He lived in a jar, owned a staff and a cloak and nothing else, and was a sarcastic pain in the ass. He took the example of Socrates to its limit. Plato is the one who called him “Socrates gone mad,” but in a sense he is just the logical result of thinking through how Socrates lived. It is the integrity of Diogenes the Dog, the Cynic, that is hard to distinguish from madness.
I am Athens’ one free man. (#13)
He often seems like a
proto-hippie. The quotations are
all from Guy Davenport’s Seven Greeks, which I find the most fun place
to read about, or read, Diogenes, his surviving works in thirteen pages with no
sources or doubts. Some are likely jokes
or misattributions from later Cynics.
There were never many Cynics, but it was clear enough who they were, ethical
descendants of the legendary Diogenes.
In the rich man’s house there is no place to spit but in his face. (#56)
The curious thing is that Athens, perhaps feeling guilty
about Socrates, seemed to like Diogenes.
In general, Roman Cynics would insult the emperor once too often (e.g.,
once) and be exiled to Greece, where they were adopted by one or another city. I suppose they were thought of as holy fools,
allowed to say and do things that other people could not.
I pissed on the man who called me a dog. Why was he so surprised? (#73)
I love the performance art of Diogenes. He would beg money from statues, since the
result was the same as if he begged from people. He wandered the marketplace in the daytime
with a lamp, “looking for an honest man,” or more literally “a human being,” a
hopeless task. He refuted the Platonic Academy’s definition of man as a “featherless
biped” with his famous plucked chicken, a kind of deconstructionist joke. I mean, he wasn’t the one who introduced the
idea of feathers, which is what any comedian would latch onto. People seemed to find Diogenes funny.
I am a citizen of the world. (#7)
Or perhaps a “cosmopolitan” is a citizen of the cosmos. In context the concept is negative, a
rejection of the narrow citizenship of Athens, but over time it has become something
positive, if empty. I worked for a while
at a liberal arts college that actively encouraged students to think of
themselves as citizens of the world. It
amused me that this was an idea that went back to crazy Diogenes.
I greatly enjoyed William Desmond’s Cynics (2008), a guide
to the movement for college students, bizarrely well written for such a book. The nine hundred years of Cynicism affords
lots of good stories. Eventually
Christian asceticism, the hermits, stylites, and monks, replaced Cynicism for
good. Asceticism is a natural, if rare,
human impulse, and a healthy society finds a role for its ascetics. Mockery, prayer, something.
Diogenes and his followers did benefit from Mediterranean
privilege. I am thinking of the scene in
Walden where semi-Cynic Henry David Thoreau spends a day desperately
trying to recover the axe he dropped in the pond. If all he had in Massachusetts were a jar and
a cloak, he would freeze to death. The
New England Cynic has to own a lot more stuff.
Tomorrow I’ll turn to the great satirist Lucian.
Thanks for a superb and funny post. We had a family problem in August, so I'm behind, but will read Plutarch in September.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I guess it will be a different tomorrow for Lucian. I'm too tired.
ReplyDeleteI have been reading Plutarch haphazardly, and enjoying his voice, his company.