Aristippus
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Aristippus (Greek: Ἀρίστιππος) son of Aritades, was born at Cyrene, (lived c. 435-c. 360 BC), and was the founder of the Cyrenaic School of Philosophy.[1]
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He came over to Greece to be present at the Olympic games, where he fell in with Ischomachus the agriculturist, and by his description was filled with so ardent a desire to see Socrates, that he went to Athens for the purpose,[2] and remained with him almost up to the time of his execution, 399 BC. Diodorus[3] dates him to 366 BC, which agrees very well with the facts which we know about him, and with the statement,[4] that Lais, the courtesan with whom he was intimate, was born 421 BC.
Though a disciple of Socrates, he wandered both in principle and practice very far from the teaching and example of his great master. He was luxurious in his mode of living; he indulged in sensual gratifications, and the society of the notorious Lais; he took money for his teaching,[5]and avowed to his instructor that he resided in a foreign land in order to escape the trouble of mixing in the politics of his native city.[6] He passed part of his life at the court of Dionysius I of Syracuse or Dionysius the Younger, and is also said to have been taken prisoner by Artaphernes, the satrap who drove the Spartans from Rhodes, 396 BC.[7] He appears, however, at last to have returned to Cyrene, and there he spent his old age.
The anecdotes which are told of him, and of which we find lots in Diogenes Laërtius,[8] by no means give us the notion of a person who was the mere slave of his passions, but rather of one who took a pride in extracting enjoyment from all circumstances of every kind, and in controlling adversity and prosperity alike. They illustrate and confirm the two statements of Horace,[9] that to observe the precepts of Aristippus is "to endeavour to adapt circumstances to myself, not myself to circumstances" and[10] that, "every complexion of life, every station and circumstance sat gracefully upon him." Thus when reproached for his love of bodily indulgences, he answered, that there was no shame in enjoying them, but that it would be disgraceful if he could not at any time give them up. When Dionysius, provoked at some of his remarks, ordered him to take the lowest place at table, he said, "You wish to dignify the seat." Whether he was prisoner to a satrap, or grossly insulted and even spit upon by a tyrant, or enjoying the pleasures of a banquet, or reviled for faithlessness to Socrates by his fellow-pupils, he maintained the same calm temper. He appeared insulting to Xenophon and Plato, as we see from the Memorabilia, where he maintains an discussion against Socrates in defence of voluptuous enjoyment, and from the Phaedo, where his absence at the death of Socrates, though he was only at Aegina, 200 stadia from Athens, is doubtless mentioned as a reproach. Aristotle, too, calls him a sophist,[11] and notices a story of Plato speaking to him, with rather undue vehemence, and of his replying with calmness.[12]
He imparted his doctrine to his daughter Arete, by whom it was communicated to her son, the younger Aristippus, and by him it is said to have been reduced to a system. Diogenes Laërtius, on the authority of Sotion and Panaetius, gives a long list of books whose authorship is ascribed to Aristippus, though he also says that Sosicrates of Rhodes states, that he wrote nothing. Some epistles attributed to him are forgeries.
In Book VI of De architectura, Vitruvius describes one of Aristippus writings:
It is related of the Socratic philosopher Aristippus that, being shipwrecked and cast ashore on the coast of the Rhodians, he observed geometrical figures drawn thereon, and cried out to his companions: "Let us be of good cheer, for I see the traces of man." With that he made for the city of Rhodes, and went straight to the gymnasium. There he fell to discussing philosophical subjects, and presents were bestowed upon him, so that he could not only fit himself out, but could also provide those who accompanied him with clothing and all other necessaries of life. When his companions wished to return to their country, and asked him what message he wished them to carry home, he bade them say this: that children ought to be provided with property and resources of a kind that could swim with them even out of a shipwreck.[13]
- ^ Although the systemization of the Cyrenaic philosophy is generally placed with his grandson Aristippus the Younger.
- ^ Plutarch, de Curios. 2.
- ^ Diodorus, xv. 76.
- ^ Schol. ad Aristopli. Plut. 179.
- ^ Being the first of the disciples of Socrates who did so: Diogenes Laërtius, ii.
- ^ Xenophon, Mem. ii. 1.
- ^ Diodorus, xiv. 79.
- ^ Diogenes Laërtius, ii.
- ^ Horace, Ep. i. 1. 18
- ^ Horace, i. 17. 23.
- ^ Aristotle, Metaphys. ii. 2.
- ^ Aristotle, Rhet. ii. 23.
- ^ Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, Volume I, Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, pp 192-231. ISBN 0-674-99203-2
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1867).