The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers by Diogenes LaĆ«rtius (best free ebook reader txt) š
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These brief biographies of more than eighty philosophers of ancient Greece were assembled by Diogenes LaĆ«rtius in the early third century. He based these on a variety of sources that have since been lost. Because of this, his biographies have become an invaluable source of information on the development of ancient Greek philosophy, and on ancient Greek culture in general. Most of what we know about the lives and otherwise lost doctrines of Zeno the Stoic and Diogenes the Cynic, for example, come from what Diogenes LaĆ«rtius preserved in this book. Mourning what else we have lost, Montaigne wrote: āI am very sorry we have not a dozen LaĆ«rtii.ā
Steamy romance, barbed humor, wicked cattiness, tender acts of humanity, jealous feuds, terrible puns, sophistical paradoxes, deathbed deceptions, forgery, and political intrigueāā¦ while the philosophers of ancient Greece were developing their remarkable and penetrating philosophies, they were also leading strange and varied livesāat times living out their principles in practice, at other times seeming to defy all principle.
Diogenes Laƫrtius collected as much biographical information as he could find about these ancient sages, and tried to sift through the sometimes contradictory accounts to find the true story. He shares with us anecdotes and witty remarks and biographical details that reveal the people behind the philosophies, and frequently adds a brief poem of his own construction that comments sardonically on how each philosopher died.
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- Author: Diogenes Laƫrtius
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āSpoil all the rest, but keep your hands from Hector.ā
He used to say that courtesans were the queens of kings, for that they asked them for whatever they chose. When the Athenians had voted that Alexander was Bacchus, he said to them: āVote too that I am Serapis.ā When a man reproached him for going into unclean places, he said: āThe sun too penetrates into privies, but is not polluted by them.ā When supping in a temple, as some dirty loaves were set before him, he took them up and threw them away, saying that nothing dirty ought to come into a temple; and when someone said to him: āYou philosophize without being possessed of any knowledge,ā he said: āIf I only pretend to wisdom, that is philosophizing.ā A man once brought him a boy, and said that he was a very clever child, and one of an admirable disposition. āWhat, then,ā said Diogenes, ādoes he want of me?ā He used to say that those who utter virtuous sentiments but do not do them are no better than harps, for that a harp has no hearing or feeling. Once he was going into a theatre while everyone else was coming out of it, and when asked why he did so: āIt is,ā said he, āwhat I have been doing all my life.ā Once when he saw a young man putting on effeminate airs, he said to him: āAre you not ashamed to have worse plans for yourself than nature had for you? for she has made you a man, but you are trying to force yourself to be a woman.ā When he saw an ignorant man tuning a psaltery, he said to him: āAre you not ashamed to be arranging proper sounds on a wooden instrument, and not arranging your soul to a proper life?ā When a man said to him: āI am not calculated for philosophy,ā he said: āWhy then do you live, if you have no desire to live properly?ā To a man who treated his father with contempt, he said: āAre you not ashamed to despise him to whom you owe it that you have it in your power to give yourself airs at all?ā Seeing a handsome young man chattering in an unseemly manner, he said: āAre you not ashamed to draw a sword cut of lead out of a scabbard of ivory?ā Being once reproached for drinking in a vintnerās shop, he said: āI have my hair cut, too, in a barberās.ā At another time, he was attacked for having accepted a cloak from Antipater, but he replied:
āRefuse not thou to heed
The gifts which from the mighty Gods proceed.ā74
A man once struck him with a broom, and said: āTake care,ā so he struck him in return with his staff, and said: āTake care.ā
He once said to a man who was addressing anxious entreaties to a courtesan: āWhat can you wish to obtain, you wretched man, that you had not better be disappointed in?ā Seeing a man reeking all over with unguents, he said to him: āHave a care, lest the fragrance of your head give a bad odor to your life.ā One of his sayings was that servants serve their masters, and that wicked men are the slaves of their appetites. Being asked why slaves were called į¼Ī½Ī“ĻĪ¬ĻĪæĪ“Ī±, he replied, āBecause they have the feet of men (ĻĪæį½ŗĻ ĻĻĪ“Ī±Ļ į¼Ī½Ī“Ļįæ¶Ī½), and a soul such as you who are asking this question.ā He once asked a profligate fellow for a mina; and when he put the question to him, why he asked others for an obol and him for a mina, he said: āBecause I hope to get something from the others another time, but the Gods alone know whether I shall ever extract anything from you again.ā Once he was reproached for asking favors, while Plato never asked for any; and he said:
āHe asks as well as I do, but he does it
Bending his head, that no one else may hear.ā
One day he saw an unskillful archer shooting; so he went and sat down by the target, saying: āNow I shall be out of harmās way.ā He used to say that those who were in love were disappointed in regard of the pleasure they expected. When he was asked whether death was an evil, he replied: āHow can that be an evil which we do not feel when it is present?ā When Alexander was once standing by him, and saying: āDo not you fear me?ā He replied: āNo; for what are you, a good or an evil?ā And as he said that he was good: āWho, then,ā said Diogenes, āfears the good?ā He used to say that education was for the young sobriety, for the old comfort, for the poor riches, and for the rich an ornament. When Didymus the adulterer was once trying to cure the eye of a young girl (ĪŗĻĻĪ·Ļ), he said, āTake care, lest when you are curing the eye of the maiden, you do not hurt the pupil.ā75 A man once said to him that his friends laid plots against him; āWhat then,ā said he, āare you to do, if you must look upon both your friends and enemies in the same light?ā
On one occasion he was asked, what was the most excellent thing among men; and he said: āFreedom of speech.ā He went once into a school and saw many statues of the Muses, but very few pupils, and said: āGods, and all my good schoolmasters, you have plenty of pupils.ā He was in
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