THE LIVES AND OPINIONS OF EMINENT PHILOSOPHERS
DIOGENES LAERTIUS
BOOK TEN
TRANSLATED BY C. D. YONGE
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers was written in Greek and professes to give
an account of the lives and sayings of the
Greek philosophers. The work doesn't have
an exact title in the manuscripts and appears
in various lengthy forms. Although it is
at best an uncritical and unphilosophical
compilation, its value, as giving us an insight
into the private lives of the Greek sages,
led Montaigne to write that he wished that
instead of one Laėrtius there had been a
dozen.[1] On the other hand, modern scholars
have advised that we treat Diogenes' testimonia
with care, especially when he fails to cite
his sources: "Diogenes has acquired
an importance out of all proportion to his
merits because the loss of many primary sources
and of the earlier secondary compilations
has accidentally left him the chief continuous
source for the history of Greek philosophy."
wikipedia.
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CONTENTS OF BOOK TEN
Epicurus
1.Epicurus
Epicurus, son of Neocles and Chaerestrate,
was a citizen of Athens of the deme Gargettus,
and, as Metrodorus says in his book On Noble
Birth, of the family of the Philaidae. He
is said by Heraclides[1] in his Epitome of
Sotion, as well as by other authorities,
to have been brought up at Samos after the
Athenians had sent settlers there and to
have come to Athens at the age of eighteen,
at the time when Xenocrates was lecturing
at the Academy and Aristotle in Chalcis.
Upon the death of Alexander of Macedon and
the expulsion of the Athenian settlers from
Samos by Perdiccas,[2] Epicurus left Athens
to join his father in Colophon.
2. For some time he stayed there and gathered
disciples, but returned to Athens in the
archonship of Anaxicrates.[3] And for a while,
it is said, he prosecuted his studies in
common with the other philosophers, but afterwards
put forward independent views by the foundation
of the school called after him. He says himself
that he first came into contact with philosophy
at the age of fourteen. Apollodorus the Epicurean,
in the first book of his Life of Epicurus,
says that he turned to philosophy in disgust
at the schoolmasters who could not tell him
the meaning of "chaos" in Hesiod.[4]
According to Hermippus, however, he started
as a schoolmaster, but on coming across the
works of Democritus turned eagerly to philosophy.
3. Hence the point of Timon's allusion[5]
in the lines: Again there is the latest and
most shameless of the physicists, the schoolmaster's
son[6] from Samos, himself the most uneducated
of mortals. At his instigation his three
brothers, Neocles, Chaeredemus, and Aristobulus,
joined in his studies, according to Philodemus
the Epicurean in the tenth book of his comprehensive
work On Philosophers; furthermore his slave
named Mys, as stated by Myronianus in his
Historical Parallels. Diotimus[7] the Stoic,
who is hostile to him, has assailed him with
bitter slanders, adducing fifty scandalous
letters as written by Epicurus; and so too
did the author who ascribed to Epicurus the
epistles commonly attributed to Chrysippus.
4. They are followed by Posidonius the Stoic
and his school, and Nicolaus and Sotion in
the twelfth book of his work entitled Dioclean
Refutations, consisting of twenty-four books;
also by Dionysius of Halicarnassus. They
allege that he used to go round with his
mother to cottages and read charms, and assist
his father in his school for a pitiful fee;[8]
further, that one of his brothers was a pander
and lived with Leontion the courtesan; that
he put forward as his own the doctrines of
Democritus about atoms and of Aristippus
about pleasure; that he was not a genuine
Athenian citizen, a charge brought by Timocrates
and by Herodotus in a book On the Training
of Epicurus as a Cadet; that he basely flattered
Mithras,[9] the minister of Lysimachus, bestowing
on him in his letters Apollo's titles of
Healer and Lord.
5. Furthermore that he extolled Idomeneus,
Herodotus, and Timocrates, who had published
his esoteric doctrines, and flattered them
for that very reason. Also that in his letters
he wrote to Leontion, "O Lord Apollo,
my dear little Leontion, with what tumultuous
applause we were inspired as we read your
letter." Then again to Themista, the
wife of Leonteus: "I am quite ready,
if you do not come to see me, to spin thrice
on my own axis and be propelled to any place
that you, including Themista, agree upon";
and to the beautiful Pythocles he writes:
"I will sit down and await thy divine
advent, my heart's desire." And, as
Theodorus says in the fourth book of his
work, Against Epicurus, in another letter
to Themista he thinks he preaches to her.[10]
6. It is added that he corresponded with
many courtesans, and especially with Leontion,
of whom Metrodorus also was enamoured. It
is observed too that in his treatise On the
Ethical End he writes in these terms:[11]
"I know not how to conceive the good,
apart from the pleasures of taste, sexual
pleasures, the pleasures of sound and the
pleasures of beautiful form." And in
his letter to Pythocles: "Hoist all
sail, my dear boy, and steer clear of all
culture." Epictetus calls him preacher
of effeminacy and showers abuse on him. Again
there was Timocrates, the brother of Metrodorus,
who was his disciple and then left the school.
He in the book entitled Merriment asserts
that Epicurus vomited twice a day from over-indulgence,
and goes on to say that he himself had much
ado to escape from those notorious midnight
philosophizings and the confraternity with
all its secrets;
7. further, that Epicurus's acquaintance
with philosophy was small and his acquaintance
with life even smaller; that his bodily health
was pitiful,[12] so much so that for many
years he was unable to rise from his chair;
and that he spent a whole mina daily on his
table, as he himself says in his letter to
Leontion and in that to the philosophers
at Mitylene. Also that among other courtesans
who consorted with him and Metrodorus were
Mammarion and Hedia and Erotion and Nikidion.
He alleges too that in his thirty-seven books
On Nature Epicurus uses much repetition and
writes largely in sheer opposition to others,
especially to Nausiphanes, and here are his
own words: "Nay, let them go hang: for,
when labouring with an idea, he too had the
sophist's off-hand boast-fulness like many
another servile soul";
8. besides, he himself in his letters says
of Nausiphanes: "This so maddened him
that he abused me and called me pedagogue."
Epicurus used to call this Nausiphanes jelly-fish,[13]
an illiterate, a fraud, and a trollop; Plato's
school he called "the toadies of Dionysius,"
their master himself the "golden"
Plato,[14] and Aristotle a profligate, who
after devouring his patrimony took to soldiering
and selling drugs; Protagoras a pack-carrier
and the scribe of Democritus and village
schoolmaster; Heraclitus a muddler;[15] Democritus
Lerocritus (the nonsense-monger); and Antidorus
Sannidorus (fawning gift-bearer); the Cynics
foes of Greece; the Dialecticians despoilers;
and Pyrrho an ignorant boor.
9. But these people are stark mad. For our
philosopher has abundance of witnesses to
attest his unsurpassed goodwill to all men
- his native land, which honoured him with
statues in bronze; his friends, so many in
number that they could hardly be counted
by whole cities, and indeed all who knew
him, held fast as they were by the siren-charms
of his doctrine, save Metrodorus[16] of Stratonicea,
who went over to Carneades, being perhaps
burdened by his master's excessive goodness;
the School itself which, while nearly all
the others have died out, continues for ever
without interruption through numberless reigns
of one scholarch after another;[17]
10. his gratitude to his parents, his generosity
to his brothers, his gentleness to his servants,
as evidenced by the terms of his will and
by the fact that they were members of the
School, the most eminent of them being the
aforesaid Mys; and in general, his benevolence
to all mankind. His piety towards the gods
and his affection for his country no words
can describe. He carried deference to others
to such excess that he did not even enter
public life. He spent all his life in Greece,
notwithstanding the calamities which had
befallen her in that age;[18] when he did
once or twice take a trip to Ionia, it was
to visit his friends there.[19] Friends indeed
came to him from all parts and lived with
him in his garden.
11. This is stated by Apollodorus, who also
says that he purchased the garden for eighty
minae; and to the same effect Diocles in
the third book of his Epitome speaks of them
as living a very simple and frugal life;
at all events they were content with half
a pint of thin wine and were, for the rest,
thorough-going water-drinkers. He further
says that Epicurus did not think it right
that their property should be held in common,
as required by the maxim of Pythagoras about
the goods of friends; such a practice in
his opinion implied mistrust, and without
confidence there is no friendship. In his
correspondence he himself mentions that he
was content with plain bread and water. And
again: "Send me a little pot of cheese,
that, when I like, I may fare sumptuously."
Such was the man who laid down that pleasure
was the end of life. And here is the epigram[20]
in which Athenaeus eulogizes him:
12. Ye toil, O men, for paltry things and
incessantly begin strife and war for gain;
but nature's wealth extends to a moderate
bound, whereas vain judgements have a limitless
range. This message Neocles' wise son heard
from the Muses or from the sacred tripod
at Delphi.[21] And, as we go on, we shall
know this better from his doctrines and his
sayings. Among the early philosophers, says
Diocles, his favourite was Anaxagoras, although
he occasionally disagreed with him, and Archelaus
the teacher of Socrates. Diocles adds that
he used to train his friends in committing
his treatises to memory.[22]
13. Apollodorus in his Chronology tells us
that our philosopher was a pupil of Nausiphanes
and Praxiphanes;[23] but in his letter to
Eurylochus, Epicurus himself denies it and
says that he was self-taught. Both Epicurus
and Hermarchus deny the very existence of
Leucippus the philosopher, though by some
and by Apollodorus the Epicurean he is said
to have been the teacher of Democritus. Demetrius
the Magnesian affirms that Epicurus also
attended the lectures of Xenocrates. The
terms he used for things were the ordinary
terms, and Aristophanes the grammarian credits
him with a very characteristic style. He
was so lucid a writer that in the work On
Rhetoric he makes clearness the sole requisite.
14. And in his correspondence he replaces
the usual greeting, "I wish you joy,"
by wishes for welfare and right living, "May
you do well," and "Live well."
Ariston[24] says in his Life of Epicurus
that he derived his work entitled The Canon
from the Tripod of Nausiphanes, adding that
Epicurus had been a pupil of this man as
well as of the Platonist Pamphilus[25] in
Samos. Further, that he began to study philosophy
when he was twelve years old, and started
his own school at thirty-two. He was born,
according to Apollodorus in his Chronology,
in the third year of the 109th Olympiad,
in the archonship of Sosigenes,[26] on the
seventh day of the month Gamelion,[27] in
the seventh year after the death of Plato.
15. When he was thirty-two he founded a school
of philosophy, first in Mitylene and Lampsacus,
and then five years later removed to Athens,
where he died in the second year of the 127th
Olympiad,[28] in the archonship of Pytharatus,
at the age of seventy-two; and Hermarchus
the son of Agemortus, a Mitylenaean, took
over the School. Epicurus died of renal calculus
after an illness which lasted a fortnight:
so Hermarchus tells us in his letters. Hermippus
relates that he entered a bronze bath of
lukewarm water and asked for unmixed wine,
which he swallowed,
16. and then, having bidden his friends remember
his doctrines, breathed his last. Here is
something of my own about him:[29] Farewell,
my friends; the truths I taught hold fast:
Thus Epicurus spake, and breathed his last.
He sat in a warm bath and neat wine quaff'd,
And straightway found chill death in that
same draught. Such was the life of the sage
and such his end. His last will was as follows:
"On this wise I give and bequeath all
my property to Amynomachus, son of Philocrates
of Bate and Timocrates, son of Demetrius
of Potamus, to each severally according to
the items of the deed of gift laid up in
the Metron,
17. on condition that they shall place the
garden and all that pertains to it at the
disposal of Hermarchus, son of Agemortus,
of Mitylene, and the members of his society,
and those whom Hermarchus may leave as his
successors, to live and study in.[30] And
I entrust to my School in perpetuity the
task of aiding Amynomachus and Timocrates
and their heirs to preserve to the best of
their power the common life in the garden
in whatever way is best, and that these also
(the heirs of the trustees) may help to maintain
the garden in the same way as those to whom
our successors in the School may bequeath
it. And let Amynomachus and Timocrates permit
Hermarchus and his fellow-members to live
in the house in Melite for the lifetime of
Hermarchus.
18. "And from the revenues made over
by me to Amynomachus and Timocrates let them
to the best of their power in consultation
with Hermarchus make separate provision (1)
for the funeral offerings to my father, mother,
and brothers, and (2) for the customary celebration
of my birthday on the tenth day of Gamelion
in each year, and for the meeting of all
my School held every month on the twentieth
day to commemorate Metrodorus and myself
according to the rules now in force.[31]
Let them also join in celebrating the day
in Poseideon which commemorates my brothers,
and likewise the day in Metageitnion which
commemorates Polyaenus, as I have done hitherto.
19. "And let Amynomachus and Timocrates
take care of Epicurus, the son of Metrodorus,
and of the son of Polyaenus, so long as they
study and live with Hermarchus. Letthem likewise
provide for the maintenance of Metrodorus's
daughter,[32] so long as she is well-ordered
and obedient to Hermarchus; and, when she
comes of age, give her in marriage to a husband
selected by Hermarchus from among the members
of the School; and out of the revenues accruing
to me let Amynomachus and Timocrates in consultation
with Hermarchus give to them as much as they
think proper for their maintenance year by
year.
20. "Let them make Hermarchus trustee
of the funds[33] along with themselves, in
order that everything may be done in concert
with him, who has grown old with me in philosophy
and is left at the head of the School. And
when the girl comes of age, let Amynomachus
and Timocrates pay her dowry, taking from
the property as much as circumstances allow,
subject to the approval of Hermarchus. Let
them provide for Nicanor as I have hitherto
done, so that none of those members of the
school who have rendered service to me in
private life and have shown me kindness in
every way and have chosen to grow old with
me in the School should, so far as my means
go, lack the necessaries of life.
21. "All my books to be given to Hermarchus.
"And if anything should happen to Hermarchus
before the children of Metrodorus grow up,
Amynomachus and Timocrates shall give from
the funds bequeathed by me, so far as possible,
enough for their several needs, as long as
they are well ordered. And let them provide
for the rest according to my arrangements;
that everything may be carried out, so far
as it lies in their power. Of my slaves I
manumit Mys, Nicias, Lycon, and I also give
Phaedrium her liberty."
22. And when near his end he wrote the following
letter to Idomeneus: "On this blissful
day, which is also the last of my life, I
write this to you. My continual sufferings
from strangury and dysentery are so great
that nothing could augment them; but over
against them all I set gladness of mind at
the remembrance of our past conversations.
But I would have you, as becomes your life-long
attitude to me and to philosophy, watch over
the children of Metrodorus." Such were
the terms of his will. Among his disciples,
of whom there were many, the following were
eminent: Metrodorus,[34] the son of Athenaeus
(or of Timocrates) and of Sande, a citizen
of Lampsacus, who from his first acquaintance
with Epicurus never left him except once
for six months spent on a visit to his native
place, from which he returned to him again.
23. His goodness was proved in all ways,
as Epicurus testifies in the introductions[35]
to his works and in the third book of the
Timocrates. Such he was: he gave his sister
Batis to Idomeneus to wife, and himself took
Leontion the Athenian courtesan as his concubine.
He showed dauntless courage in meeting troubles
and death, as Epicurus declares in the first
book of his memoir. He died, we learn, seven
years before Epicurus in his fifty-third
year, and Epicurus himself in his will already
cited clearly speaks of him as departed,
and enjoins upon his executors to make provision
for Metrodorus's children. The above-mentioned
Timocrates[36] also, the brother of Metrodorus
and a giddy fellow, was another of his pupils.
24. Metrodorus wrote the following works:
Against the Physicians, in three books. Of
Sensations. Against Timocrates. Of Magnanimity.
Of Epicurus's Weak Health. Against the Dialecticians.
Against the Sophists, in nine books. The
Way to Wisdom. Of Change. Of Wealth. In Criticism
of Democritus. Of Noble Birth. Next came Polyaenus,[37]
son of Athenodorus, a citizen of Lampsacus,
a just and kindly man, as Philodemus and
his pupils affirm. Next came Epicurus's successor
Hermarchus, son of Agemortus, a citizen of
Mytilene, the son of a poor man and at the
outset a student of rhetoric. There are in
circulation the following excellent works
by him:
25. Correspondence concerning Empedocles,
in twenty-two books. Of Mathematics. Against Plato. Against Aristotle. He died of paralysis, but not till he had
given full proof of his ability. And then
there is Leonteus of Lampsacus and his wife
Themista, to whom Epicurus wrote letters;
further, Colotes[38] and Idomeneus, who were
also natives of Lampsacus. All these were
distinguished, and with them Polystratus,
the successor of Hermarchus; he was succeeded
by Dionysius, and he by Basilides. Apollodorus,
known as the tyrant of the garden, who wrote
over four hundred books, is also famous;
and the two Ptolemaei of Alexandria, the
one black and the other white; and Zeno[39]
of Sidon, the pupil of Apollodorus, a voluminous
author;
26. and Demetrius,[40] who was called the
Laconian; and Diogenes of Tarsus, who compiled
the select lectures; and Orion, and others
whom the genuine Epicureans call Sophists.
There were three other men who bore the name
of Epicurus: one the son of Leonteus and
Themista; another a Magnesian by birth; and
a third, a drill-sergeant. Epicurus was a
most prolific author and eclipsed all before
him in the number of his writings: for they
amount to about three hundred rolls, and
contain not a single citation from other
authors; it is Epicurus himself who speaks
throughout. Chrysippus tried to outdo him
in authorship according to Carneades, who
therefore calls him the literary parasite
of Epicurus. "For every subject treated
by Epicurus, Chrysippus in his contentiousness
must treat at equal length;
27. hence he has frequently repeated himself
and set down the first thought that occurred
to him, and in his haste has left things
unrevised, and he has so many citations that
they alone fill his books: nor is this unexampled
in Zeno and Aristotle." Such, then,
in number and character are the writings
of Epicurus, the best of which are the following:
Of Nature, thirty-seven books. Of Atoms and
Void. Of Love. Epitome of Objections to the
Physicists. Against the Megarians. Problems.
Sovran Maxims. Of Choice and Avoidance. Of
the End. Of the Standard, a work entitled
Canon. Chaeredemus. Of the Gods. Of Piety.
28. Hegesianax. Of Human Life, four books. Of Just Dealing. Neocles: dedicated to Themista. Symposium. Eurylochus: dedicated to Metrodorus. Of Vision. Of the Angle in the Atom. Of Touch.
Of Fate. Theories of the Feelings - against
Timocrates. Discovery of the Future. Introduction
to Philosophy. Of Images. Of Presentation.
Aristobulus. Of Music. Of Justice and the
other Virtues. Of Benefits and Gratitude.
Polymedes. Timocrates, three books. Metrodorus, five books. Antidorus,
two books. Theories about Diseases (and Death) - to Mithras.[41] Callistolas. Of Kingship. Anaximenes. Correspondence. The views expressed in these works I will
try to set forth by quoting three of his
epistles, in which he has given an epitome
of his whole system.
29. I will also set down his Sovran Maxims and any other utterance of his that seems
worth citing, that you may be in a position
to study the philosopher on all sides and
know how to judge him. The first epistle
is addressed to Herodotus and deals with
physics; the second to Pythocles and deals
with astronomy or meteorology; the third
is addressed to Menoeceus and its subject
is human life. We must begin with the first
after some few preliminary remarks[42] upon
his division of philosophy. It is divided
into three parts - Canonic, Physics, Ethics.
30. Canonic forms the introduction to the
system and is contained in a single work
entitled The Canon. The physical part includes
the entire theory of Nature: it is contained
in the thirty-seven books Of Nature and,
in a summary form, in the letters. The ethical
part deals with the facts of choice and aversion:
this may be found in the books On Human Life, in the letters, and in his
treatise Of the End. The usual arrangement, however, is to conjoin
canonic with physics, and the former they
call the science which deals with the standard
and the first principle, or the elementary
part of philosophy, while physics proper,
they say, deals with becoming and perishing
and with nature; ethics, on the other hand,
deals with things to be sought and avoided,
with human life and with the end-in-chief.
31. They reject dialectic as superfluous;
holding that in their inquiries the physicists
should be content to employ the ordinary
terms for things.[43] Now in The Canon Epicurus
affirms that our sensations and preconceptions
and our feelings are the standards of truth;
the Epicureans generally make perceptions
of mental presentations[44] to be also standards.
His own statements are also to be found in
the Summary addressed to Herodotus and in
the Sovran Maxims. Every sensation, he says, is devoid of reason
and incapable of memory; for neither is it
self-caused nor, regarded as having an external
cause, can it add anything thereto or take
anything therefrom.
32. Nor is there anything which can refute
sensations or convict them of error: one
sensation cannot convict another and kindred
sensation, for they are equally valid; nor
can one sensation refute another which is
not kindred but heterogeneous, for the objects
which the two senses judge are not the same;[45]
nor again can reason refute them, for reason
is wholly dependent on sensation; nor can
one sense refute another, since we pay equal
heed to all. And the reality of separate
perceptions guarantees[46] the truth of our
senses. But seeing and hearing are just as
real as feeling pain. Hence it is from plain
facts that we must start when we draw inferences
about the unknown.[47] For all our notions
are derived from perceptions, either by actual
contact or by analogy, or resemblance, or
composition, with some slight aid from reasoning.
And the objects presented to mad-men[48]
and to people in dreams are true, for they
produce effects - i. e. movements in the
mind - which that which is unreal never does.
33. By preconception they mean a sort of
apprehension or a right opinion or notion,
or universal idea stored in the mind; that
is, a recollection of an external object
often presented, e. g. Such and such a thing
is a man: for no sooner is the word "man"
uttered than we think of his shape by an
act of preconception, in which the senses
take the lead.[49] Thus the object primarily
denoted by every term is then plain and clear.
And we should never have started an investigation,
unless we had known what it was that we were
in search of. For example: The object standing
yonder is a horse or a cow. Before making
this judgement, we must at some time or other
have known by preconception the shape of
a horse or a cow. We should not have given
anything a name, if we had not first learnt
its form by way of preconception. It follows,
then, that preconceptions are clear. The
object of a judgement is derived from something
previously clear, by reference to which we
frame the proposition, e. g. "How do
we know that this is a man?"
34. Opinion they also call conception or
assumption, and declare it to be true and
false;[50] for it is true if it is subsequently
confirmed or if it is not contradicted by
evidence, and false if it is not subsequently
confirmed or is contradicted by evidence.
Hence the introduction of the phrase, "that
which awaits" confirmation, e. g. to
wait and get close to the tower and then
learn what it looks like at close quarters.[51]
They affirm that there are two states of
feeling, pleasure and pain, which arise in
every animate being, and that the one is
favourable and the other hostile to that
being, and by their means choice and avoidance
are determined;[52] and that there are two
kinds of inquiry, the one concerned with
things, the other with nothing but words.[53]
So much, then, for his division[54] and criterion
in their main outline. But we must return
to the letter.[55] "Epicurus to Herodotus,
greeting.
35. "For those who are unable to study
carefully all my physical writings or to
go into the longer treatises at all, I have
myself prepared an epitome[56] of the whole
system, Herodotus, to preserve in the memory
enough of the principal doctrines,[57] to
the end that on every occasion they may be
able to aid themselves on the most important
points, so far as they take up the study
of Physics. Those who have made some advance
in the survey of the entire system ought
to fix in their minds under the principal
headings an elementary outline of the whole
treatment of the subject. For a comprehensive
view is often required, the details but seldom.
36. "To the former, then - the main
heads - we must continually return, and must
memorize them so far as to get a valid conception
of the facts, as well as the means of discovering
all the details exactly when once the general
outlines are rightly understood and remembered;
since it is the privilege of the mature student
to make a ready use of his conceptions by
referring every one of them to elementary
facts and simple terms. For it is impossible
to gather up the results of continuous diligent
study of the entirety of things, unless we
can embrace in short formulas and hold in
mind all that might have been accurately
expressed even to the minutest detail.
37. "Hence, since such a course is of
service to all who take up natural science,
I, who devote to the subject my continuous
energy and reap the calm enjoyment of a life
like this, have prepared for you just such
an epitome and manual of the doctrines as
a whole. "In the first place, Herodotus,
you must understand what it is that words
denote, in order that by reference to this
we may be in a position to test opinions,
inquiries, or problems, so that our proofs
may not run on untested ad infinitum, nor
the terms we use be empty of meaning.
38. For the primary signification of every
term employed must be clearly seen, and ought
to need no proving;[58] this being necessary,
if we are to have something to which the
point at issue or the problem or the opinion
before us can be referred. "Next, we
must by all means stick to our sensations,
that is, simply to the present impressions
whether of the mind or of any criterion whatever,
and similarly to our actual feelings, in
order that we may have the means of determining
that which needs confirmation and that which
is obscure. "When this is clearly understood,
it is time to consider generally things which
are obscure. To begin with, nothing comes
into being out of what is non-existent.[59]
For in that case anything would have arisen
out of anything, standing as it would in
no need of its proper germs.[60]
39. And if that which disappears had been
destroyed and become non-existent, everything
would have perished, that into which the
things were dissolved being non-existent.
Moreover, the sum total of things was always
such as it is now, and such it will ever
remain. For there is nothing into which it
can change. For outside the sum of things
there is nothing which could enter into it
and bring about the change. "Further
[this he says also in the Larger Epitome
near the beginning and in his First Book
"On Nature"], the whole of being
consists of bodies and space.[61] For the
existence of bodies is everywhere attested
by sense itself, and it is upon sensation
that reason must rely when it attempts to
infer the unknown from the known.
40. And if there were no space (which we call
also void and place and intangible nature),[62]
bodies would have nothing in which to be
and through which to move, as they are plainly
seen to move. Beyond bodies and space there
is nothing which by mental apprehension or
on its analogy we can conceive to exist.
When we speak of bodies and space, both are
regarded as wholes or separate things, not
as the properties or accidents of separate
things. "Again [he repeats this in the
First Book and in Books XIV. and XV. of the
work "On Nature" and in the Larger
Epitome], of bodies some are composite, others
the elements of which these composite bodies
are made.
41. These elements are indivisible and unchangeable,
and necessarily so, if things are not all
to be destroyed and pass into non-existence,
but are to be strong enough to endure when
the composite bodies are broken up, because
they possess a solid nature and are incapable
of being anywhere or anyhow dissolved.[63]
It follows that the first beginnings must
be indivisible, corporeal entities. "Again,
the sum of things is infinite. For what is
finite has an extremity, and the extremity
of anything is discerned only by comparison
with something else. (Now the sum of things
is not discerned by comparison with anything
else:[64] hence, since it has no extremity,
it has no limit; and, since it has no limit,
it must be unlimited or infinite. "Moreover,
the sum of things is unlimited both by reason
of the multitude of the atoms and the extent
of the void.
42. For if the void were infinite and bodies
finite, the bodies would not have stayed
anywhere but would have been dispersed in
their course through the infinite void, not
having any supports or counter-checks to
send them back on their upward rebound. Again,
if the void were finite, the infinity of
bodies would not have anywhere to be. "Furthermore,
the atoms, which have no void in them - out
of which composite bodies arise and into
which they are dissolved - vary indefinitely
in their shapes; for so many varieties of
things as we see could never have arisen
out of a recurrence of a definite number
of the same shapes. The like atoms of each
shape are absolutely infinite; but the variety
of shapes, though indefinitely large, is
not absolutely infinite.
43. [For neither does the divisibility go
on "ad infinitum," he says below;[65]
but he adds, since the qualities change,
unless one is prepared to keep enlarging
their magnitudes also simply "ad infinitum."]
"The atoms are in continual motion through
all eternity. [Further, he says below, that
the atoms move with equal speed, since the
void makes way for the lightest and heaviest
alike.] Some of them rebound to a considerable
distance from each other, while others merely
oscillate in one place when they chance to
have got entangled or to be enclosed by a
mass of other atoms shaped for entangling.[66]
44. "This is because each atom is separated
from the rest by void, which is incapable
of offering any resistance to the rebound;
while it is the solidity of the atom which
makes it rebound after a collision, however
short the distance to which it rebounds,
when it finds itself imprisoned in a mass
of entangling atoms. Of all this there is
no beginning, since both atoms and void exist
from everlasting. [He says below that atoms
have no quality at all except shape, size,
and weight. But that colour varies with the
arrangement of the atoms he states in his
"Twelve Rudiments"; further, that
they are not of any and every size; at any
rate no atom has ever been seen by our sense.]
45. "The repetition at such length of
all that we are now recalling to mind furnishes
an adequate outline for our conception of
the nature of things. "Moreover, there
is an infinite number of worlds, some like
this world, others unlike it.[67] For the
atoms being infinite in number, as has just
been proved, are borne ever further in their
course. For the atoms out of which a world
might arise, or by which a world might be
formed, have not all been expended on one
world or a finite number of worlds, whether
like or unlike this one. Hence there will
be nothing to hinder an infinity of worlds.
46. "Again, there are outlines or films,
which are of the same shape as solid bodies,
but of a thinness far exceeding that of any
object that we see. For it is not impossible
that there should be found in the surrounding
air combinations of this kind, materials
adapted for expressing the hollowness and
thinness of surfaces, and effluxes preserving
the same relative position and motion which
they had in the solid objects from which
they come. To these films we give the name
of 'images' or 'idols.' Furthermore, so long
as nothing comes in the way to offer resistance,
motion through the void accomplishes any
imaginable distance in an inconceivably short
time. For resistance encountered is the equivalent
of slowness, its absence the equivalent of
speed.
47. "Not that, if we consider the minute
times perceptible by reason alone,[68] the
moving body itself arrives at more than one
place simultaneously (for this too is inconceivable),
although in time perceptible to sense it
does arrive simultaneously, however different
the point of departure from that conceived
by us. For if it changed its direction, that
would be equivalent to its meeting with resistance,
even if up to that point we allow nothing
to impede the rate of its flight. This is
an elementary fact which in itself is well
worth bearing in mind. In the next place
the exceeding thinness of the images is contradicted
by none of the facts under our observation.
Hence also their velocities are enormous,
since they always find a void passage to
fit them. Besides, their incessant effluence
meets with no resistance,[69] or very little,
although many atoms, not to say an unlimited
number, do at once encounter resistance.
48. "Besides this, remember that the
production of the images is as quick as thought.
For particles are continually streaming off
from the surface of bodies, though no diminution
of the bodies is observed, because other
particles take their place.[70] And those
given off for a long time retain the position
and arrangement which their atoms had when
they formed part of the solid bodies, although
occasionally they are thrown into confusion.
Sometimes such films[71] are formed very
rapidly in the air, because they need not
have any solid content; and there are other
modes in which they may be formed. For there
is nothing in all this which is contradicted
by sensation, if we in some sort look at
the clear evidence of sense, to which we
should also refer the continuity of particles
in the objects external to ourselves.
49. "We must also consider that it is
by the entrance of something coming from
external objects that we see their shapes
and think of them.[72] For external things
would not stamp on us their own nature of
colour and form through the medium of the
air which is between them and us,[73] or
by means of rays of light or currents of
any sort going from us to them, so well as
by the entrance into our eyes or minds, to
whichever their size is suitable, of certain
films coming from the things themselves,
these films or outlines being of the same
colour and shape as the external things themselves.
50. They move with rapid motion;[74] and
this again explains why they present the
appearance of the single continuous object,
and retain the mutual interconnexion which
they had in the object, when they impinge
upon the sense, such impact being due to
the oscillation of the atoms in the interior
of the solid object from which they come.
And whatever presentation we derive by direct
contact, whether it be with the mind or with
the sense-organs, be it shape that is presented
or other properties, this shape as presented
is the shape of the solid thing, and it is
due either to a close coherence of the image
as a whole or to a mere remnant of its parts.[75]
Falsehood and error always depend upon the
intrusion of opinion[76] (when a fact awaits)
confirmation or the absence of contradiction,
which fact is afterwards frequently not confirmed
(or even contradicted) [following a certain
movement in ourselves connected with, but
distinct from, the mental picture presented
- which is the cause of error.]
51. "For the presentations which, e.
g., are received in a picture or arise in
dreams, or from any other form of apprehension
by the mind or by the other criteria of truth,
would never have resembled what we call the
real and true things, had it not been for
certain actual things of the kind with which
we come in contact. Error would not have
occurred, if we had not experienced some
other movement in ourselves, conjoined with,
but distinct from,[77] the perception of
what is presented. And from this movement,
if it be not confirmed or be contradicted,
falsehood results; while, if it be confirmed
or not contradicted, truth results.
52. "And to this view we must closely
adhere, if we are not to repudiate the criteria
founded on the clear evidence of sense, nor
again to throw all these things into confusion
by maintaining falsehood as if it were truth.
[78] "Again, hearing takes place when
a current passes from the object, whether
person or thing, which emits voice or sound
or noise, or produces the sensation of hearing
in any way whatever. This current is broken
up into homogeneous particles, which at the
same time preserve a certain mutual connexion
and a distinctive unity extending to the
object which emitted them, and thus, for
the most part, cause the perception in that
case or, if not, merely indicate the presence
of the external object.
53. For without the transmission from the
object of a certain interconnexion of the
parts no such sensation could arise. Therefore
we must not suppose that the air itself is
moulded into shape by the voice emitted or
something similar;[79] for it is very far
from being the case that the air is acted
upon by it in this way. The blow which is
struck in us when we utter a sound causes
such a displacement of the particles as serves
to produce a current resembling breath, and
this displacement gives rise to the sensation
of hearing. "Again, we must believe
that smelling,[80] like hearing, would produce
no sensation, were there not particles conveyed
from the object which are of the proper sort
for exciting the organ of smelling, some
of one sort, some of another, some exciting
it confusedly and strangely, others quietly
and agreeably.
54. "Moreover, we must hold that the
atoms in fact possess none of the qualities
belonging to things which come under our
observation, except shape, weight, and size,
and the properties necessarily conjoined
with shape.[81] For every quality changes,
but the atoms do not change, since, when
the composite bodies are dissolved, there
must needs be a permanent something, solid
and indissoluble, left behind, which makes
change possible: not changes into or from
the non-existent, but often through differences
of arrangement, and sometimes through additions
and subtractions of the atoms.[82] Hence
these somethings capable of being diversely
arranged must be indestructible, exempt from
change, but possessed each of its own distinctive
mass[83] and configuration. This must remain.
55. "For in the case of changes of configuration
within our experience the figure is supposed
to be inherent when other qualities are stripped
off, but the qualities are not supposed,
like the shape which is left behind, to inhere
in the subject of change, but to vanish altogether
from the body. Thus, then, what is left behind
is sufficient to account for the differences
in composite bodies, since something at least
must necessarily be left remaining and be
immune from annihilation. "Again, you
should not suppose that the atoms have any
and every size,[84] lest you be contradicted
by facts; but differences of size must be
admitted; for this addition renders the facts
of feeling and sensation easier of explanation.
56. But to attribute any and every magnitude
to the atoms does not help to explain the
differences of quality in things; moreover,
in that case atoms large enough to be seen
ought to have reached us, which is never
observed to occur; nor can we conceive how
its occurrence should be possible, i. e.
that an atom should become visible.[85] "Besides,
you must not suppose that there are parts
unlimited in number, be they ever so small,
in any finite body. Hence not only must we
reject as impossible subdivision ad infinitum
into smaller and smaller parts, lest we make
all things too weak and, in our conceptions
of the aggregates, be driven to pulverize
the things that exist, i. e. the atoms, and
annihilate[86] them; but in dealing with
finite things we must also reject as impossible
the progression ad infinitum by less and
less increments.
57. "For when once we have said that
an infinite number of particles, however
small, are contained in anything, it is not
possible to conceive how it could any longer
be limited or finite in size. For clearly
our infinite number of particles must have
some size; and then, of whatever size they
were, the aggregate they made would be infinite.
And, in the next place, since what is finite
has an extremity which is distinguishable,
even if it is not by itself observable, it
is not possible to avoid thinking of another
such extremity next to this. Nor can we help
thinking that in this way, by proceeding
forward from one to the next in order, it
is possible by such a progression to arrive
in thought at infinity.[87]
58. "We must consider the minimum perceptible
by sense as not corresponding to that which
is capable of being traversed, i. e. is extended,[88]
nor again as utterly unlike it, but as having
something in common with the things capable
of being traversed, though it is without
distinction of parts. But when from the illusion
created by this common property we think
we shall distinguish something in the minimum,
one part on one side and another part on
the other side, it must be another minimum
equal to the first which catches our eye.
In fact, we see these minima one after another,
beginning with the first, and not as occupying
the same space; nor do we see them touch
one another's parts with their parts, but
we see that by virtue of their own peculiar
character (i. e. as being unit indivisibles)
they afford a means of measuring magnitudes:
there are more of them, if the magnitude
measured is greater; fewer of them, if the
magnitude measured is less. "We must
recognize that this analogy also holds of
the minimum in the atom;
59. it is only in minuteness that it differs
from that which is observed by sense, but
it follows the same analogy. On the analogy
of things within our experience we have declared
that the atom has magnitude; and this, small
as it is, we have merely reproduced on a
larger scale. And further, the least and
simplest[89] things must be regarded as extremities
of lengths, furnishing from themselves as
units the means of measuring lengths, whether
greater or less, the mental vision being
employed, since direct observation is impossible.
For the community which exists between them
and the unchangeable parts (i. e. the minimal
parts of area or surface) is sufficient to
justify the conclusion so far as this goes.
But it is not possible that these minima
of the atom should group themselves together
through the possession of motion.[90]
60. "Further, we must not assert 'up'
or 'down' of that which is unlimited, as
if there were a zenith or nadir.[91] As to
the space overhead, however, if it be possible
to draw[92] a line to infinity from the point
where we stand, we know that never will this
space - or, for that matter, the space below
the supposed standpoint if produced to infinity
- appear to us to be at the same time 'up'
and 'down' with reference to the same point;
for this is inconceivable. Hence it is possible
to assume one direction of motion, which
we conceive as extending upwards ad infinitum,
and another downwards, even if it should
happen ten thousand times that what moves
from us to the spaces above our heads reaches
the feet of those above us, or that which
moves downwards from us the heads of those
below us. None the less is it true that the
whole of the motion in the respective cases
is conceived as extending in opposite directions
ad infinitum.
61. "When they are travelling through
the void and meet with no resistance, the
atoms must move with equal speed. Neither
will heavy atoms travel more quickly than
small and light ones, so long as nothing
meets them, nor will small atoms travel more
quickly than large ones, provided they always
find a passage suitable to their size, and
provided also that they meet with no obstruction.
Nor will their upward or their lateral motion,
which is due to collisions, nor again their
downward motion, due to weight, affect their
velocity. As long as either motion obtains,
it must continue, quick as the speed of thought,
provided there is no obstruction, whether
due to external collision or to the atoms'
own weight counteracting the force of the
blow.
62. "Moreover, when we come to deal
with composite bodies, one of them will travel
faster than another, although their atoms
have equal speed. This is because the atoms
in the aggregates are travelling in one direction[93]
during the shortest continuous time, albeit
they move in different directions in times
so short as to be appreciable only by the
reason, but frequently collide until the
continuity of their motion is appreciated
by sense. For the assumption that beyond
the range of direct observation even the
minute times conceivable by reason will present
continuity of motion is not true in the case
before us. Our canon is that direct observation
by sense and direct apprehension by the mind
are alone invariably true.
63. "Next, keeping in view our perceptions
and feelings (for so shall we have the surest
grounds for belief), we must recognize generally
that the soul is a corporeal thing, composed
of fine particles, dispersed all over the
frame,[94] most nearly resembling wind with
an admixture of heat,[95] in some respects
like wind, in others like heat. But, again,
there is the third part which exceeds the
other two in the fineness of its particles
and thereby keeps in closer touch with the
rest of the frame.[96] And this is shown
by the mental faculties and feelings, by
the ease with which the mind moves, and by
thoughts, and by all those things the loss
of which causes death.
64. Further, we must keep in mind that soul
has the greatest share in causing sensation.
Still, it would not have had sensation, had
it not been somehow confined within the rest
of the frame. But the rest of the frame,
though it provides this indispensable condition[97]
for the soul, itself also has a share, derived
from the soul, of the said quality; and yet
does not possess all the qualities of soul.
Hence on the departure of the soul it loses
sentience. For it had not this power in itself;
but something else, congenital with the body,
supplied it to body: which other thing, through
the potentiality actualized in it by means
of motion, at once acquired for itself a
quality of sentience, and, in virtue of the
neighbourhood and interconnexion between
them, imparted it (as I said) to the body
also.
65. "Hence, so long as the soul is in
the body, it never loses sentience through
the removal of some other part. The containing
sheath[98] may be dislocated in whole or
in part, and portions of the soul may thereby
be lost; yet in spite of this the soul, if
it manage to survive, will have sentience.
But the rest of the frame, whether the whole
of it survives or only a part, no longer
has sensation, when once those atoms have
departed, which, however few in number, are
required to constitute the nature of soul.
Moreover, when the whole frame is broken
up,[99] the soul is scattered and has no
longer the same powers as before, nor the
same motions; hence it does not possess sentience
either.
66. "For we cannot think of it[100]
as sentient, except it be in this composite
whole and moving with these movements; nor
can we so think of it when the sheaths which
enclose and surround it are not the same
as those in which the soul is now located
and in which it performs these movements.
[He says elsewhere that the soul is composed
of the smoothest and roundest of atoms, far
superior in both respects to those of fire;
that part of it is irrational, this being
scattered over the rest of the frame, while
the rational part resides in the chest, as
is manifest from our fears and our joy; that
sleep occurs when the parts of the soul which
have been scattered all over the composite
organism are held fast in it or dispersed,
and afterwards collide with one another by
their impacts. The semen is derived from
the whole of the body.]
67. "There is the further point to be
considered, what the incorporeal can be,
if, I mean, according to current usage the
term is applied to what can be conceived
as self-existent.[101] But it is impossible
to conceive anything that is incorporeal
as self-existent except empty space. And
empty space cannot itself either act or be
acted upon, but simply allows body to move
through it. Hence those who call soul incorporeal
speak foolishly. For if it were so, it could
neither act nor be acted upon. But, as it
is, both these properties, you see, plainly
belong to soul.
68. "If, then, we bring all these arguments
concerning soul to the criterion of our feelings
and perceptions, and if we keep in mind the
proposition stated at the outset, we shall
see that the subject has been adequately
comprehended in outline: which will enable
us to determine the details with accuracy
and confidence. "Moreover, shapes and
colours, magnitudes and weights, and in short
all those qualities which are predicated
of body, in so far as they are perpetual
properties either of all bodies or of visible
bodies, are knowable by sensation of these
very properties: these, I say, must not be
supposed to exist independently by themselves[102]
(for that is inconceivable),
69. nor yet to be non-existent, nor to be
some other and incorporeal entities cleaving
to body,[103] nor again to be parts of body.
We must consider the whole body in a general
way to derive its permanent nature from all
of them, though it is not, as it were, formed
by grouping them together in the same way
as when from the particles themselves a larger
aggregate is made up, whether these particles
be primary or any magnitudes whatsoever less
than the particular whole. All these qualities,
I repeat, merely give the body its own permanent
nature. They all have their own characteristic
modes of being perceived and distinguished,
but always along with the whole body in which
they inhere and never in separation from
it; and it is in virtue of this complete
conception of the body as a whole that it
is so designated.
70. "Again, qualities often attach to
bodies without being permanent concomitants.
They are not to be classed among invisible
entities nor are they incorporeal. Hence,
using the term 'accidents'[104] in the commonest
sense, we say plainly that 'accidents' have
not the nature of the whole thing to which
they belong, and to which, conceiving it
as a whole, we give the name of body, nor
that of the permanent properties without
which body cannot be thought of. And in virtue
of certain peculiar modes of apprehension
into which the complete body always enters,
each of them can be called an accident. 71.
But only as often as they are seen actually
to belong to it, since such accidents are
not perpetual concomitants. There is no need
to banish from reality this clear evidence
that the accident has not the nature of that
whole - by us called body - to which it belongs,
nor of the permanent properties which accompany
the whole. Nor, on the other hand, must we
suppose the accident to have independent
existence (for this is just as inconceivable
in the case of accidents as in that of the
permanent properties); but, as is manifest,
they should all be regarded as accidents,
not as permanent concomitants, of bodies,
nor yet as having the rank of independent
existence. Rather they are seen to be exactly
as and what sensation itself makes them individually
claim to be.
72. "There is another thing which we
must consider carefully. We must not investigate
time as we do the other accidents which we
investigate in a subject, namely, by referring
them to the preconceptions envisaged in our
minds; but we must take into account the
plain fact itself, in virtue of which we
speak of time as long or short, linking to
it in intimate connexion this attribute of
duration.[105] We need not adopt any fresh
terms as preferable, but should employ the
usual expressions about it. Nor need we predicate
anything else of time, as if this something
else contained the same essence as is contained
in the proper meaning of the word 'time'
(for this also is done by some). We must
chiefly reflect upon that to which we attach
this peculiar character of time, and by which
we measure it.
73. No further proof is required: we have
only to reflect that we attach the attribute
of time to days and nights and their parts,
and likewise to feelings of pleasure and
pain and to neutral states, to states of
movement and states of rest, conceiving a
peculiar accident of these to be this very
characteristic which we express by the word
'time.' [He says this both in the second
book "On Nature" and in the Larger
Epitome.] "After the foregoing we have
next to consider that the worlds and every
finite aggregate which bears a strong resemblance
to things we commonly see have arisen out
of the infinite.[106] For all these, whether
small or great, have been separated off from
special conglomerations of atoms; and all
things are again dissolved,[107] some faster,
some slower, some through the action of one
set of causes, others through the action
of another. [It is clear, then, that he also
makes the worlds perishable, as their parts
are subject to change. Elsewhere he says
the earth is supported on the air.]
74. "And further, we must not suppose
that the worlds have necessarily one and
the same shape. [On the contrary, in the
twelfth book "On Nature" he himself
says that the shapes of the worlds differ,
some being spherical, some oval, others again
of shapes different from these. They do not,
however, admit of every shape. Nor are they
living beings which have been separated from
the infinite.] For nobody can prove that
in one sort of world there might not be contained,
whereas in another sort of world there could
not possibly be, the seeds out of which animals
and plants arise and all the rest of the
things we see. [And the same holds good for
their nurture in a world after they have
arisen. And so too we must think it happens
upon the earth also.]
75. "Again, we must suppose that nature[108]
too has been taught and forced to learn many
various lessons by the facts themselves,
that reason subsequently develops what it
has thus received and makes fresh discoveries,
among some tribes more quickly, among others
more slowly, the progress thus made being
at certain times and seasons greater, at
others less. "Hence even the names of
things were not originally due to convention,[109]
but in the several tribes under the impulse
of special feelings and special presentations
of sense primitive man uttered special cries.[110]
The air thus emitted was moulded by their
individual feelings or sense-presentations,
and differently according to the difference
of the regions which the tribes inhabited.
76. Subsequently whole tribes adopted their
own special names, in order that their communications
might be less ambiguous to each other and
more briefly expressed. And as for things
not visible, so far as those who were conscious
of them tried to introduce any such notion,
they put in circulation certain names for
them, either sounds which they were instinctively
compelled to utter or which they selected
by reason on analogy according to the most
general cause there can be for expressing
oneself in such a way.[111] "Nay more:
we are bound to believe that in the sky revolutions,
solstices, eclipses, risings and settings,
and the like, take place without the ministration
or command, either now or in the future,
of any being who at the same time enjoys
perfect bliss along with immortality.
77. For troubles and anxieties and feelings
of anger and partiality do not accord with
bliss, but always imply weakness and fear
and dependence upon one's neighbours. Nor,
again, must we hold that things which are
no more than globular masses of fire, being
at the same time endowed with bliss, assume
these motions at will. Nay, in every term
we use we must hold fast to all the majesty
which attaches to such notions as bliss and
immortality, lest the terms should generate
opinions inconsistent with this majesty.
Otherwise such inconsistency will of itself
suffice to produce the worst disturbance
in our minds. Hence, where we find phenomena
invariably recurring, the invariableness
of the recurrence must be ascribed to the
original interception and conglomeration
of atoms whereby the world was formed.
78. "Further, we must hold that to arrive
at accurate knowledge of the cause of things
of most moment is the business of natural
science, and that happiness depends on this
(viz. on the knowledge of celestial and atmospheric
phenomena), and upon knowing what the heavenly
bodies really are, and any kindred facts
contributing to exact knowledge in this respect.[112]
"Further, we must recognize on such
points as this no plurality of causes or
contingency, but must hold that nothing suggestive
of conflict or disquiet is compatible with
an immortal and blessed nature. And the mind
can grasp the absolute truth of this.
79. "But when we come to subjects for
special inquiry, there is nothing in the
knowledge of risings and settings and solstices
and eclipses and all kindred subjects that
contributes to our happiness; but those who
are well-informed about such matters and
yet are ignorant what the heavenly bodies
really are, and what are the most important
causes of phenomena, feel quite as much fear
as those who have no such special information
- nay, perhaps even greater fear, when the
curiosity excited by this additional knowledge
cannot find a solution or understand the
subordination of these phenomena to the highest
causes. "Hence, if we discover more
than one cause that may account for solstices,
settings and risings, eclipses and the like,
as we did also in particular matters of detail,
80. we must not suppose that our treatment
of these matters fails of accuracy, so far
as it is needful to ensure our tranquillity
and happiness. When, therefore, we investigate
the causes of celestial and atmospheric phenomena,
as of all that is unknown, we must take into
account the variety of ways in which analogous
occurrences happen within our experience;
while as for those who do not recognize the
difference between what is or comes about
from a single cause and that which may be
the effect of any one of several causes,
overlooking the fact that the objects are
only seen at a distance, and are moreover
ignorant of the conditions that render, or
do not render, peace of mind impossible -
all such persons we must treat with contempt.
If then we think that an event could happen
in one or other particular way out of several,
we shall be as tranquil when we recognize
that it actually comes about in more ways
than one as if we knew that it happens in
this particular way.
81. "There is yet one more point to
seize, namely, that the greatest anxiety
of the human mind arises through the belief
that the heavenly bodies are blessed and
indestructible, and that at the same time
they have volitions and actions and causality
inconsistent with this belief; and through
expecting or apprehending some everlasting
evil, either because of the myths, or because
we are in dread of the mere insensibility
of death, as if it had to do with us; and
through being reduced to this state not by
conviction but by a certain irrational perversity,
so that, if men do not set bounds to their
terror, they endure as much or even more
intense anxiety than the man whose views
on these matters are quite vague.
82. But mental tranquillity means being released
from all these troubles and cherishing a
continual remembrance of the highest and
most important truths. "Hence we must
attend to present feelings and sense perceptions,
whether those of mankind in general or those
peculiar to the individual, and also attend
to all the clear evidence available, as given
by each of the standards of truth. For by
studying them we shall rightly trace to its
cause and banish the source of disturbance
and dread, accounting for celestial phenomena
and for all other things which from time
to time befall us and cause the utmost alarm
to the rest of mankind. "Here then,
Herodotus, you have the chief doctrines of
Physics in the form of a summary.
83. So that, if this statement be accurately
retained and take effect, a man will, I make
no doubt, be incomparably better equipped
than his fellows, even if he should never
go into all the exact details. For he will
clear up for himself many of the points which
I have worked out in detail in my complete
exposition; and the summary itself, if borne
in mind, will be of constant service to him.
"It is of such a sort that those who
are already tolerably, or even perfectly,
well acquainted with the details can, by
analysis of what they know into such elementary
perceptions as these, best prosecute their
researches in physical science as a whole;
while those, on the other hand, who are not
altogether entitled to rank as mature students
can in silent fashion and as quick as thought
run over the doctrines most important for
their peace of mind." Such is his epistle
on Physics. Next comes the epistle on Celestial
Phenomena. "Epicurus to Pythocles, greeting.
84. "In your letter to me, of which
Cleon was the bearer, you continue to show
me affection which I have merited by my devotion
to you, and you try, not without success,
to recall the considerations which make for
a happy life. To aid your memory you ask
me for a clear and concise statement respecting
celestial phenomena; for what we have written
on this subject elsewhere is, you tell me,
hard to remember, although you have my books
constantly with you. I was glad to receive
your request and am full of pleasant expectations.
85. We will then complete our writing and
grant all you ask. Many others besides you
will find these reasonings useful, and especially
those who have but recently made acquaintance
with the true story of nature and those who
are attached to pursuits which go deeper
than any part of ordinary education. So you
will do well to take and learn them and get
them up quickly along with the short epitome
in my letter to Herodotus.[113] "In
the first place, remember that, like everything
else, knowledge of celestial phenomena, whether
taken along with other things or in isolation,
has no other end in view than peace of mind
and firm conviction.[114]
86. We do not seek to wrest by force what
is impossible, nor to understand all matters
equally well, nor make our treatment always
as clear as when we discuss human life or
explain the principles of physics in general
- for instance, that the whole of being consists
of bodies and intangible nature, or that
the ultimate elements of things are indivisible,
or any other proposition which admits only
one explanation of the phenomena to be possible.
But this is not the case with celestial phenomena:
these at any rate admit of manifold causes
for their occurrence and manifold accounts,
none of them contradictory of sensation,
of their nature. "For in the study of
nature we must not conform to empty assumptions
and arbitrary laws, but follow the promptings
of the facts;
87. for our life has no need now of unreason
and false opinion; our one need is untroubled
existence. All things go on uninterruptedly,
if all be explained by the method of plurality
of causes in conformity with the facts, so
soon as we duly understand what may be plausibly
alleged respecting them. But when we pick
and choose among them, rejecting one equally
consistent with the phenomena, we clearly
fall away from the study of nature altogether
and tumble into myth. Some phenomena within
our experience afford evidence by which we
may interpret what goes on in the heavens.
We see how the former really take place,
but not how the celestial phenomena take
place, for their occurrence may possibly
be due to a variety of causes.
88. However, we must observe each fact as
presented, and further separate from it all
the facts presented along with it, the occurrence
of which from various causes is not contradicted
by facts within our experience. "A world
is a circumscribed portion of the universe,
which contains stars and earth and all other
visible things, cut off from the infinite,
and terminating [and terminating in a boundary
which may be either thick or thin, a boundary
whose dissolution will bring about the wreck
of all within it] in an exterior which may
either revolve or be at rest, and be round
or triangular or of any other shape whatever.
All these alternatives are possible: they
are contradicted by none of the facts in
this world, in which an extremity can nowhere
be discerned.
89. "That there is an infinite number
of such worlds can be perceived, and that
such a world may arise in a world or in one
of the intermundia (by which term we mean
the spaces between worlds) in a tolerably
empty space and not, as some maintain, in
a vast space perfectly clear and void.[115]It
arises when certain suitable seeds rush in
from a single world or intermundium, or from
several, and undergo gradual additions or
articulations or changes of place, it may
be, and waterings from appropriate sources,
until they are matured and firmly settled
in so far as the foundations laid can receive
them.
90. For it is not enough that there should
be an aggregation or a vortex in the empty
space in which a world may arise, as the
necessitarians hold, and may grow until it
collide with another, as one of the so-called
physicists[116] says. For this is in conflict
with facts. "The sun and moon and the
stars generally were not of independent origin
and later absorbed within our world, [such
parts of it at least as serve at all for
its defence]; but they at once began to take
form and grow [and so too did earth and sea][117]
by the accretions and whirling motions of
certain substances of finest texture, of
the nature either of wind or fire, or of
both; for thus sense itself suggests.
91. "The size of the sun and the remaining
stars relatively to us is just as great as
it appears.[118] [This he states in the eleventh
book "On Nature." For, says he,
if it had diminished in size on account of
the distance, it would much more have diminished
its brightness; for indeed there is no distance
more proportionate to this diminution of
size than is the distance at which the brightness
begins to diminish.] But in itself and actually
it may be a little larger or a little smaller,
or precisely as great as it is seen to be.
For so too fires of which we have experience
are seen by sense when we see them at a distance.
And every objection brought against this
part of the theory will easily be met by
anyone who attends to plain facts, as I show
in my work On Nature.
92. And the rising and setting of the sun,
moon, and stars may be due to kindling and
quenching,[119] provided that the circumstances
are such as to produce this result in each
of the two regions, east and west: for no
fact testifies against this. Or the result
might be produced by their coming forward
above the earth and again by its intervention
to hide them: for no fact testifies against
this either. And their motions[120] may be
due to the rotation of the whole heaven,
or the heaven may be at rest and they alone
rotate according to some necessary impulse
to rise, implanted at first when the world
was made
93. ... and this through excessive heat,
due to a certain extension of the fire which
always encroaches upon that which is near
it.[121] "The turnings of the sun and
moon in their course may be due to the obliquity
of the heaven, whereby it is forced back
at these times.[122] Again, they may equally
be due to the contrary pressure of the air
or, it may be, to the fact that either the
fuel from time to time necessary has been
consumed in the vicinity or there is a dearth
of it. Or even because such a whirling motion
was from the first inherent in these stars
so that they move in a sort of spiral. For
all such explanations and the like do not
conflict with any clear evidence, if only
in such details we hold fast to what is possible,
and can bring each of these explanations
into accord with the facts, unmoved by the
servile artifices of the astronomers.
94. "The waning of the moon and again
her waxing[123] might be due to the rotation
of the moon's body, and equally well to configurations
which the air assumes; further, it may be
due to the interposition of certain bodies.
In short, it may happen in any of the ways
in which the facts within our experience
suggest such an appearance to be explicable.
But one must not be so much in love with
the explanation by a single way as wrongly
to reject all the others from ignorance of
what can, and what cannot, be within human
knowledge, and consequent longing to discover
the indiscoverable. Further, the moon may
possibly shine by her own light, just as
possibly she may derive her light from the
sun;
95. for in our own experience we see many
things which shine by their own light and
many also which shine by borrowed light.
And none of the celestial phenomena stand
in the way, if only we always keep in mind
the method of plural explanation and the
several consistent assumptions and causes,
instead of dwelling on what is inconsistent
and giving it a false importance so as always
to fall back in one way or another upon the
single explanation. The appearance of the
face in the moon may equally well arise from
interchange of parts, or from interposition
of something, or in any other of the ways
which might be seen to accord with the facts.
96. For in all the celestial phenomena such
a line of research is not to be abandoned;
for, if you fight against clear evidence,
you never can enjoy genuine peace of mind.
"An eclipse of the sun or moon may be
due to the extinction of their light, just
as within our own experience this is observed
to happen; and again by interposition of
something else - whether it be the earth
or some other invisible body like it. And
thus we must take in conjunction the explanations
which agree with one another, and remember
that the concurrence of more than one at
the same time may not impossibly happen.
[He says the same in Book XII. of his "De
Natura," and further that the sun is
eclipsed when the moon throws her shadow
over him, and the moon is eclipsed by the
shadow of the earth; or again, eclipse may
be due to the moon's withdrawal, and this
is cited by Diogenes the Epicurean in the
first book of his "Epilecta."]
97. "And further, let the regularity
of their orbits be explained in the same
way as certain ordinary incidents within
our own experience; the divine nature must
not on any account be adduced to explain
this, but must be kept free from the task
and in perfect bliss. Unless this be done,
the whole study of celestial phenomena will
be in vain, as indeed it has proved to be
with some who did not lay hold of a possible
method, but fell into the folly of supposing
that these events happen in one single way
only and of rejecting all the others which
are possible, suffering themselves to be
carried into the realm of the unintelligible,
and being unable to take a comprehensive
view of the facts which must be taken as
clues to the rest.
98. "The variations in the length of
nights and days may be due to the swiftness
and again to the slowness of the sun's motion
in the sky, owing to the variations in the
length of spaces traversed and to his accomplishing
some distances more swiftly or more slowly,
as happens sometimes within our own experience;
and with these facts our explanation of celestial
phenomena must agree; whereas those who adopt
only one explanation are in conflict with
the facts and are utterly mistaken as to
the way in which man can attain knowledge.
"The signs in the sky which betoken
the weather may be due to mere coincidence
of the seasons, as is the case with signs
from animals seen on earth, or they may be
caused by changes and alterations in the
air. For neither the one explanation nor
the other is in conflict with facts,
99. and it is not easy to see in which cases
the effect is due to one cause or to the
other. "Clouds may form and gather either
because the air is condensed under the pressure
of winds, or because atoms which hold together
and are suitable to produce this result become
mutually entangled, or because currents collect
from the earth and the waters; and there
are several other ways in which it is not
impossible for the aggregations of such bodies
into clouds to be brought about. And that
being so, rain may be produced from them
sometimes by their compression, sometimes
by their transformation;
100. or again may be caused by exhalations
of moisture rising[124] from suitable places
through the air, while a more violent inundation
is due to certain accumulations suitable
for such discharge. Thunder may be due to
the rolling of wind in the hollow parts of
the clouds, as it is sometimes imprisoned
in vessels which we use; or to the roaring
of fire in them when blown by a wind,[125]
or to the rending and disruption of clouds,
or to the friction and splitting up of clouds
when they have become as firm as ice. As
in the whole survey, so in this particular
point, the facts invite us to give a plurality
of explanations.
101. Lightnings too happen in a variety of
ways. For when the clouds rub against each
other and collide, that collocation of atoms
which is the cause of fire generates lightning;
or it may be due to the flashing forth from
the clouds, by reason of winds, of particles
capable of producing this brightness; or
else it is squeezed out of the clouds when
they have been condensed either by their
own action or by that of the winds; or again,
the light diffused from the stars may be
enclosed in the clouds, then driven about
by their motion and by that of the winds,
and finally make its escape from the clouds;
or light of the finest texture may be filtered
through the clouds (whereby the clouds may
be set on fire and thunder produced), and
the motion of this light may make lightning;
or it may arise from the combustion of wind
brought about by the violence of its motion
and the intensity of its compression;
102. or, when the clouds are rent asunder
by winds, and the atoms which generate fire
are expelled, these likewise cause lightning
to appear. And it may easily be seen that
its occurrence is possible in many other
ways, so long as we hold fast to facts and
take a general view of what is analogous
to them. Lightning precedes thunder, when
the clouds are constituted as mentioned above
and the configuration which produces lightning
is expelled at the moment when the wind falls
upon the cloud, and the wind being rolled
up afterwards produces the roar of thunder;
or, if both are simultaneous, the lightning
moves with a greater velocity towards us
103. and the thunder lags behind, exactly
as when persons who are striking blows are
observed from a distance. [126] A thunderbolt
is caused when winds are repeatedly collected,
imprisoned, and violently ignited; or when
a part is torn asunder and is more violently
expelled downwards, the rending being due
to the fact that the compression of the clouds
has made the neighbouring parts more dense;
or again it may be due like thunder merely
to the expulsion of the imprisoned fire,
when this has accumulated and been more violently
inflated with wind and has torn the cloud,
being unable to withdraw to the adjacent
parts because it is continually more and
more closely compressed - [generally by some
high mountain where thunderbolts mostly fall].
104. And there are several other ways in
which thunderbolts may possibly be produced.
Exclusion of myth is the sole condition necessary;
and it will be excluded, if one properly
attends to the facts and hence draws inferences
to interpret what is obscure. "Fiery
whirlwinds are due to the descent of a cloud
forced downwards like a pillar by the wind
in full force and carried by a gale round
and round, while at the same time the outside
wind gives the cloud a lateral thrust; or
it may be due to a change of the wind which
veers to all points of the compass as a current
of air from above helps to force it to move;
or it may be that a strong eddy of winds
has been started and is unable to burst through
laterally because the air around is closely
condensed.
105. And when they descend upon land, they
cause what are called tornadoes, in accordance
with the various ways in which they are produced
through the force of the wind; and when let
down upon the sea, they cause waterspouts.
"Earthquakes may be due to the imprisonment
of wind underground, and to its being interspersed
with small masses of earth and then set in
continuous motion, thus causing the earth
to tremble. And the earth either takes in
this wind from without or from the falling
in of foundations, when undermined, into
subterranean caverns, thus raising a wind
in the imprisoned air. Or they may be due
to the propagation of movement arising from
the fall of many foundations and to its being
again checked when it encounters the more
solid resistance of earth.
106. And there are many other causes to which
these oscillations of the earth may be due.
"Windsarise from time to time when foreign
matter continually and gradually finds its
way into the air; also through the gathering
of great store of water. The rest of the
winds arise when a few of them fall into
the many hollows and they are thus divided
and multiplied. "Hail is caused by the
firmer congelation and complete transformation,
and subsequent distribution into drops, of
certain particles resembling wind: also by
the slighter congelation of certain particles
of moisture and the vicinity of certain particles
of wind which at one and the same time forces
them together and makes them burst, so that
they become frozen in parts and in the whole
mass.
107. The round shape of hailstones is not
impossibly due to the extremities on all
sides being melted and to the fact that,
as explained, particles either of moisture
or of wind surround them evenly on all sides
and in every quarter, when they freeze. "Snow
may be formed when a fine rain issues from
the clouds because the pores are symmetrical
and because of the continuous and violent
pressure of the winds upon clouds which are
suitable; and then this rain has been frozen
on its way because of some violent change
to coldness in the regions below the clouds.
Or again, by congelation in clouds which
have uniform density a fall of snow might
occur through the clouds which contain moisture
being densely packed in close proximity to
each other; and these clouds produce a sort
of compression and cause hail, and this happens
mostly in spring.
108. And when frozen clouds rub against each
other, this accumulation of snow might be
thrown off. And there are other ways in which
snow might be formed. "Dew is formed
when such particles as are capable of producing
this sort of moisture meet each other from
the air: again by their rising from moist
and damp places, the sort of place where
dew is chiefly formed, and their subsequent
coalescence, so as to create moisture and
fall downwards, just as in several cases
something similar is observed to take place
under our eyes.
109. And the formation of hoar-frost is not
different from that of dew, certain particles
of such a nature becoming in some such way
congealed owing to a certain condition of
cold air. "Ice is formed by the expulsion
from the water of the circular, and the compression
of the scalene and acute-angled atoms contained
in it; further by the accretion of such atoms
from without, which being driven together
cause the water to solidify after the expulsion
of a certain number of round atoms. "The
rainbow arises when the sun shines upon humid
air; or again by a certain peculiar blending
of light with air, which will cause either
all the distinctive qualities of these colours
or else some of them belonging to a single
kind, and from the reflection of this light
the air all around will be coloured as we
see it to be, as the sun shines upon its
parts.
110. The circular shape which it assumes
is due to the fact that the distance of every
point is perceived by our sight to be equal;
or it may be because, the atoms in the air
or in the clouds and deriving from the sun
having been thus united, the aggregate of
them presents a sort of roundness. "A
halo round the moon arises because the air
on all sides extends to the moon; or because
it equably raises upwards the currents from
the moon so high as to impress a circle upon
the cloudy mass and not to separate it altogether;
or because it raises the air which immediately
surrounds the moon symmetrically from all
sides up to a circumference round her and
there forms a thick ring.
111. And this happens at certain parts either
because a current has forced its way in from
without or because the heat has gained possession
of certain passages in order to effect this.
"Comets arise either because fire is
nourished in certain places at certain intervals
in the heavens, if circumstances are favourable;
or because at times the heaven has a particular
motion above us so that such stars appear;
or because the stars themselves are set in
motion under certain conditions and come
to our neighbourhood and show themselves.
And their disappearance is due to the causes
which are the opposite of these.
112. Certain stars may revolve without setting
not only for the reason alleged by some,
because this is the part of the world round
which, itself unmoved, the rest revolves,
but it may also be because a circular eddy
of air surrounds this part, which prevents
them from travelling out of sight like other
stars; or because there is a dearth of necessary
fuel farther on, while there is abundance
in that part where they are seen to be. Moreover
there are several other ways in which this
might be brought about, as may be seen by
anyone capable of reasoning in accordance
with the facts. The wanderings of certain
stars, if such wandering is their actual
motion,
113. and the regular movement of certain
other stars, may be accounted for by saying
that they originally moved in a circle and
were constrained, some of them to be whirled
round with the same uniform rotation and
others with a whirling motion which varied;
but it may also be that according to the
diversity of the regions traversed in some
places there are uniform tracts of air, forcing
them forward in one direction and burning
uniformly, in others these tracts present
such irregularities as cause the motions
observed. To assign a single cause for these
effects when the facts suggest several causes
is madness and a strange inconsistency; yet
it is done by adherents of rash astronomy,
who assign meaningless causes for the stars
whenever they persist in saddling the divinity
with burdensome tasks.
114. That certain stars are seen to be left
behind by others may be because they travel
more slowly, though they go the same round
as the others; or it may be that they are
drawn back by the same whirling motion and
move in the opposite direction; or again
it may be that some travel over a larger
and others over a smaller space in making
the same revolution. But to lay down as assured
a single explanation of these phenomena is
worthy of those who seek to dazzle the multitude
with marvels. "Falling stars, as they
are called, may in some cases be due to the
mutual friction of the stars themselves,
in other cases to the expulsion of certain
parts when that mixture of fire and air takes
place which was mentioned when we were discussing
lightning;
115. or it may be due to the meeting of atoms
capable of generating fire, which accord
so well as to produce this result, and their
subsequent motion wherever the impulse which
brought them together at first leads them;
or it may be that wind collects in certain
dense mist-like masses and, since it is imprisoned,
ignites and then bursts forth upon whatever
is round about it, and is carried to that
place to which its motion impels it. And
there are other ways in which this can be
brought about without recourse to myths.
"The fact that the weather is sometimes
foretold from the behaviour of certain animals
is a mere coincidence in time.[127] For the
animals offer no necessary reason why a storm
should be produced; and no divine being sits
observing when these animals go out and afterwards
fulfilling the signs which they have given.
116. For such folly as this would not possess
the most ordinary being if ever so little
enlightened, much less one who enjoys perfect
felicity. "All this, Pythocles, you
should keep in mind; for then you will escape
a long way from myth, and you will be able
to view in their connexion the instances
which are similar to these. But above all
give yourself up to the study of first principles
and of infinity and of kindred subjects,
and further of the standards and of the feelings
and of the end for which we choose between
them. For to study these subjects together
will easily enable you to understand the
causes of the particular phenomena. And those
who have not fully accepted this, in proportion
as they have not done so, will be ill acquainted
with these very subjects, nor have they secured
the end for which they ought to be studied."
117. Such are his views on celestial phenomena.
But as to the conduct of life, what we ought
to avoid and what to choose, he writes as
follows.[128] Before quoting his words, however,
let me go into the views of Epicurus himself
and his school concerning the wise man. There
are three motives to injurious acts among
men - hatred, envy, and contempt; and these
the wise man overcomes by reason. Moreover,
he who has once become wise never more assumes
the opposite habit, not even in semblance,
if he can help it. He will be more susceptible
of emotion than other men: that will be no
hindrance to his wisdom. However, not every
bodily constitution nor every nationality
would permit a man to become wise. Even on
the rack the wise man is happy. He alone
will feel gratitude towards friends, present
and absent alike, and show it by word and
deed.
118. When on the rack, however, he will give
vent to cries and groans. As regards women
he will submit to the restrictions imposed
by the law, as Diogenes says in his epitome
of Epicurus' ethical doctrines. Nor will
he punish his servants; rather he will pity
them and make allowance on occasion for those
who are of good character. The Epicureans
do not suffer the wise man to fall in love;
nor will he trouble himself about funeral
rites; according to them love does not come
by divine inspiration: so Diogenes in his
twelfth book. The wise man will not make
fine speeches. No one was ever the better
for sexual indulgence, and it is well if
he be not the worse.
119. Nor, again, will the wise man marry
and rear a family: so Epicurus says in the
Problems and in the De Natura. Occasionally
he may marry owing to special circumstances
in his life. Some too will turn aside from
their purpose. Nor will he drivel, when drunken:
so Epicurus says in the Symposium. Nor will
he take part in politics, as is stated in
the first book On Life; nor will he make
himself a tyrant; nor will he turn Cynic
(so the second book On Life tells us); nor
will he be a mendicant. But even when he
has lost his sight, he will not withdraw
himself[129] from life: this is stated in
the same book. The wise man will also feel
grief, according to Diogenes in the fifth
book of his Epilecta.
120a. And he will take a suit into court.
He will leave written words behind him, but
will not compose panegyric. He will have
regard to his property and to the future.
He will be fond of the country. He will be
armed against fortune and will never give
up a friend. He will pay just so much regard
to his reputation as not to be looked down
upon. He will take more delight than other
men in state festivals.[130]
121b.[131] The wise man will set up votive
images. Whether he is well off or not will
be matter of indifference to him. Only the
wise man will be able to converse correctly
about music and poetry, without however actually
writing poems himself. One wise man does
not move more wisely than another. And he
will make money, but only by his wisdom,
if he should be in poverty, and he will pay
court to a king, if need be. He will be grateful
to anyone when he is corrected. He will found
a school, but not in such a manner as to
draw the crowd after him; and will give readings
in public, but only by request. He will be
a dogmatist but not a mere sceptic; and he
will be like himself even when asleep. And
he will on occasion die for a friend.
120b. The school holds that sins are not
all equal; that health is in some cases a
good, in others a thing indifferent; that
courage is not a natural gift but comes from
calculation of expediency; and that friendship
is prompted by our needs. One of the friends,
however, must make the first advances (just
as we have to cast seed into the earth),
but it is maintained by a partnership in
the enjoyment of life's pleasures.
121a. Two sorts of happiness can be conceived,
the one the highest possible, such as the
gods enjoy, which cannot be augmented, the
other admitting addition and subtraction
of pleasures. We must now proceed to his
letter. "Epicurus to Menoeceus, greeting.
122. "Let no one be slow to seek wisdom
when he is young nor weary in the search
thereof when he is grown old. For no age
is too early or too late for the health of
the soul. And to say that the season for
studying philosophy has not yet come, or
that it is past and gone, is like saying
that the season for happiness is not yet
or that it is now no more. Therefore, both
old and young ought to seek wisdom, the former
in order that, as age comes over him, he
may be young in good things because of the
grace of what has been, and the latter in
order that, while he is young, he may at
the same time be old, because he has no fear
of the things which are to come. So we must
exercise ourselves in the things which bring
happiness, since, if that be present, we
have everything, and, if that be absent,
all our actions are directed toward attaining
it.
123. "Those things which without ceasing
I have declared unto thee, those do, and
exercise thyself therein, holding them to
be the elements of right life. First believe
that God is a living being immortal and blessed,
according to the notion of a god indicated
by the common sense of mankind; and so believing,
thou shalt not affirm of him aught that is
foreign to his immortality or that agrees
not with blessedness, but shalt believe about
him whatever may uphold both his blessedness
and his immortality. For verily there are
gods, and the knowledge of them is manifest;
but they are not such as the multitude believe,
seeing that men do not steadfastly maintain
the notions they form respecting them. Not
the man who denies the gods worshipped by
the multitude, but he who affirms of the
gods what the multitude believes about them
is truly impious.
124. For the utterances of the multitude
about the gods are not true preconceptions
but false assumptions; hence it is that the
greatest evils happen to the wicked and the
greatest blessings happen to the good from
the hand of the gods, seeing that they are
always favourable to their own good qualities
and take pleasure in men like unto themselves,
but reject as alien whatever is not of their
kind. "Accustom thyself to believe that
death is nothing to us, for good and evil
imply sentience, and death is the privation
of all sentience; therefore a right understanding
that death is nothing to us makes the mortality
of life enjoyable, not by adding to life
an illimitable time, but by taking away the
yearning after immortality.
125. For life has no terrors for him who
has thoroughly apprehended that there are
no terrors for him in ceasing to live. Foolish,
therefore, is the man who says that he fears
death, not because it will pain when it comes,
but because it pains in the prospect. Whatsoever
causes no annoyance when it is present, causes
only a groundless pain in the expectation.
Death, therefore, the most awful of evils,
is nothing to us, seeing that, when we are,
death is not come, and, when death is come,
we are not. It is nothing, then, either to
the living or to the dead, for with the living
it is not and the dead exist no longer.[132]
But in the world, at one time men shun death
as the greatest of all evils, and at another
time choose it as a respite from the evils
in life.
126. The wise man does not deprecate life
nor does he fear the cessation of life. The
thought of life is no offence to him, nor
is the cessation of life regarded as an evil.
And even as men choose of food not merely
and simply the larger portion, but the more
pleasant, so the wise seek to enjoy the time
which is most pleasant and not merely that
which is longest. And he who admonishes the
young to live well and the old to make a
good end speaks foolishly, not merely because
of the desirableness of life, but because
the same exercise at once teaches to live
well and to die well. Much worse is he who
says that it were good not to be born, but
when once one is born to pass with all speed
through the gates of Hades.[133]
127. For if he truly believes this, why does
he not depart from life? It were easy for
him to do so, if once he were firmly convinced.
If he speaks only in mockery, his words are
foolishness, for those who hear believe him
not. "We must remember that the future
is neither wholly ours nor wholly not ours,
so that neither must we count upon it as
quite certain to come nor despair of it as
quite certain not to come. "We must
also reflect that of desires some are natural,
others are groundless; and that of the natural
some are necessary as well as natural, and
some natural only. And of the necessary desires
some are necessary if we are to be happy,
some if the body is to be rid of uneasiness,
some if we are even to live.
128. He who has a clear and certain understanding
of these things will direct every preference
and aversion toward securing health of body
and tranquillity of mind, seeing that this
is the sum and end of a blessed life. For
the end of all our actions is to be free
from pain and fear, and, when once we have
attained all this, the tempest of the soul
is laid; seeing that the living creature
has no need to go in search of something
that is lacking, nor to look for anything
else by which the good of the soul and of
the body will be fulfilled. When we are pained
because of the absence of pleasure, then,
and then only, do we feel the need of pleasure.
Wherefore we call pleasure the alpha and
omega of a blessed life. Pleasure is our
first and kindred good.
129. It is the starting-point of every choice
and of every aversion, and to it we come
back, inasmuch as we make feeling the rule
by which to judge of every good thing. And
since pleasure is our first and native good,
for that reason we do not choose every pleasure
whatsoever, but ofttimes pass over many pleasures
when a greater annoyance ensues from them.
And ofttimes we consider pains superior to
pleasures when submission to the pains for
a long time brings us as a consequence a
greater pleasure. While therefore all pleasure
because it is naturally akin to us is good,
not all pleasure is choiceworthy, just as
all pain is an evil and yet not all pain
is to be shunned.
130. It is, however, by measuring one against
another, and by looking at the conveniences
and inconveniences, that all these matters
must be judged. Sometimes we treat the good
as an evil, and the evil, on the contrary,
as a good. Again, we regard independence
of outward things as a great good, not so
as in all cases to use little, but so as
to be contented with little if we have not
much, being honestly persuaded that they
have the sweetest enjoyment of luxury who
stand least in need of it, and that whatever
is natural is easily procured and only the
vain and worthless hard to win. Plain fare
gives as much pleasure as a costly diet,
when once the pain of want has been removed,
131. while bread and water confer the highest
possible pleasure when they are brought to
hungry lips. To habituate one's self, therefore,
to simple and inexpensive diet supplies all
that is needful for health, and enables a
man to meet the necessary requirements of
life without shrinking, and it places us
in a better condition when we approach at
intervals a costly fare and renders us fearless
of fortune. "When we say, then, that
pleasure is the end and aim, we do not mean
the pleasures of the prodigal or the pleasures
of sensuality, as we are understood to do
by some through ignorance, prejudice, or
wilful misrepresentation. By pleasure we
mean the absence of pain in the body and
of trouble in the soul.
132. It is not an unbroken succession of
drinking-bouts and of revelry, not sexual
love, not the enjoyment of the fish and other
delicacies of a luxurious table, which produce
a pleasant life; it is sober reasoning, searching
out the grounds of every choice and avoidance,
and banishing those beliefs through which
the greatest tumults take possession of the
soul. Of all this the beginning and the greatest
good is prudence. Wherefore prudence is a
more precious thing even than philosophy;
from it spring all the other virtues, for
it teaches that we cannot lead a life of
pleasure which is not also a life of prudence,
honour, and justice; nor lead a life of prudence,
honour, and justice, which is not also a
life of pleasure. For the virtues have grown
into one with a pleasant life, and a pleasant
life is inseparable from them.
133. "Who, then, is superior in thy
judgement to such a man? He holds a holy
belief concerning the gods, and is altogether
free from the fear of death. He has diligently
considered the end fixed by nature, and understands
how easily the limit of good things can be
reached and attained, and how either the
duration or the intensity of evils is but
slight. Destiny, which some introduce as
sovereign over all things, he laughs to scorn,
affirming rather that some things happen
of necessity, others by chance, others through
our own agency. For he sees that necessity
destroys responsibility and that chance or
fortune is inconstant; whereas our own actions
are free, and it is to them that praise and
blame naturally attach.
134. It were better, indeed, to accept the
legends of the gods than to bow beneath that
yoke of destiny which the natural philosophers
have imposed. The one holds out some faint
hope that we may escape if we honour the
gods, while the necessity of the naturalists
is deaf to all entreaties. Nor does he hold
chance to be a god, as the world in general
does, for in the acts of a god there is no
disorder; nor to be a cause, though an uncertain
one, for he believes that no good or evil
is dispensed by chance to men so as to make
life blessed, though it supplies the starting-point
of great good and great evil. He believes
that the misfortune of the wise is better
than the prosperity of the fool.
135. It is better, in short, that what is
well judged in action should not owe its
successful issue to the aid of chance. "Exercise
thyself in these and kindred precepts day
and night, both by thyself and with him who
is like unto thee; then never, either in
waking or in dream, wilt thou be disturbed,
but wilt live as a god among men. For man
loses all semblance of mortality by living
in the midst of immortal blessings."
Elsewhere he rejects the whole of divination,[134]
as in the short epitome, and says, "No
means of predicting the future really exists,
and if it did, we must regard what happens
according to it as nothing to us." Such
are his views on life and conduct; and he
has discoursed upon them at greater length
elsewhere.
136. He differs from the Cyrenaics[135]with
regard to pleasure. They do not include under
the term the pleasure which is a state of
rest, but only that which consists in motion.
Epicurus admits both; also pleasure of mind
as well as of body, as he states in his work
On Choice and Avoidance and in that On the Ethical End, and in the first book of his work On Human
Life and in the epistle to his philosopher
friends in Mytilene. So also Diogenes in
the seventeenth book of his Epilecta, and
Metrodorus in his Timocrates, whose actual
words are: "Thus pleasure being conceived
both as that species which consists in motion
and that which is a state of rest."
The words of Epicurus in his work On Choice
are: "Peace of mind and freedom from
pain are pleasures which imply a state of
rest; joy and delight are seen to consist
in motion and activity."
137. He further disagrees with the Cyrenaics
in that they hold that pains of body are
worse than mental pains; at all events evil-doers
are made to suffer bodily punishment; whereas
Epicurus holds the pains of the mind to be
the worse; at any rate the flesh endures
the storms of the present alone, the mind
those of the past and future as well as the
present. In this way also he holds mental
pleasures to be greater than those of the
body. And as proof that pleasure is the end
he adduces the fact that living things, so
soon as they are born, are well content with
pleasure and are at enmity with pain, by
the prompting of nature and apart from reason.
Left to our own feelings, then, we shun pain;
as when even Heracles, devoured by the poisoned
robe, cries aloud, And bites and yells, and
rock to rock resounds, Headlands of Locris
and Euboean cliffs.[136]
138. And we choose the virtues too on account
of pleasure and not for their own sake, as
we take medicine for the sake of health.
So too in the twentieth book of his Epilecta
says Diogenes, who also calls education ???????
recreation ?d? a?????. Epicurus describes
virtue as the sine qua non of pleasure, i.
e. the one thing without which pleasure cannot
be, everything else, food, for instance,
being separable, i. e. not indispensable
to pleasure. Come, then, let me set the seal,
so to say, on my entire work as well as on
this philosopher's life by citing his Sovran
Maxims,[137] therewith bringing the whole
work to a close and making the end of it
to coincide with the beginning of happiness.
1. 139. A blessed and eternal being has no
trouble himself and brings no trouble upon
any other being; hence he is exempt from
movements of anger and partiality, for every
such movement implies weakness [Elsewhere
he says that the gods are discernible by
reason alone, some being numerically distinct,
while others result uniformly from the continuous
influx of similar images directed to the
same spot and in human form.]
2. Death is nothing to us; for the body,
when it has been resolved into its elements,
has no feeling, and that which has no feeling
is nothing to us.
3. The magnitude of pleasure reaches its
limit in the removal of all pain. When pleasure
is present, so long as it is uninterrupted,
there is no pain either of body or of mind
or of both together.
4. 140. Continuous pain does not last long
in the flesh; on the contrary, pain, if extreme,
is present a very short time, and even that
degree of pain which barely outweighs pleasure
in the flesh does not last for many days
together. Illnesses of long duration even
permit of an excess of pleasure over pain
in the flesh.
5. It is impossible to live a pleasant life
without living wisely and well and justly,
and it is impossible to live wisely and well
and justly without living pleasantly. Whenever
any one of these is lacking, when, for instance,
the man is not able to live wisely, though
he lives well and justly, it is impossible
for him to live a pleasant life.
6. In order to obtain security from other
men any means whatsoever of procuring this
was a natural good.[138]
7. 141. Some men have sought to become famous
and renowned, thinking that thus they would
make themselves secure against their fellow-men.
If, then, the life of such persons really
was secure, they attained natural good; if,
however, it was insecure, they have not attained
the end which by nature's own prompting they
originally sought.
8. No pleasure is in itself evil, but the
things which produce certain pleasures entail
annoyances many times greater than the pleasures
themselves.
9.
142. If all pleasure had been capable of
accumulation, - if this had gone on not only
by recurrence in time, but all over the frame
or, at any rate, over the principal parts
of man's nature, there would never have been
any difference between one pleasure and another,
as in fact there is.
10. If the objects which are productive of
pleasures to profligate persons really freed
them from fears of the mind, - the fears,
I mean, inspired by celestial and atmospheric
phenomena, the fear of death, the fear of
pain; if, further, they taught them to limit
their desires, we should never have any fault
to find with such persons, for they would
then be filled with pleasures to overflowing
on all sides and would be exempt from all
pain, whether of body or mind, that is, from
all evil.
11. If we had never been molested by alarms
at celestial and atmospheric phenomena, nor
by the misgiving that death somehow affects
us, nor by neglect of the proper limits of
pains and desires, we should have had no
need to study natural science.
12.
143. It would be impossible to banish fear
on matters of the highest importance, if
a man did not know the nature of the whole
universe, but lived in dread of what the
legends tell us. Hence without the study
of nature there was no enjoyment of unmixed
pleasures.
13. There would be no advantage in providing
security against our fellow-men, so long
as we were alarmed by occurrences over our
heads or beneath the earth or in general
by whatever happens in the boundless universe.
14. When tolerable security against our fellow-men
is attained, then on a basis of power sufficient
to afford support[139] and of material prosperity
arises in most genuine form the security
of a quiet private life withdrawn from the
multitude.
15.
144. Nature's wealth at once has its bounds
and is easy to procure; but the wealth of
vain fancies recedes to an infinite distance.
16. Fortune but seldom interferes with the
wise man; his greatest and highest interests
have been, are, and will be, directed by
reason throughout the course of his life.
17. The just man enjoys the greatest peace
of mind, while the unjust is full of the
utmost disquietude.
18. Pleasure in the flesh admits no increase
when once the pain of want has been removed;
after that it only admits of variation. The
limit of pleasure in the mind, however, is
reached when we reflect on the things themselves
and their congeners which cause the mind
the greatest alarms.
19.
145. Unlimited time and limited time afford
an equal amount of pleasure, if we measure
the limits of that pleasure by reason.
20. The flesh receives as unlimited the limits
of pleasure; and to provide it requires unlimited
time. But the mind, grasping in thought what
the end and limit of the flesh is, and banishing
the terrors of futurity, procures a complete
and perfect life, and has no longer any need
of unlimited time. Nevertheless it does not
shun pleasure, and even in the hour of death,
when ushered out of existence by circumstances,
the mind does not lack enjoyment of the best
life.
21.
146. He who understands the limits of life
knows how easy it is to procure enough to
remove the pain of want and make the whole
of life complete and perfect. Hence he has
no longer any need of things which are not
to be won save by labour and conflict.
22. We must take into account as the end
all that really exists and all clear evidence
of sense to which we refer our opinions;
for otherwise everything will be full of
uncertainty and confusion.
23. If you fight against all your sensations,
you will have no standard to which to refer,
and thus no means of judging even those judgements
which you pronounce false.
24.
147. If you reject absolutely any single
sensation without stopping to discriminate
with respect to that which awaits confirmation
between matter of opinion and that which
is already present, whether in sensation
or in feelings or in any presentative perception
of the mind, you will throw into confusion
even the rest of your sensations by your
groundless belief and so you will be rejecting
the standard of truth altogether. If in your
ideas based upon opinion you hastily affirm
as true all that awaits confirmation as well
as that which does not, you will not escape
error, as you will be maintaining complete
ambiguity whenever it is a case of judging
between right and wrong opinion.
25.
148. If you do not on every separate occasion
refer each of your actions to the end prescribed
by nature, but instead of this in the act
of choice or avoidance swerve aside to some
other end, your acts will not be consistent
with your theories.
26. All such desires as lead to no pain when
they remain ungratified are unnecessary,
and the longing is easily got rid of, when
the thing desired is difficult to procure
or when the desires seem likely to produce
harm.
27. Of all the means which are procured by
wisdom to ensure happiness throughout the
whole of life, by far the most important
is the acquisition of friends.
28. The same conviction which inspires confidence
that nothing we have to fear is eternal or
even of long duration, also enables us to
see that even in our limited conditions of
life nothing enhances our security so much
as friendship.
29.
149. Of our desires some are natural and
necessary; others are natural, but not necessary;
others, again, are neither natural nor necessary,
but are due to illusory opinion. [Epicurus
regards as natural and necessary desires
which bring relief from pain, as e. g. drink
when we are thirsty; while by natural and
not necessary he means those which merely
diversify the pleasure without removing the
pain, as e. g. costly viands; by the neither
natural nor necessary he means desires for
crowns and the erection of statues in one's
honour. - Schol.]
30. Those natural desires which entail no
pain when not gratified, though their objects
are vehemently pursued, are also due to illusory
opinion; and when they are not got rid of,
it is not because of their own nature, but
because of the man's illusory opinion.
31.
150. Natural justice is a symbol or expression
of expediency, to prevent one man from harming
or being harmed by another.
32. Those animals which are incapable of
making covenants with one another, to the
end that they may neither inflict nor suffer
harm, are without either justice or injustice.
And those tribes which either could not or
would not form mutual covenants to the same
end are in like case.
33. There never was an absolute justice,
but only an agreement made in reciprocal
intercourse in whatever localities now and
again from time to time, providing against
the infliction or suffering of harm.
34.
151. Injustice is not in itself an evil,
but only in its consequence, viz. the terror
which is excited by apprehension that those
appointed to punish such offences will discover
the injustice.
35. It is impossible for the man who secretly
violates any article of the social compact
to feel confident that he will remain undiscovered,
even if he has already escaped ten thousand
times; for right on to the end of his life
he is never sure he will not be detected.
36. Taken generally, justice is the same
for all, to wit, something found expedient
in mutual intercourse; but in its application
to particular cases of locality or conditions
of whatever kind, it varies under different
circumstances.
37.
152. Among the things accounted just by conventional
law, whatever in the needs of mutual intercourse
is attested to be expedient, is thereby stamped
as just, whether or not it be the same for
all; and in case any law is made and does
not prove suitable to the expediencies of
mutual intercourse, then this is no longer
just. And should the expediency which is
expressed by the law vary and only for a
time correspond with the prior conception,
nevertheless for the time being it was just,
so long as we do not trouble ourselves about
empty words, but look simply at the facts.
38. 153. Where without any change in circumstances
the conventional laws, when judged by their
consequences, were seen not to correspond
with the notion of justice, such laws were
not really just; but wherever the laws have
ceased to be expedient in consequence of
a change in circumstances, in that case the
laws were for the time being just when they
were expedient for the mutual intercourse
of the citizens, and subsequently ceased
to be just when they ceased to be expedient.
39. 154. He who best knew how to meet fear
of external foes made into one family all
the creatures he could; and those he could
not, he at any rate did not treat as aliens;
and where he found even this impossible,
he avoided all intercourse, and, so far as
was expedient, kept them at a distance.
40. Those who were best able to provide themselves
with the means of security against their
neighbours, being thus in possession of the
surest guarantee, passed the most agreeable
life in each other's society; and their enjoyment
of the fullest intimacy was such that, if
one of them died before his time, the survivors
did not lament his death as if it called
for commiseration.
THE END
FOOTNOTES TO BOOK TEN - HERE
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