The Stoics
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The Stoics - Diogenes Laërtius
The Stoics
By Diogenes Laërtius
Table of Contents
Title Page
The Stoics
Zeno of Citium
Ariston of Chios
Herillus of Carthage
Dionysius the Renegade
Cleanthes of Assos
Sphaerus of Bosphorus
Chrysippus of Soli
Further Reading: Plato Six Pack – Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo, The Allegory of the Cave and Symposium
The Stoics by Diogenes Laërtius. From Lives of the Eminent Philosophers (Vol. 2, Bk. VII) by Diogenes Laërtius, translated by Robert Hicks, published in 1925.
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Published 2017 by Enhanced Media Publishing. All rights reserved.
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ISBN: 978-1-365-88403-0
Zeno of Citium
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Zeno, the son of Mnaseas (or Demeas), was a native of Citium in Cyprus, a Greek city which had received Phoenician settlers. Apollonius of Tyre says he was lean, fairly tall, and swarthy. A contemporary wag called him an Egyptian vine-branch, according to Chrysippus in the first book of his Proverbs. He had thick legs and was delicate. Persaeus in his Convivial Reminiscences relates that he declined most invitations to dinner. Apparently he was fond of eating green figs and of basking in the sun.
Zeno was a pupil of Crates. He attended the lectures of Stilpo and Xenocrates for ten years – so Timocrates says in his Dion – and Polemo as well. Hecato writes that Zeno consulted the oracle to know what he should do to attain the best life, and that the god's response was that he should take on the complexion of the dead. Whereupon, perceiving what this meant, he studied ancient authors. The way he met Crates sounds like the work of fate. He was shipwrecked on a voyage from Phoenicia to Peiraeus with a cargo of purple. He went up into Athens and sat down in a bookseller's shop, being then a man of thirty. As he went on reading the second book of Xenophon's Memorabilia, he was so pleased that he inquired where men like Socrates were to be found. Crates happened to pass by, so the bookseller pointed to him and said, Follow yonder man.
From that day he became Crates's pupil, showing in other respects a strong bent for philosophy. He was instructed by Crates who wrote a now lost Republic and the following works:
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Of Life according to Nature.
Of Impulse, or Human Nature.
Of Emotions.
Of Duty.
Of Law.
Of Greek Education.
Of Vision.
Of the Whole World.
Of Signs.
Pythagorean Questions.
Universals.
Of Varieties of Style.
Homeric Problems, in five books.
Of the Reading of Poetry.
There are also by him:
A Handbook of Rhetoric.
Solutions.
Two books of Refutations.
Recollections of Crates.
Ethics.
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Crates and the dead philosophers Zeno read were his masters for twenty years. Hence he is reported to have said, I made a prosperous voyage when I suffered shipwreck.
But others attribute this saying of his to the time when he was under Crates. A different version of the story is that he was staying at Athens when he heard his ship was wrecked and said, It is well done of thee, Fortune, thus to drive me to philosophy.
But some say that he disposed of his cargo in Athens, before he turned his attention to philosophy.
He used then to discourse, pacing up and down in the painted colonnade, his object being to keep the spot clear of a concourse of idlers. It was the spot where in the time of the Thirty 1400 Athenian citizens had been put to death. Hither, then, people came henceforth to hear Zeno, and this is why they were known as men of the Stoa, or Stoics; and the same name was given to his followers, who had formerly been known as Zenonians. So it is stated by Epicurus in his letters. According to Eratosthenes in his eighth book On the Old Comedy, the name of Stoic had formerly been applied to the poets who passed their time there, and they had made the name of Stoic still more famous.
The people of Athens held Zeno in high honour, as is proved by their depositing with him the keys of the city walls, and their honouring him with a golden crown and a bronze statue. This last mark of respect was also shown to him by citizens of his native town, who deemed his statue an ornament to their city, and the men of Citium living in Sidon were also proud to claim him for their own. Antigonus (Gonatas) also favoured him, and whenever he came to Athens would hear him lecture and often invited him to come to his court. This offer he declined but dispatched thither one of his friends, Persaeus, the son of Demetrius and a native of Citium, who flourished in the 130th Olympiad,at which time Zeno was already an old man. According to Apollonius of Tyre in his work upon Zeno, the letter of Antigonus was couched in the following terms:
"King Antigonus to Zeno the philosopher, greeting.
While in fortune and fame I deem myself your superior, in reason and education I own myself inferior, as well as in the perfect happiness which you have attained. Wherefore I have decided to ask you to pay me a visit, being persuaded that you will not refuse the request. By all means, then, do your best to hold conference with me, understanding clearly that you will not be the instructor of myself alone but of all the Macedonians taken together. For it is obvious that whoever instructs the ruler of Macedonia and guides him in the paths of virtue will also be training his subjects to be good men. As is the ruler, such for the most part it may be expected that his subjects will become.
And Zeno's reply is as follows:
"Zeno to King Antigonus, greeting.
I welcome your love of learning in so far as you cleave to that true education which tends to advantage and not to that popular counterfeit of it which serves only to corrupt morals. But if anyone has yearned for philosophy, turning away from much-vaunted pleasure which renders effeminate the souls of some of the young, it is evident that not by nature only, but also by the bent of his will he is inclined to nobility of character. But if a noble nature be aided by moderate exercise and further receive ungrudging instruction, it easily comes to acquire virtue in perfection. But I am constrained by bodily weakness, due to old age, for I am eighty years old; and for that reason I am unable to join you. But I send you certain companions of my studies whose mental powers are not inferior to mine, while their bodily strength is far greater, and if you associate with these you will in no way fall short of the conditions necessary to perfect happiness.
So he sent Persaeus and Philonides the Theban; and Epicurus in his letter to his brother Aristobulus mentions them both as living with Antigonus.
The decree which the Athenians passed concerning him reads as follows:
"In the archonship of Arrhenides, in the fifth prytany of the tribe Acamantis on the