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alexandria and her schools-第13章

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 hapless Megarans; who thought that they had found that for which Socrates professed only to seek dimly and afar off; and had got it safe in a dogma; preserved as it were in spirits; and put by in a museum; the great use of dialectic was to confute opponents。  Delight in their own subtlety grew on them; the worship not of objective truth; but of the forms of the intellect whereby it may be demonstrated; till they became the veriest word…splitters; rivals of the old sophists whom their master had attacked; and justified too often Aristophanes' calumny; which confounded Socrates with his opponents; as a man whose aim was to make the worse appear the better reason。

We have here; in both parties; all the marks of an age of exhaustion; of scepticism; of despair about finding any real truth。  No wonder that they were superseded by the Pyrrhonists; who doubted all things; and by the Academy; which prided itself on setting up each thing to knock it down again; and so by prudent and well…bred and tolerant qualifying of every assertion; neither affirming too much; nor denying too much; keep their minds in a wholesomeor unwholesomestate of equilibrium; as stagnant pools are kept; that everything may have free toleration to rot undisturbed。

These hapless caricaturists of the dialectic of Plato; and the logic of Aristotle; careless of any vital principles or real results; ready enough to use fallacies each for their own party; and openly proud of their success in doing so; were assisted by worthy compeers of an outwardly opposite tone of thought; the Cyrenaics; Theodorus and Hegesias。  With their clique; as with their master Aristippus; the senses were the only avenues to knowledge; man was the measure of all things; and 〃happiness our being's end and aim。〃  Theodorus was surnamed the Atheist; and; it seems; not without good reason; for he taught that there was no absolute or eternal difference between good and evil; nothing really disgraceful in crimes; no divine ground for laws; which according to him had been invented by men to prevent fools from making themselves disagreeable; on which theory; laws must be confessed to have been in all ages somewhat of a failure。  He seems to have been; like his master; an impudent light…hearted fellow; who took life easily enough; laughed at patriotism; and all other high…flown notions; boasted that the world was his country; and was no doubt excellent after…dinner company for the great king。  Hegesias; his fellow Cyrenaic; was a man of a darker and more melancholic temperament; and while Theodorus contented himself with preaching a comfortable selfishness; and obtaining pleasure; made it rather his study to avoid pain。  Doubtless both their theories were popular enough at Alexandria; as they were in France during the analogous period; the Siecle Louis Quinze。  The 〃Contrat Social;〃 and the rest of their doctrines; moral and metaphysical; will always have their admirers on earth; as long as that variety of the human species exists for whose especial behoof Theodorus held that laws were made; and the whole form of thought met with great approbation in after years at Rome; where Epicurus carried it to its highest perfection。  After that; under the pressure of a train of rather severe lessons; which Gibbon has detailed in his 〃Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire;〃 little or nothing was heard of it; save sotto voce; perhaps; at the Papal courts of the sixteenth century。  To revive it publicly; or at least as much of it as could be borne by a world now for seventeen centuries Christian; was the glory of the eighteenth century。  The moral scheme of Theodorus has now nearly vanished among us; at least as a confessed creed; and; in spite of the authority of Mr。 Locke's great and good name; his metaphysical scheme is showing signs of a like approaching disappearance。  Let us hope that it may be a speedy one; for if the senses be the only avenues to knowledge; if man be the measure of all things; and if law have not; as Hooker says; her fount and home in the very bosom of God himself; then was Homer's Zeus right in declaring man to be 〃the most wretched of all the beasts of the field。〃

And yet one cannot help looking with a sort of awe (I dare not call it respect) at that melancholic faithless Hegesias。  Doubtless he; like his compeers; and indeed all Alexandria for three hundred years; cultivated philosophy with no more real purpose than it was cultivated by the graceless beaux…esprits of Louis XV。's court; and with as little practical effect on morality; but of this Hegesias alone it stands written; that his teaching actually made men do something; and moreover; do the most solemn and important thing which any man can do; excepting always doing right。  I must confess; however; that the result of his teaching took so unexpected a form; that the reigning Ptolemy; apparently Philadelphus; had to interfere with the sacred right of every man to talk as much nonsense as he likes; and forbade Hegesias to teach at Alexandria。  For Hegesias; a Cyrenaic like Theodorus; but a rather more morose pedant than that saucy and happy scoffer; having discovered that the great end of man was to avoid pain; also discovered (his digestion being probably in a disordered state) that there was so much more pain than pleasure in the world; as to make it a thoroughly disagreeable place; of which man was well rid at any price。  Whereon he wrote a book called; 'Greek text:  apokarteroon'; in which a man who had determined to starve himself; preached the miseries of human life; and the blessings of death; with such overpowering force; that the book actually drove many persons to commit suicide; and escape from a world which was not fit to dwell in。  A fearful proof of how rotten the state of society was becoming; how desperate the minds of men; during those frightful centuries which immediately preceded the Christian era; and how fast was approaching that dark chaos of unbelief and unrighteousness; which Paul of Tarsus so analyses and describes in the first chapter of his Epistle to the Romanswhen the old light was lost; the old faiths extinct; the old reverence for the laws of family and national life; destroyed; yea even the natural instincts themselves perverted; that chaos whose darkness Juvenal; and Petronius; and Tacitus have proved; in their fearful pages; not to have been exaggerated by the more compassionate though more righteous Jew。

And now observe; that this selfishnessthis wholesome state of equilibriumthis philosophic calm; which is really only a lazy pride; was; as far as we can tell; the main object of all the schools from the time of Alexander to the Christian era。  We know very little of those Sceptics; Cynics; Epicureans; Academics; Peripatetics; Stoics; of whom there has been so much talk; except at second…hand; through the Romans; from whom Stoicism in after ages received a new and not ignoble life。 But this we do know of the later sets; that they gradually gave up the search for truth; and propounded to themselves as the great type for a philosopher; How shall a man save his own soul from this evil world? They may have been right; it may have been the best thing to think about in those exhausted and decaying
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