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Search results for epsilon,2405 in Adler number:
Headword:
Epikouros
Adler number: epsilon,2405
Translated headword: Epicurus, Epikouros
Vetting Status: high
Translation: This man assigned no importance to religion;[1] but there were three brothers [sc. of his],[2] who died in the most pitiful way, struck down by countless diseases.[3] As for
Epicurus, although still young, he was not able to easily descend from his bed by himself, but he was short-sighted and fearful of facing the sunlight, for he disliked the most brilliant and shining of the gods. And indeed he turned his eyes away even from the light of fire, and from his lower orifices blood used to drip down, and such was the consumption of his body that he was not even able to carry the weight of his own clothes.[4] And
Metrodorus[5] and
Polyaenus[6], both of them his companions, died in the worst way men can die, and indeed they took for their impiety a requital that nobody might ever blame. So easily overcome by pleasure was
Epicurus that in his last moments he wrote in his will a disposition that a sacrifice be offered once a year to his father, his mother and his brothers, and to the previously mentioned
Metrodorus and
Polyaenus, but twice a year to himself;[7] so that even in this the sage honored the higher degree of profligacy. And he had some tables of stone built, and gave orders that these be put in his tomb, this greedy and gluttonous man. He devised these things not because he was rich, but because his appetites had driven him mad, as if those things should die along with him. They banished the Epicureans from Rome by a public senatorial decree.[8] And also the Messenians, the ones who live in Arcadia, expelled those reputed to be members of this, let us say, "manger", saying that they were corrupters of the youth and attaching to their doctrine the stain of infamy because of their effeminacy and impiety; and they gave orders that, before sunset, the Epicureans be out of the borders of
Messenia and that after they had left, the priests purify the temples and the
timouchoi (this is the name Messenians give to their magistrates) purify the whole city, as delivered from some filthy contaminations and offscourings. [Note] that in Crete the citizens of
Lyktos[9] chased away some Epicureans who had come there. And a law was written in the local language, stating that whoever thought of adhering to this effeminate and ignominious and hideous doctrine were enemies of the gods and should be banished from
Lyktos; but if anybody dared to come and neglect the orders of the law, he should be bound in a pillory near the office of the magistrates for twenty days, naked and with his body spread with honey and milk, so that he would be a meal for bees and flies and the insects would in the stated time kill them. After this time, if he were still alive, he should be thrown from a cliff, dressed in women's clothes.
Greek Original:Epikouros: houtos to theion par' ouden etitheto: adelphoi de treis êsan, [hoi] muriois arrôstêmasi periplakentes apethanon oiktista. hoge mên Epikouros eti neos ôn autos ou rhaidiôs apo tês klinês hoios te ên katienai, ambluôttôn te kai pros tên tou hêliou aiglên deilos ôn kai tôi phaidrotatôi te kai enargestatôi tôn theôn apechthanomenos. kai mentoi kai tên tou puros augên apestrepheto haima te autôi dia tôn porôn apekrineto tôn katô, tosautê de ara hê suntêxis hê tou sômatos ên, hôs adunatein kai tên tôn himatiôn pherein epibolên. kai Mêtrodôros de kai Poluainos, amphô tô hetairô autou, kakista anthrôpôn apethanon: kai mentoi tês atheïas ênenkanto misthon oudama oudamê mempton. houtô de ara ên hêdonês hêttôn ho Epikouros, hôste dia tôn eschatôn en tais diathêkais autou egrapse tôi men patri kai têi mêtri kai tois adelphois enagizein hapax tou etous kai Mêtrodôrôi kai Poluainôi tois proeirêmenois, heautôi de dissôs eipein, tês asôtias to pleon protimôn kai entautha ho sophos: kai trapezas lithôn pepoiêtai, kai hôs anathêmata en tôi taphôi prosetaxe tethênai ho protenthês te kai opsophagos houtos. kai tauta epeskêpsen ouk ôn en periousiai, luttôn oun tais epithumiais, hôsper oun kai ekeinôn sun autôi tethnêxomenôn. exêlasan de tous Epikoureious tês Rhômês dogmati tês boulês koinôi. kai Messênioi de en Arkadiai tous ek tês autês hoionei phatnês edêdokotas exêlasan lumeônas men einai tôn neôn legontes, kêlida men philosophiai prosballontes dia te malakian kai atheotêta: kai prosetaxan ge pro tôn tou hêliou dusmôn exô tôn horôn tês Messênias gês einai autous, ekphrêsthentôn de tous hiereas kathêrai ta hiera, tous ge mên timouchous [kalousi dê tautêi tous archontas Messênioi] kai tên polin kathêrai pasan, hoia dêpou lumatôn tinôn kai katharmatôn apêllagmenên. hoti en Krêtêi Luktioi tôn Epikoureiôn tinas ekei paraballontas exêlasan. kai nomos egraphê têi epichôriôi phônêi, tous tên thêleian sophian kai agennê kai aischran epinoêsantas kai mentoi tois theois polemious ekkekêruchthai tês Luktou: ean de tis aphikêtai thrasunomenos kai ta ek tou nomou par' ouden poiêsêtai, dedesthô en kuphôni pros tôi archeiôi hêmerôn eikosin, epirreomenos meliti gumnos kai galakti, hina êi melittais kai muiais deipnon kai analôsôsi chronôi tôi proeirêmenôi autous. toutou ge mên dielthontos, ean eti periêi, kata krêmnou ôtheisthô stolên gunaikeian periblêtheis.
Notes:
For
Epicurus see already
epsilon 2404 (and again
epsilon 2406). The present entry is
Aelian fr. 42a Domingo-Forasté (39 Hercher), from
On Divine Manifestations; cf.
epsilon 715,
eta 630,
kappa 2800,
omicron 773,
pi 2870,
sigma 1637,
tau 510,
phi 132.
Following a scheme familiar in Christian writers (e.g. Lactantius,
De mortibus persecutorum),
Aelian shows in this work the effects of divine punishment -- essentially, in terms of physical ailments -- on individuals guilty of being an "enemy of the gods"; this means, in the surviving fragments, people held to adhere to the Epicurean school. The attitude towards Epicurean doctrine that
Aelian displays is based on the common perception of Epicureans as atheists and effeminates -- one stemming from the misunderstanding of the ethical aspect of Epicureanism, determining pleasure as the highest goal (see
Epicurus,
Epistula ad Meneceum 132 for the definition of pleasure). Like
Plutarch and especially
Athenaeus,
Aelian essentially sees the Epicurean notion of pleasure as over-indulgence in food, and effeminacy.
[1] On
Epicurus' indifference to popular religion see also
Aelian fr. 64a D-F, 61 Hercher (also from
On Divine Manifestation).
[2] Neokles, Chairedemos and Aristoboulos: see under
epsilon 2040.
[3] Neither the diseases which killed
Epicurus' brothers nor the physical ailments that afflicted the philosopher himself are attested elsewhere.
[4] The cause of
Epicurus' death (in 270 BCE) was a urinary blockage and associated dysentery.
[5]
Metrodorus of Lampsacus (c.331-278), a disciple and close friend of
Epicurus, described as a "second
Epicurus" by
Cicero (
De Finibus 2.28.92). After
Metrodorus' death,
Epicurus took care of his family and recommended his children to be cared for in his last will. Only fragments of his work survive.
[6]
Polyaenus of Lampsacus (?340-278), a mathematician, whose friendship with
Epicurus started when the philosopher opened a school in Lampsacus in 307-306. Both
Polyaenus and
Metrodorus, together with Hermarchus, had the rank of
kathegemones, "secondary leaders", in the hierarchically-based Epicurean school.
[7]
Epicurus' birthday was celebrated each year; the twentieth day of each month was celebrated in honor of
Metrodorus. On the flattering attitude of the members of the school towards
Epicurus cf.
Plutarch,
Against Colotes 1117AB.
[8] The reference is to the expulsion of the Epicureans
Alcaeus and
Philiscus in 154 BCE as a result of their ethical teaching.
[9] An ancient city in Crete, a former Lacedaemonian colony mentioned by
Homer and Hesiod as participating to the Trojan War. See
Stephanus of
Byzantium s.v., and
lambda 831.
Keywords: biography; Christianity; clothing; constitution; ethics; food; geography; law; medicine; philosophy; religion; zoology
Translated by: Antonella Ippolito on 26 September 2005@20:58:07.
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