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Monday, April 6, 2020

Musonius Rufus, Lectures 9.4


In fact, there have been cases where exile was an absolute blessing as it was to Diogenes, who by his exile was transformed from an ordinary citizen into a philosopher, and instead of sitting idly in Sinope, he busied himself in Greece, and in the pursuit of virtue came to surpass the philosophers.

My first impressions of Diogenes were that he seemed a bit of a clown, and some of his more outrageous antics could easily offend my tame Catholic sensibilities.

As the years passed, however, I was drawn to this odd character more and more. I came to recognize that his eccentricity was intended to wake us from our slumber, and that I only found him crude because I had been more interested in appearing refined than actually being virtuous.

The Cynics, like Antisthenes, Diogenes, and Crates, had much in common with the Stoics, and I often think of the two traditions as being sister philosophies. The Socratic mission inspired them both, and they shared a commitment to the life of virtue, in harmony with Nature, and free from any attachment to circumstances.

The Cynics, however, pulled out all the stops, and their mockery of institutions and customs had a radical and iconoclastic component; the rich, fashionable, and powerful considered them especially impudent and shameless.

When I found myself slowly becoming ever more out of the loop, the Cynics, the “dog-like” philosophers, started becoming more like my friends.

Exile did not make Diogenes a philosopher, but it offered Diogenes an ideal opportunity to make himself into a philosopher. After his father was involved in a scandal in Sinope, Diogenes was cast out from the city, losing both his citizenship and his property. Starting again in Athens, he now pursued a simple life, and dedicated himself to seeking virtue above all other things.

It is also said that Diogenes was later captured by pirates during a journey, and then sold as a slave. The story has it that this was when Xeniades of Corinth purchased Diogenes, impressed by his insistence that he would be best suited for a household that needed a master.

Those who love Stoicism and Cynicism will know exactly what Diogenes meant by this, that to govern men is really nothing else than helping them to learn right from wrong. This Diogenes certainly did, by educating the children of the family in character.

I can only imagine what may have gone through the man’s mind, facing such a complete upheaval of his life, not once but twice. First, he lost his home, and then he lost his home again, along with the very ownership of his body. His response never ceases to amaze me.

What did Diogenes do in these situations? He used them both to gain a greater mastery of his own soul, to practice decency, temperance, and honesty in everything he faced, never hesitating to demand that others should aspire to the same. He cared very little for where he was, or what he had, and stood only on who he was.

Diogenes was surely the sort of fellow we would now call difficult, inappropriate, and scandalous. The offense and outrage, however, will only come from our own recognition that he has called us out, that he was able to live in practice what we will only pretend to honor in theory. He hits us where it hurts. He wasn’t about writing books and scratching his chin, he was about getting his hands dirty and doing the job.

This is the sort of opportunity that can come from exile! 

Written in 12/2016


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