful. Most people don't really love what is truly good, but what
appears to be good to them. In friendship there is goodwill for each other. Older people tend to
pursue the beneficial more than pleasure, which is sought more by the young. The best friendship
is between good people who wish each other's good because they are good; this friendship tends
to last longest. Friendship does not occur quickly, though the wish to be friends can come
quickly. Friendships based on pleasure can last quite a while as long as they continue to be
pleasant, but those that are useful tend to dissolve when the advantage ceases. Friendships of the
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good imply mutual trust and the assurance that neither will ever wrong the other. Thus in this
way Aristotle noted in the Eudemian Ethics that friendship and justice are nearly the same.
Friendship is based on equality, and this is sometimes achieved by compensating for different
factors by proportionate affection. Most people wish to receive affection more than give it,
though friendship is giving affection more than receiving it. Friendships based on opposites, such
as the rich and poor, the learned and ignorant, are useful, because they supply what their friend
lacks. Friends share things in common, and this is the basis of community. Aristotle held that
there can be no friendship with a slave as a slave, but there can be friendship with the human
being who happens to be a slave. Parents love their children, because they have produced them;
thus the mother tends to feel more affection than the father. A good friend will not complain
about giving more than one receives, but a friend concerned with usefulness will. Thus
friendships based on character last longer. One must love oneself as well as one's friend, as
loving a friend is loving another self. One must make effort to avoid vice and be good in order to
be a good friend. Goodwill alone tends to lack the intensity and desire of friendship; yet goodwill
can arise in the moment and be toward anyone and everyone.
Some believe that benefactors care more about their beneficiaries than the reverse the way
debtors avoid their creditors, but Aristotle argued that those who do good care more about those
they are helping because of the joy it brings. The base are selfish in doing everything for their
own sake; the good also love themselves best but differ in that they love others as they love
themselves. One cannot love others well without loving the best part of oneself which is the
sovereign element of intelligence. Thus the good will love this part of themselves in order to be
able to do noble actions and benefit others, while the wicked do not really love themselves,
because by following base emotions they harm themselves. Some argue that the happiest, self-
sufficient people do not need friends, but Aristotle held that good people need friends to whom
they can do good, especially in misfortune. Humans are social beings and need to live with
others.
Life is good and pleasant, because it is desired by all, especially the good and happy. Aristotle
foreshadowed the insights of Descartes and Berkeley when he wrote that in thinking we perceive
that we think, which means that we must exist, since existence is perceiving or thinking. This
perceiving that we are living is pleasant; for existence is good, and perceiving this goodness is
pleasant. The ethically good person has the same attitude toward oneself as toward one's friend,
since a friend is another self. Thus one's friend's existence is desirable too, and so to be happy
one needs good friends. Although one may have many friends who are virtuous, it is practical to
have only a few intimate friends, nor can one really be in love with more than one person
according to Aristotle. Friends are most needed in bad fortune, but it is more noble to have
friends in good fortune. One wishes to pursue activities with one's friends, and so best friends
live together.
Aristotle found that not all pleasures are desirable, though he observed that drawing such
distinctions is not a strong point for most people. Pleasure is valuable though in making
judgment more perceptive and execution more accurate, for those who enjoy a particular activity
tend to become good at it. A pleasurable activity can draw one's attention from some other
activity, and pain from an activity can also destroy it. Pleasures from ethically good activities are
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good, while those from base activities are bad. For Aristotle pleasures of the mind are superior to
those of the senses. What is real and true is determined best by the good person. Virtuous actions
that perform noble and good deeds are desirable for their own sake and are most happy. Pleasant
amusements are also sought for their own sake, but for Aristotle it is childish to exert serious
efforts for amusements.
The highest virtue relates to the highest part of ourselves, which is intelligence. Intelligent
activity can be performed more continuously and easily than any other kind of action. The wise
person requires the necessities of life but, unlike the just and courageous persons, does not need
anyone else to exercise the intellect in study, and the wiser one is the more one can do it by
oneself. As intelligence is the most divine quality, the life guided by intelligence is more divine.
This highest and best controlling part of us is our true self and acts according to virtue. Thus for
Aristotle contemplative activity surpasses all others in bliss. One still needs external goods to
live as a human, but the wise will not possess them in excess. Those who cultivate intelligence
best are most beloved of the gods and presumably happiest.
Most people though are not guided by goodness and nobility, but they are swayed by fear of
punishment more than shame of disgrace. Influenced by emotions, they pursue pleasures and
avoid pains. Aristotle asked how could such people be transformed by argument. Some argue
that people are good by nature, others by habit, and others by teaching. Nature is beyond our
power. Teaching is not effective in all cases, because the listener must first be conditioned by
appropriate habits. To give the right training from the beginning, one must be brought up under
the right laws, which also can regulate the actions of adults. Law has the power to compel; while
people resent those who oppose their impulses, the law is not as invidious. Thus anyone who
wants to make people better ought to study legislation, and so Aristotle turned next to politics
and governmental constitutions.
Aristotle's Politics
Many of Aristotle's prejudices came out in his Politics. He believed that barbarians and slaves
are identical and that the Greeks ought to rule over both. He also quoted Homer for the long-
standing practice that men ought to have the power of law over children and wives. Aristotle
believed that humans are political animals and only a sub-human like the war-mad man of
Homer has no family, no morals, and no home. Wickedness that is armed is the hardest to
handle. Justice is the essential basis of political association. Aristotle was aware that some people
believed there is no difference in the nature of slaves and that as a form of rule based on force it
is wrong. Aristotle considered property and tools essential to a minimum standard of wealth and
the good life. He included tamed animals and slaves as tools and the master's property. He
believed that some by nature should rule and others serve. When the mind rules over the body, a
person is in a good state; when the body rules over the mind, one is in a bad condition. He
believed that as the mind is to rule the emotions, so too men are to rule over women.
Aristotle said that where the discrepancy among people is the same as that between people and
animals, then the inferior ought to be slave to the superior. However, I don't believe it is at all
clear, as he said it is, that such a discrepancy among humans exists in nature, although it may
have seemed to exist within his society. Again Aristotle mentioned those versed in law who
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protested legal slavery as contrary to law, which should restrain such violence. They held there is
no justification for overpowering others by violence to make them property. Others believed that
the stronger should rule; they said enslavement by war is right, though often the war may have
been unjust. Aristotle hoped for mutual affection between masters and slaves, but he found this
did not occur when the slavery arose from the use of such force. The original means of getting
slaves was by raiding and hunting. Aristotle held that plants exist for the sake of animals, and
animals for the sake of humans. War, of which hunting was a part, was a way of acquiring
property, and he justified its use against men. Aristotle noted that rule over slaves is different
from the rule over free and equal persons which constitutes the government of a state.
Aristotle noted that money-making is one pursuit that can have no limit. He criticized excessive
commercial trade and was particularly against charging interest for the loan of money as most
contrary to nature. He observed that a monopoly was a way of making money, and that it is used
by governments as well as private interests. He reported how the Sicilian tyrant
Dionysius
expelled a citizen for monopolizing iron as detrimental to the country. Aristotle, mistakenly I
believe, found no deliberative faculty in slaves and observed that it was inoperative in women
and undeveloped in children. These observations were undoubtedly due to social conditions.
However, he did believe that these faculties should be developed by education in women and
children so that they could become good.
Aristotle compared several forms of government starting with those recommended by
Plato
. He
believed that having wives and children in common was unworkable. He found too much
emphasis on unity in
Plato's Republic
. It is easier for a family to have unity, but a state is based
on cooperative self-sufficiency, which requires more specialization and less unity. He noticed a
logical error in the concept of having all things in common, because in practice everyone could
not use all things; thus it was an impossible situation. In common ownership there would be less
respect for property, because people are more careful with their own possessions. They only care
for public property in so far as it affects them. Similarly with children, no one would care much
about any of them. He suggested sarcastically that perhaps having children in common might be
better for the farming class, because with less affection between them they would be less likely
to revolt.
Aristotle did believe in friendly feelings in cities as a safeguard against strife, but he thought that
by sharing wives and children the feelings of affection would be lukewarm and watered down
without any sense of what is one's own that one loves specially. Also he predicted that the
transfers from one class to another because of different natures would not be conducive to
brotherhood but would lead to problems and crime. He also criticized Plato's communistic
system for taking away the incentives of work by equalizing income; he believed that private
ownership worked much better, though he suggested the right use of property can be communal
if the lawgiver makes the citizens disposed to this. Ownership is pleasurable and natural;
selfishness is only condemned when it is excessive. Greed is bad, but everyone likes to have their
bit of property. There is also the pleasure of giving and helping others. In the communal system
there would be no self-restraint in sexual passion and no liberality with money.
The complaints that people have about broken contracts and the undue influence of the wealthy
arise from the defects of character, and there are even more such disputes in shared ownership. A
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state that becomes too unified could be much worse like a monotone without variety and
harmony. The plurality of a state can develop unity through education, which is a much better
method for training character than regulating property. Aristotle suspected that Plato's farmers,
who would have to pay rent, would be more troublesome than the Helots and slaves they knew.
He considered women doing the same work as men futile, since men do not do housework, once
again showing his social conditioning.
Aristotle also criticized Plato's
Laws
for relying too much on virtue without being liberal. Both
are needed, because virtue alone is too hard, and liberality alone is too easy. He thought that
leaving the number of births unrestricted would lead to poverty, discontent, and crime. Equality
of wealth would not put an end to stealing, and the upper class, discontent with equality, would
want more. Aristotle's suggestion was that the upper class should not wish to get more (He did
not say how - presumably by education.), and the inferior should not be able to because they are
weaker though not downtrodden.
Aristotle agreed with the Spartan custom that citizens should be free of all menial tasks, but he
found that Spartan women indulged in every luxury and license. He criticized Spartan inequality
of property and noted that the number of full citizens had fallen below one thousand. He seemed
to like Cretan government better although it wasn't much different, and he disliked the
importance of money in Carthage. He credited Charondas as being the first to make perjury an
indictable offense.
The constitution for Aristotle is the way of organizing the people living in the state. Citizens are
those who participate in the legal, political, and administrative judgment and authority of the
state. Citizenship was usually based on birth and often on some property standard. In democratic
constitutions the people are supreme, in oligarchies the few. Constitutions that aim at the
common good are right and those aiming only at the good of the rulers are deviations and wrong.
The deviation of a monarchy is a tyranny, of an aristocracy an oligarchy, and of what he called a
polity a democracy. Democratic concepts of justice are based on equality, oligarchic on
superiority. Aristotle noted that people generally are bad judges where their own interests are
involved. The state is more than an investment to provide a living but is to make life worth
while; it is more than a community living in the same place promoting the exchange of goods
and services; it ought to promote living well a full and satisfying life that includes culture, civic
associations, and religion.
The majority by taking and distributing the possessions of the few can destroy a state just as
much as can a tyrant, nor is it just for the wealthy few to rule by plunder. Aristotle's fourth
alternative is that the good should govern, and the fifth is rule by the best person. He also
observed that the many collectively may rule better than any single person, as a feast in which
many contribute is better than one given at one person's expense. In addition to birth and
property Aristotle considered the virtues of justice and military prowess to be needed. Justice
means equality and fairness for all, but for Aristotle apparently that meant only all citizens, not
all the people.
Aristotle delineated four kinds of constitutional kingship as (1) the old heroic monarchy in which
the king's duty was defined as judge, military commander, and religious head; (2) the hereditary
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despotic monarchy of barbarians that was considered legal; (3) an elected dictator; and (4) the
Lacedaemonian dual kingship which was a hereditary generalship for life. A fifth kind was
unrestricted control of everything, though that is not constitutional monarchy but tyranny.
Aristotle asked whether rule by the best person is better or by the best laws. Laws can only
enunciate principles, while a human has feelings and can give sounder counsel in individual
cases; but laws must be laid down to guard against personal whims. Many judges are less
corruptible than one judge and less likely to have a warped view. Based on his observation of
history, Aristotle believed that hereditary succession was harmful, although sometimes a good
family can rule well.
Aristotle defined the constitution as the arrangement for distributing offices of power and for
determining the sovereignty and its ends. Laws prescribe the rules by which the rulers rule and
transgressors of the laws are restrained. He listed five classes: (1) farmers who make up the bulk
of the people; (2) urban workers; (3) commercial traders; (4) hired laborers; and (5) defenders in
war. Aristotle then added a class of well-to-do, who serve with their possessions, and a class of
government employees. Democracies can limit citizenship by property and by birth; they can be
ruled by law, or the people can be made sovereign without law. When there are no laws, there is
no constitution. Oligarchies can restrict offices to those with property of differing amounts or can
be ruled by hereditary officers with or without laws. Aristotle noted that the majority principle
may be used among the oligarchies as well as in the democracies, as a majority of those
participating determines policy.
In looking for the virtuous mean Aristotle, hoping for an aristocratic polity, recommended a
combination of democracy and oligarchy, preferring oligarchic selection to choosing officials by
lot while favoring the democratic freedom from property qualification. In framing laws he
suggested giving the middle class the greatest consideration, for he believed it would be unlikely
for the rich and poor to make common cause against them. In analyzing revolutions he found that
those bent on equality may revolt if they believe they have less, and those wanting superiority
revolt if they are not getting more. Other motives include profit and dignity, and the origins of
disorders are cruelty, fear, excessive power, contemptuous attitudes, disproportionate
aggrandizement, and the nonviolent methods of lobbying and intrigue.
Those bent on profiting themselves may be cruel and oppressive. Dignity is affected when
people see others honored and themselves degraded. Criminals fearing punishment may revolt. A
small power group may become excessive. The larger class may have contempt for the oligarchs,
or in democracies the upper classes may have contempt for the disorder and inefficiency. In a
democracy a disproportionate growth of the number of poor may become unstable, or too much
increase of wealth among the rich may lead to a strong power-group. Lobbying can change the
constitution without violence which may be done overtly, because of lack of vigilance, or so
gradually that it is not noticed. From history Aristotle also found that the most potent cause of
revolution in democracies was the unprincipled character of popular leaders who often by
malicious prosecutions against property-owners caused them to join forces.
Governments are stabilized by loyalty to the established constitution, capacity for the work, and
the virtues of goodness and honesty. Tyrants tend to have a guard of foreign mercenaries rather
than a citizen guard, and they maintain their power by making sure the people have no minds of
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their own, do not trust each other, and have no means of carrying out anything. Aristotle gave
several examples of tyrannical policies.
The foundation of democratic constitutions is liberty in which the poor have more sovereign
power than the propertied class, for being more numerous they are the prevailing majority.
Aristotle also described this society as under the "live as you like" principle. The features of
democracy include elections in which all citizens are eligible for office, some offices filled by
lot, little or no property qualification for office, limited terms for office-holders, juries chosen
from all the citizens, a sovereign assembly or council, and pay for serving on juries, the
assembly, council, and in offices. Aristotle felt that an agricultural democracy was best, because
farmers kept busy, rarely attended the assembly, and did not lack necessities. Aristotle suggested
that money from fines go for sacred purposes so that people won't fine too much to gain funds
for the government. Guarding prisoners is unpleasant work, and they need to be well-paid so that
they can be accountable and not have a free hand to disregard the laws. Aristotle summarized the
services of government as "religion, defense, income and expenditure, trade, the town and
harbor, the countryside, legal administration, registration of contracts, prisons and the execution
of judgment, auditing and review of accounts, examination of the holders of office, and finally
discussion and decision on the affairs of the nation."5
Aristotle found that those who value wealth wanted the city to be prosperous, those who value
power wanted it to rule over extensive dominions, and those who value virtue wanted the city to
excel in justice and goodness. He criticized Sparta and Crete for designing their educational
systems for war and military power as do the Scythians, Persians, Thracians, and Celts. In
Carthage, Macedonia, and Iberia soldiers were honored with some distinction for having killed
an enemy. Aristotle attributed the fall of Sparta to its militaristic system, and he could not
applaud lawgivers who train their people to acquire power and rule over their neighbors. For
Aristotle military training should be only for defense against subjection, to win leadership in
order to benefit others but not to dominate, and in order to be master over the slaves. Military
states, he found, generally fight wars and survive; but once they have established an empire, they
decline, because they are not educated for peace.
He believed it was just to serve only someone who was superior in virtue and in the ability to
perform good actions. If happiness is doing well, then the active life is better both for the
individual and the whole community. Aristotle listed the necessities as food, handicrafts and
their tools, arms, wealth, religion, and most essential is a method of arriving at decisions. For
Aristotle slaves were necessary for the agricultural work so that the citizens could handle the
civic and military duties as well as religious functions as they got older. This class distinction he
traced back to the earliest civilizations in
Egypt
and
Crete
. Although all creatures live by nature
and some by habit, Aristotle believed that only humans use reason, which can enable one to do
many things contrary to nature, and habit when one is convinced it is a better course. People do
not object to letting older people rule more, because they hope to earn their chance to rule also.
Along with courage and steadfastness for work, Aristotle believed that we need intellectual
ability for cultivated leisure as well as honesty and restraint at all times, especially in peace. Thus
Aristotle turned to education and agreed with
Plato
on many things such as the importance of
play for children and having inspectors to choose children's stories and censoring unseemly talk;
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but he disagreed in letting children cry so that they could exercise their lungs. He recognized the
need to control population and approved of abortion before the embryo has acquired life and
sensation. He did not approve of extra-marital sex with persons of either sex. Aristotle did not
believe that children should view comedies until they are old enough to drink. He thought
education for the citizens ought to be a national concern, and he considered degrading
occupations or work for money as deleterious to the body's condition. In addition to reading and
writing and gymnastics, Aristotle was also very particular about the kind of music that ought to
be taught. Children should not be allowed to view art that is not truly ethical.
A work by Aristotle or his followers on economics or household management is about the
relationship between a man and a woman as the most natural of all relationships that in humans
can be based on mutual help, goodwill, and cooperation. Parents take care of their children when
they are young and weak, and later the children can care for the parents when they become old
and weak. Aristotle believed that women are better fitted for quiet employments requiring
patience, while men are more active and stronger. The mother nurtures the children, and the
father educates them. The man should not do wrong to the woman, such as by associating with
other women, while women should not importune their husbands nor be restless during their
absences. This book also discusses the proper treatment of slaves. To develop trust one should
not allow them to be insolent nor mistreat them. Aristotle recommended setting the prize of
freedom as an incentive for good work with a definite time when it can be attained, and he also
advised frequent inspections of workers or stewards and developing good habits of management
without procrastination.
The second book of the Oeconomica cites numerous historical examples of how devious rulers
raised money to pay their soldiers. The third book only survived in Latin translations of the 13th
century and is about the relationship between husband and wife. A good wife is responsible for
administering the internal functions of the home, the husband the external concerns, although the
wife is expected to obey her husband. Virtue is emphasized, and it is noted that only a great soul
can handle troubles and wrongs without committing a base act. Correctly reared children will
grow up to be virtuous, but parents who are not just will find them rebelling. Aristotle praised
fidelity and warned the husband against promiscuity as well as the wife, for it is a shame to have
children outside of marriage. The husband who learns how to master himself can then teach his
wife to follow his example. Aristotle saw no greater blessing on earth than a husband and wife
ruling their home in harmony of mind and will. After each other their duties extend to their
children, their friends, and their estate. By treating their entire household as a common
possession they can vie with each other to see who can contribute the most to the common
welfare and excel in virtue.
Diogenes
The line of Cynic philosophers goes back to a disciple of
Socrates
named Antisthenes, who
emulated his hardihood and disregard of feeling. Antisthenes, who was about twenty years
younger than
Socrates
and about twenty years older than
Plato
, lived in the Peiraeus and walked
the five miles each day to hear
Socrates
. He considered the most necessary part of learning
getting rid of having anything to unlearn. He said it was a royal privilege to do good and be
called evil. He pointed to Heracles and Cyrus to show that pain could be a good thing.
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Antisthenes said he would rather be mad than feel pleasure. He had few students because he used
a silver rod to eject them, and he criticized them the way a physician treats a patient. He
preferred crows who eat the dead to flatterers who devour the living. He believed those who
would be immortal ought to live justly and piously, and states are doomed when they cannot
distinguish the good from the bad. Antisthenes criticized
Plato
for his pride. He maintained that
virtue had to do with actions not words. The wise are guided by virtue and not by laws of the
state. The good deserve to be loved, and virtue cannot be taken away and is the same for men
and women.
Diogenes lived to be over eighty and died about the same time as Alexander in 323 BC.
Diogenes was the son of a banker in Sinope, and both were banished for adulterating the coinage,
which Diogenes admitted later. In Athens Antisthenes tried to discourage Diogenes, but
Diogenes persisted by offering his head to the staff of Antisthenes saying, "Strike, for you will
find no wood hard enough to keep me away from you, so long as I think you've something to
say."6 Antisthenes then accepted him as a pupil, and Diogenes began a simple life. Wandering
and begging for his food, Diogenes used any place he could find for eating, sleeping, conversing,
or any other purpose. He found that the Athenians had provided him with places to live in the
portico of Zeus and the hall of the processions. To inure himself to hardship he would roll in hot
sand in the summer and embrace snow-covered statues in the winter. Diogenes found that
despising pleasure itself could be most pleasurable once one was accustomed to it. When
begging charity in his poverty, Diogenes asked them to give to him if they have given to anyone
else; or if they had not, to begin with him. The love of money he called the mother-city of all
evils.
Diogenes scorned the school of Euclides as cholic, Plato's lectures as a waste of time, and
Dionysian performances as peep-shows for fools. Demogogues he called lackeys of the mob.
When he observed philosophers and physicians, he called humans the most intelligent animal;
but seeing diviners puffed up by wealth, he thought no animal more silly. Once Diogenes
trampled on the carpets of
Plato
, saying he was trampling on his pride; but
Plato
replied that
Diogenes had a different kind of pride. When
Plato
was applauded for defining humans as
featherless bipeds, Diogenes plucked a fowl and took it to Plato's lecture room as "Plato's
person." Diogenes mocked Plato's ideas of tablehood and cuphood, and he considered himself a
Socrates
gone mad.
One day Diogenes lit a lamp and went around saying he was seeking a person, a story that later
became a search for an honest person. Diogenes wondered at the grammarians who investigate
the ills of Odysseus but are ignorant of their own, or the musicians who tune their lyres but leave
the dispositions of their souls discordant, or at orators who make a fuss about justice in their
speeches but never practice it, or the avaricious who criticize money while being so fond of it.
He got angry at those who sacrificed to the gods for health and feasted to their own health's
detriment. One day when a child drank out of his hands, he threw away his cup, because a child
had surpassed him in plainness of living. He reasoned that all things belong to the gods; the wise
are friends of the gods; since friends have all things in common, all things belong to the wise.
Diogenes opposed fortune with courage, convention with nature, and passion with reason. When
someone complained that he was not adapted to the study of philosophy, Diogenes asked why he
lived, if he did not care to live well. Diogenes held that education is a controlling grace to the
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young, consolation to the old, wealth to the poor, and an ornament to the rich. Diogenes believed
that the most beautiful thing in the world is freedom of speech.
When Athenians urged him to become initiated so that he would enjoy a special privilege in the
other world, Diogenes thought it ludicrous that this could cause those of no account to live in the
Isles of the Blessed. Observing a religious purification, he asked the priest if he knew that he
could no more get rid of errors of conduct by sprinkling than he could so correct errors of
grammar. He reproached people for praying for what they thought was good instead of what is
truly good. Diogenes often insisted that the gods had given humans everything they need to live
easily, but they wanted honeycakes and ointments and other such things. When he saw temple
officials leading away someone for stealing a bowl that belonged to the treasurers, Diogenes
commented that the great thieves were leading away the little thief.
When strangers asked to see Demosthenes, Diogenes pointed him out with his middle finger and
called him the demagogue of Athens. He noted how much difference a finger could make in
human attitudes. After the battle of Charonea, Diogenes was taken and dragged off to Philip,
who asked him who he was. Diogenes replied that he was a spy on his insatiable greed, for which
he was admired and set free.
Alexander
said that if he had not been
Alexander
he would have
liked to have been Diogenes. When Diogenes was sunning himself in the Craneum,
Alexander
came and stood over him saying that he could have anything he wished. Diogenes simply asked
Alexander
to move out of his sunlight.
Alexander
said that he was
Alexander
the great king, and
he said that he was Diogenes the hound. Asked why he was called that, Diogenes replied that he
fawned on those who gave him anything, yelped at those who refused, and put his teeth into
rascals. Asked where he was from one time, Diogenes said that he was a citizen of the world,
perhaps the first use of the term "cosmopolitan." He believed that the only true commonwealth is
as wide as the universe, and he advocated the community of wives with no marriage other than
consenting union by persuasion. Children thus would also be held in common.
When Diogenes was captured and put up for sale as a slave and was asked what he could do, he
said he could govern people and told the crier to announce for someone who wanted to purchase
a master for himself. He told the Corinthian Xeniades who bought him that he must obey him as
though he were a physician, and he educated his children. Xeniades entrusted his whole house to
him and said that a good spirit had entered his house. Finally Diogenes died either from eating
raw octopus, being bitten by a dog, or from holding his breath.
Notes
1. Hippocrates, Aphorisms, tr. Francis Adams, 1:1.
2. Isocrates, Panathenaicus, tr. George Norlin 12-14.
3. Diogenes Laertius, Lives of the Eminent Philosophers, tr. R. D. Hicks, 5:20.
4. Aristotle, Rhetoric, tr. W. R. Roberts, 1:13, 1373b.
5. Aristotle, Politics, tr. J. A. Sinclair, 6:8.
6. Diogenes Laertius, Lives of the Eminent Philosophers, tr. R. D. Hicks, 6:21.