Theophrastus,
in his comparison of bad acts—such a comparison as one would
make in accordance with the common notions of mankind—says, like
a true philosopher, that the offences which are committed through desire
are more blameworthy than those which are committed through anger.
For
he who is excited by anger seems to turn away from reason with a certain pain and unconscious contraction, but he who offends through
desire, being overpowered by pleasure, seems to be in a manner
more intemperate and more unmanly in his offences.
Rightly
then, and in a way worthy of philosophy, he said that the
offence which is committed with pleasure is more blameworthy than
that which is committed with pain; on the whole the one is more like
a person who has been first wronged and through pain is compelled to
be angry, but the other is moved by his own impulse to do wrong, being carried towards doing something by desire.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 2 (tr
Long)
Theophrastus
was the successor to Aristotle at the Lyceum, the Peripatetic School. I share
in Marcus Aurelius’ respect for his observation, because I have come across the
same distinction so often in my own life.
It is
necessary for me to consider not only that I am accountable for my actions, but
also why I make the decisions I do, and how the nature of my choices affects
the degrees of my responsibility. It is an act of judgment, informed by
knowledge or by ignorance, that will ultimately determine how I act, but I must
not underestimate the influence that the passions will play in that estimation.
Feelings
are powerful things, and the greater their force, the greater the strength of mental
discipline necessary to guide and order them. This is especially true if I have
not yet built up good habits of self-control, which can make it possible to act
with far less inner tension, or if my passions are suddenly excited.
Pain and
pleasure are at the two ends of our emotions, and they in turn breed anger and
desire. Pain is, of course, less agreeable than pleasure, and anger is usually
more difficult to resists than desire. In my own experience, anger is sharp,
spontaneous, and urgent, and can easily reveal itself through a state of panic.
Desire, in contrast, always appears more subtle, deliberate, and intentional, and
is often accompanied by a grasping calculation.
Anger
acts with desperation as it violently lashes out at what pains us, but desire
acts with selfishness as it cleverly consumes the pleasures we crave.
Succumbing to anger seems far more instinctive, while surrendering to desire
seems far more considered. Anger feels more like a rabid dog, and desire like a
slowly constricting snake.
Whenever
I have yielded to anger, I observe that I often immediately regret my mistake,
sometimes even as the deed is being done, and I am far more willing to make
things right. Whenever I have yielded to desire, I will surround myself with
pathetic excuses, trying to justify as right what I know deep in my heart is
quite wrong, and I will staunchly resist taking responsibility or making
amends.
The
blame is most certainly always my own, but I know desire is more grievous than
anger, because it is far more purposeful in its character. My worst act of
anger, which I feel guilty about every day of my life, arose from despair, but
my worst act of desire, which I still find difficult to even acknowledge, arose
only from greed.
It is
surely no accident that I also find it easier to forgive the insult from a
moment of rage than I do from a scheming act of lust.
Written in 8/2004
Image: A statue of Theophrastus at the Palermo Botanical Garden
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