THE DIVINE INSTITUTES. REST OF BOOK III
CHAP. XVI.--THAT THE PHILOSOPHERS WHO GIVE GOOD INSTRUCTIONS LIVE BADLY, BY
THE TESTIMONY OF CICERO; THEREFORE WE SHOULD NOT SO MUCH DEVOTE OURSELVES TO THE
STUDY OF PHILOSOPHY AS TO WISDOM.
But when they give themselves up to perpetual sloth, and undertake no
exercise of virtue, and pass their whole life in the practice of speaking, in what
light ought they to be regarded rather than as triflers? For wisdom, unless it
is engaged on some action on which it may exert its force, is empty and false;
and Tullius rightly gives the preference, above teachers of philosophy, to
those men employed in civil affairs, who govern the state, who found new cities or
maintain with equity those already founded, who preserve the safety and liberty
of the citizens either by good laws or wholesome counsels, or by weighty
judgments. For it is right to make men good rather than to give precepts about duty
to those shut up in corners, which precepts are not observed even by those who
speak them; and inasmuch as they have withdrawn themselves from true actions,
it is manifest that they invented the system of philosophy itself, for the
purpose of exercising the tongue, or for the sake of pleading. But they who merely
teach without acting, of themselves detract from the weight of their own
precepts; for who would obey, when they who give the precepts themselves teach
disobedience? Moreover, it is a good thing to give right and honourable precepts; but
unless you also practise them it is a deceit, and it is inconsistent and
trifling to have goodness not in the heart, but on the lips.
It is not therefore utility, but enjoyment, which they seek from
philosophy. And this Cicero indeed testified. "Truly," he says, "all their disputation,
although it contains most abundant fountains of virtue and knowledge, yet, when
compared with their actions and accomplishments, I fear lest it should seem
not to have brought so much advantage to the business of men as enjoyment to
their times of relaxation." He ought not to have feared, since he spoke the truth;
but as if he were afraid lest he should be arraigned by the philosophers on a
charge of betraying a mystery, he did not venture confidently to pronounce that
which was true, that they do not dispute for the purpose of teaching, but for
their own enjoyment in their leisure; and since they are the advisers of
actions, and do not themselves act at all, they are to be regarded as mere talkers.(1)
But assuredly, because they contributed no advantage to life, they neither
obeyed their own decrees, nor has any one been found, through so many ages, who
lived in accordance with their laws. Therefore philosophy(2) must altogether be
laid aside, because we are not to devote ourselves to the pursuit of wisdom,
for this has no limit or moderation; but we must be wise, and that indeed
quickly. For a second life is not granted to us, so that when we seek wisdom in this
life we may be wise in that; each result must be brought about in this life. It
ought to be quickly found, in order that it may be quickly taken up, lest any
part of life should pass away, the end of which is uncertain. Hortensius in
Cicero, contending against philosophy, is pressed by a clever argument; inasmuch
as, when he said that men ought not to philosophize, he seemed nevertheless to
philosophize, since it is the part of the philosophers to discuss what ought and
what ought not to be done in life. We are free and exempt from this calumny,
who take away philosophy, because it is the invention of human thought; we defend
wisdom, because it is a divine tradition, and we testify that it ought to be
taken up by all. He, when he took away philosophy without introducing anything
better, was supposed to take away wisdom; and on that account was more easily
driven from his opinion, because it is agreed upon that man is not born to folly,
but to wisdom.
Moreover, the argument which the same Hortensius employed has great weight
also against philosophy,--namely, that it may be understood from this, that
philosophy is not wisdom, since its beginning and origin are apparent. When, he
says, did philosophers begin to exist? Thales, as I imagine, was the first, and
his age was recent. Where, then, among the more ancient men did that love of
investigating the truth lie hid? Lucretius also says:(3)--
"Then, too, this nature and system of things has been discovered lately,
and I the very first of all have only now been found able to transfer it into
native words."
And Seneca says: "There are not yet a thousand years since the beginnings of
wisdom were undertaken." Therefore mankind for many generations lived without
system. In ridicule of which, Persius says:(4)--
"When wisdom came to the city,
Together with pepper and palms;"
as though wisdom had been introduced into the city together with savoury
merchandise.(5) For if it is in agreement with the nature of man, it must have had
its commencement together with man; but if it is not in agreement with it, human
nature would be incapable of receiving it. But, inasmuch as it has received
it, it follows that wisdom has existed from the beginning: therefore philosophy,
inasmuch as it has not existed from the beginning, is not the same true wisdom.
But, in truth, the Greeks, because they had not attained to the sacred letters
of truth, did not know how wisdom was corrupted. And, therefore, since they
thought that human life was destitute of wisdom, they invented philosophy; that
is, they wished by discussion to tear up the truth which was lying hid and
unknown to them: and this employment, through ignorance of the truth, they thought
to be wisdom.
CHAP. XVII.--HE PASSES FROM PHILOSOPHY TO THE PHILOSOPHERS, BEGINNING WITH
EPICURUS; AND HOW HE REGARDED LEUCIPPUS AND DEMOCRITUS AS AUTHORS OF ERROR.
I have spoken on the subject of philosophy itself as briefly as I could;
now let us come to the philosophers, not that we may contend with these, who
cannot maintain their ground, but that we may pursue those who are in flight and
driven from our battle-field. The system of Epicurus was much more generally
followed than those of the others; not because it brings forward any truth, but
because the attractive name of pleasure invites many.(1) For every one is
naturally inclined to vices. Moreover, for the purpose of drawing the multitude to
himself, he speaks that which is specially adapted to each character separately.
He forbids the idle to apply himself to learning; he releases the covetous man
from giving largesses to the people; he prohibits the inactive man from
undertaking the business of the state, the sluggish from bodily exercise, the timid
from military service. The irreligious is told that the gods pay no attention to
the conduct of men; the man who is unfeeling and selfish is ordered to give
nothing to any one, for that the wise man does everything on his own account. To a
man who avoids the crowd, solitude is praised. One who is too sparing, learns
that life can be sustained on water and meal. If a man hates his wife, the
blessings of celibacy are enumerated to him; to one who has bad children, the
happiness of those who are without children is proclaimed; against unnatural(2)
parents it is said that there is no bond of nature. To the man who is delicate and
incapable of endurance, it is said that pain is the greatest of all evils; to
the man of fortitude, it is said that the wise man is happy even under tortures.
The man who devotes himself to the pursuit of influence and distinction is
enjoined to pay court to kings; he who cannot endure annoyance is enjoined to shun
the abode of kings. Thus the crafty man collects an assembly from various and
differing characters; and while he lays himself out to please all, he is more at
variance with himself than they all are with one another. But we must explain
from what source the whole of this system is derived, and what origin it has.
Epicurus saw that the good are always subject to adversities, poverty,
labours, exile, loss of dear friends. On the contrary, he saw that the wicked
were happy; that they were exalted with influence, and loaded with honours; he saw
that innocence was unprotected, that crimes were committed with impunity: he
saw that death raged without any regard to character, without any arrangement or
discrimination of age; but that some arrived at old age, while others were
carried off in their infancy; that some died when they were now robust and
vigorous, that others were cut off by an untimely death in the first flower of youth;
that in wars the better men were especially overcome and slain. But that which
especially moved him, was the fact that religious men were especially visited
with weightier evils, whereas he saw that less evils or none at all fell upon
those who altogether neglected the gods, or worshipped them in an impious manner;
and that even the very temples themselves were often set on fire by lightning.
And of this Lucretius complains,(3) when he says respecting the god:--
"Then he may hurl lightnings, and often throw down his temples, and
withdrawing into the deserts, there spend his rage in practising his bolt, which
often passes the guilty by, and strikes dead the innocent and unoffending."
But if he had been able to collect even a small particle of truth, he would
never say that the god throws down his own temples, when he throws them down on
this account, because they are not his. The Capitol, which is the chief seat of
the Roman city and religion, was struck with lightning and set on fire not once
only, but frequently. But what was the opinion of clever men respecting this
is evident from the saying of Cicero, who says that the flame came from heaven,
not to destroy that earthly dwelling-place of Jupiter, but to demand a loftier
and more magnificent abode. Concerning which transaction, in the books
respecting his consulship, he speaks to the same purport as Lucretius:--
"For the father thundering on high, throned in the lofty Olympus, himself
assailed his own citadels and famed temples, and cast fires upon his abode in
the Capitol."
In the obstinacy of their folly, therefore, they not only did not understand
the power and majesty of the true God, but they even increased the impiety of
their error, in endeavouring against all divine law to restore a temple so often
condemned by the judgment of Heaven.
Therefore, when Epicurus reflected on these things, induced as it were by
the injustice of these matters (for thus it appeared to him in his ignorance of
the cause and subject), he thought that there was no providence.(4) And having
persuaded himself of this, he undertook also to defend it, and thus he
entangled himself in inextricable errors. For if there is no providence, how is it
that the world was made with such order and arrangement? He says: There is no
arrangement, for many things are made in a different manner from that in which they
ought to have been made. And the divine man found subjects of censure. Now, if
I had leisure to refute these things separately, I could easily show that this
man was neither wise nor of sound mind. Also, if there is no providence, how
is it that the bodies of animals are arranged with such foresight, that the
various members, being disposed in a wonderful manner, discharge their own offices
individually? The system of providence, he says, contrived nothing in the
production of animals; for neither were the eyes made for seeing, nor the ears for
hearing, nor the tongue for speaking, nor the feet for walking; inasmuch as
these were produced before it was possible to speak, to hear, to see, and to walk.
Therefore these were not produced for use; but use was produced from them. If
there is no providence, why do rains fall, fruits spring up, and trees put forth
leaves? These things, he says, are not always done for the sake of living
creatures, inasmuch as they are of no benefit to providence; but all things must be
produced of their own accord. From what source, therefore, do they arise,(1)
or how are all things which are carried on brought about? There is no need he
says, of supposing a providence; for there are seeds floating through the empty
void, and from these, collected together without order, all things are produced
and take their form. Why, then, do we not perceive or distinguish them?
Because, he says, they have neither any colour, nor warmth, nor smell; they are also
without flavour and moisture; and they are so minute, that they cannot be cut
and divided.
Thus, because he had taken up a false principle at the commencement, the
necessity of the subjects which followed led him to absurdities. For where or
from whence are these atoms? Why did no one dream of them besides Leucippus only?
from whom Democritus,(2) having received instructions, left to Epicurus the
inheritance of his folly. And if these are minute bodies, and indeed solid, as
they say, they certainly are able to fall under the notice of the eyes. If the
nature of all things is the same, how is it that they compose various objects?
They meet together, he says, in varied order and position as the letters which,
though few in number, by variety of arrangement make up innumerable words. But
it is urged the letters have a variety of forms. And so, he says, have these
first principles; for they are rough, they are furnished with hooks, they are
smooth. Therefore they can be cut and divided, if there is in them any part which
projects. Bat if they are smooth and without hooks, they cannot cohere. They
ought therefore to he hooked, that they may be linked together one with another.
But since they are said to be so minute that they cannot be cut asunder by the
edge of any weapon, how is it that they have hooks or angles? For it must be
possible for these to be torn asunder, since they project. In the next place, by
what mutual compact, by what discernment, do they meet together, so that
anything may be constructed out of them? If they are without intelligence, they
cannot come together in such order and arrangement; for nothing but reason can bring
to accomplishment anything in accordance with reason. With how many arguments
can this trifling be refuted! But I must proceed with my subject. This is he
"Who surpassed in intellect the race of man, and quenched the light of
all, as the ethereal sun arisen quenches the stars."(3)
Which verses I am never able to read without laughter. For this was not said
respecting Socrates or Plato, who are esteemed as kings of philosophers, but
concerning a man who, though of sound mind and vigorous health, raved more
senselessly than any one diseased. And thus the most vain poet, I do not say adorned,
but overwhelmed and crushed, the mouse with the praises of the lion. But the
same man also releases us from the fear of death, respecting which these are his
own exact words:--
"When we are in existence, death does not exist; when death exists, we
have no existence: therefore death is nothing to us."
How cleverly he has deceived us! As though it were death now completed which
is an object of fear, by which sensation has been already taken away, and not
the very act of dying, by which sensation is being taken from us. For there is a
time in which we ourselves even yet(4) exist, and death does not yet exist; and
that very time appears to be miserable, because death is beginning to exist,
and we are ceasing to exist.
Nor is it said without reason that death is not miserable. The approach of
death is miserable; that is, to waste away by disease, to endure the thrust,
to receive the weapon in the body, to be burnt with fire, to be torn by the
teeth of beasts. These are the things which are feared, not because they bring
death, but because they bring great pain. But rather make out that pain is not an
evil. He says it is the greatest of all evils. How therefore can I fail to fear,
if that which precedes or brings about death is an evil? Why should I say that
the argument is false, inasmuch as souls do not perish? But, he says, souls do
perish; for that which is born with the body must perish with the body. I have
already stated that I prefer to put off the discussion of this subject, and to
reserve it for the last part of my work, that I may refute this persuasion of
Epicurus, whether it was that of Democritus or Dicaearchus, both by arguments
and divine testimonies. But perhaps he promised himself impunity in the
indulgence of his vices; for he was an advocate of most disgraceful pleasure, and said
that man was born for its enjoyment.(1) Who, when he hears this affirmed, would
abstain from the practice of vice and wickedness? For; if the soul is doomed
to perish, let us eagerly pursue riches, that we may be able to enjoy all kinds
of indulgence; and if these are wanting to us, let us take them away from those
who have them by stealth, by stratagem, or by force, especially if there is no
God who regards the actions of men: as long as the hope of impunity shall
favour us, let us plunder and put to death.(2) For it is the part of the wise man
to do evil, if it is advantageous to him, and safe; since, if there is a God in
heaven, He is not angry with any one. It is also equally the part of the
foolish man to do good; because, as he is not excited with anger, so he is not
influenced by favour. Therefore let us live in the indulgence of pleasures in every
possible way; for in a short time we shall not exist at all. Therefore let us
suffer no day, in short, no moment of time, to pass away from us without
pleasure; lest, since we ourselves are doomed to perish, the life which we have already
spent should itself also perish.
Although he does not say this in word, yet he teaches it in fact. For when
he maintains that the wise man does everything for his own sake, he refers all
things which he does to his own advantage. And thus he who hears these
disgraceful things, will neither think that any good tiring ought to be done, since
the conferring of benefits has reference to the advantage of another; nor that he
ought to abstain from guilt, because the doing of evil is attended with gain.
If any chieftain of pirates or leader of robbers were exhorting his men to acts
of violence, what other language could he employ than to say the same things
which Epicurus says: that the gods take no notice; that they are not affected
with anger nor kind feeling; that the punishment of a future state is not to be
dreaded, because souls die after death, and that there is no future state of
punishment at all; that pleasure is the greatest good; that there is no society
among men; that every one consults for his own interest; that there is no one
who loves another, unless it be for his own sake; that death is not to be feared
by a brave man, nor any pain; for that he, even if he should be tortured or
burnt, should say that he does not regard it. There is evidently sufficient cause
why any one should regard this as the expression of a wise man, since it can
most fittingly be applied to robbers!
CHAP. XVIII.--THE PYTHAGOREANS AND STOICS, WHILE THEY HOLD THE IMMORTALITY OF
THE SOUL, FOOLISHLY PERSUADE A VOLUNTARY DEATH.
Others, again, discuss things contrary to these, namely, that the soul
survives after death; and these are chiefly the Pythagoreans and Stoics. And
although they are to be treated with indulgence because they perceive the truth, yet
I cannot but blame them, because they fell upon the truth not by their
opinion, but by accident. And thus they erred in some degree even in that very matter
which they rightly perceived. For, since they feared the argument by which it
is inferred that the soul must necessarily die with the body, because it is born
with the body, they asserted that the soul is not born with the body, but
rather introduced into it, and that it migrates from one body to another. They did
not consider that it was possible for the soul to survive the body, unless it
should appear to have existed previously to the body. There is therefore an
equal and almost similar error on each side. But the one side are deceived with
respect to the past, the other with respect to the future. For no one saw that
which is most true, that the soul is both created and does not die, because they
were ignorant why that came to pass, or what was the nature of man. Many
therefore of them, because they suspected that the soul is immortal, laid violent
hands upon themselves, as though they were about to depart to heaven. Thus it was
with Cleanthes(3) and Chrysippus,(4) with Zeno,(5) and Empedocles,(6) who in the
dead of night cast himself into a cavity of the burning AEtna, that when he
had suddenly disappeared it might be believed that he had departed to the gods;
and thus also of the Romans Cato died, who through the whole of his life was an
imitator of Socratic ostentation. For Democritus, was of another persuasion.
But, however,
"By his own spontaneous act he offered up his head to death;"(2)
and nothing can be more wicked than this. For if a homicide is guilty because
he is a destroyer of man, he who puts himself to death is under the same guilt,
because he puts to death a man. Yea, that crime may be considered to be
greater, the punishment of which belongs to God alone. For as we did not come into
this life of our own accord; so, on the other hand, we can only withdraw from
this habitation of the body which has been appointed for us to keep, by the
command of Him who placed us in this body that we may inhabit it, until He orders us
to depart from it; and if any violence is offered to us, we must endure it with
equanimity, since the death of an innocent person cannot be unavenged, and
since we have a great Judge who alone always has the power of taking vengeance in
His hands.
All these philosophers, therefore, were homicides; and Cato himself, the
chief of Roman wisdom, who, before he put himself to death, is said to have read
through the treatise of Plato which he wrote on the immortality of the soul,
and was led by the authority of the philosopher to the commission of this great
crime; yet he, however, appears to have had some cause for death in his hatred
of slavery. Why should I speak of the Ambraciot,(3) who, having read the same
treatise, threw himself into the sea, for no other cause than that he believed
Plato?--a doctrine altogether detestable and to be avoided, if it drives men
from life. But if Plato had known and taught by whom, and how, and to whom and on
account of what actions, and at what time, immortality is given, he would
neither have driven Cleombrotus nor Cato to a voluntary death, but he would have
trained them to live with justice. For it appears to me that Cato sought a cause
for death, not so much that he might escape from Caesar, as that he might obey
the decrees of the Stoics, whom he followed, and might make his name
distinguished by some great action; and I do not see what evil could have happened to him
if he had lived. For Caius Caesar, such was his clemency, had no other object,
even in the very heat of civil war, than to appear to deserve well of the
state, by preserving two excellent citizens, Cicero and Cato. But let us return to
those who praise death as a benefit. You complain of life as though you had
lived, or had ever settled with yourself why you were born at all. May not
therefore the true and common Father of all justly find fault with that saying of
Terence:(4)--
"First, learn in what life consists; then, if you shall be dissatisfied
with life, have recourse to death."
You are indignant that you are exposed to evils; as though you deserved
anything good, who are ignorant of your Father. Lord, and King; who, although you
behold with your eyes the bright light, are nevertheless blind in mind, and lie in
the depths of the darkness of ignorance. And this ignorance has caused that
some have not been ashamed to say, that we are born for this cause, that we may
suffer the punishment of our crimes; but I do not see what can be more senseless
than this. For where or what crimes could we have committed when we did not
even exist? Unless we shall happen to believe that foolish old man,(5) who
falsely said that he had lived before, and that in his former life he had been
Euphorbus. He, I believe, because he was born of an ignoble race, chose for
himself a family from the poems of Homer. O wonderful and remarkable memory of
Pythagoras! O miserable forgetfulness on the part of us all, since we know not who we
were in our former life! But perhaps it was caused by some error, or favour,
that he alone did not touch the abyss of Lethe, or taste the water of oblivion;
doubtless the trifling old man (as is wont to be the case with old women who
are free from occupation) invented fables as it were for credulous infants. But
if he had thought well of those to whom he spoke these things; if he had
considered them to be men, he would never have claimed to himself the liberty of
uttering such perverse falsehoods. But the folly of this most trifling man is
deserving of ridicule. What shall we do in the case of Cicero, who, having said in
the beginning of his Consolation that men were born for the sake of atoning for
their crimes, afterwards repeated the assertion, as though rebuking him who
does not imagine that life is a punishment? He was right, therefore, in saying
beforehand that he was held by error and wretched ignorance of the truth.
CHAP. XIX.--CICERO AND OTHERS OF THE WISEST MEN TEACH THE IMMORTALITY OF THE
SOUL, BUT IN AN UNBELIEVING MANNER; AND THAT A GOOD OR AN EVIL DEATH MUST BE
WEIGHED FROM THE PREVIOUS LIFE.
But those who assert the advantage of death, because they know nothing of
the truth, thus reason: If there is nothing after death, death is not an evil;
for it takes away the perception of evil. But if the soul survives, death is
even an advantage; because immortality follows. And this sentiment is thus set
forth by Cicero concerning the Laws:(1) "We may congratulate ourselves, since
death is about to bring either a better state than that which exists in life, or
at any rate not a worse. For if the soul is in a state of vigour without the
body, it is a divine life; and if it is without perception, assuredly there is no
evil." Cleverly argued, as it appeared to himself, as though there could be no
other state. But each conclusion is false. For the sacred writings(2) teach
that the soul is not annihilated; but that it is either rewarded according to its
righteousness, or eternally punished according to its crimes. For neither is it
right, that he who has lived a life of wickedness in prosperity should escape
the punishment which he deserves; nor that he who has been wretched on account
of his righteousness, should be deprived of his reward. And this is so true,
that Tully also, in his Consolation, declared that the righteous and the wicked
do not inhabit the same abodes. For those same wise men, he says, did not judge
that the same course was open for all into the heaven; for they taught that
those who were contaminated by vices and crimes were thrust down into darkness,
and lay in the mire; but that, on the other hand, souls that were chaste, pure,
upright, and uncontaminated, being also refined by the study and practice of
virtue, by a light and easy course take their flight to the gods, that is, to a
nature resembling their own. But this sentiment is posed to the former argument.
For that is based on the assumption that every man at his birth is presented
with immortality. What distinction, therefore, will there be between virtue and
guilt, if it makes no difference whether a man be Aristides or Phalaris, whether
he be Cato or Catiline? But a man does not perceive this opposition between
sentiments and actions, unless he is in possession of the truth. If any one,
therefore, should ask me whether death is a good or an evil, I shall reply that its
character depends upon the course of the life. For as life itself is a good if
it is passed virtuously, but an evil if it is spent viciously, so also death
is to be weighed in accordance with the past actions of life. And so it comes to
pass, that if life has been passed in the service of God, death is not an
evil, for it is a translation to immortality. But if not so, death must necessarily
be an evil, since it transfers men, as I have said, to everlasting
punishment.(3)
What, then, shall we say, but that they are in error who either desire
death as a good, or flee from life as an evil? unless they are most unjust, who do
not weigh the fewer evils against the greater number of blessings. For when
they pass all their lives in a variety of the choicest gratifications, if any
bitterness has chanced to succeed to these, they desire to die; and they so regard
it as to appear never to have fared well, if at any time they happen to fare
ill. Therefore they condemn the whole of life, and consider it as nothing else
than filled with evils. Hence arose that foolish sentiment, that this state
which we imagine to be life is death, and that that which we fear as death is life;
and so that the first good is not to be born, that the second is an early
death. And that this sentiment may be of greater weight, it is attributed to
Silenus.(4) Cicero in his Consolation says: "Not to be born is by far the best thing,
and not to fall upon these rocks of life. But the next thing is, if you have
been born, to die as soon as possible, and to flee from the violence of fortune
as from a conflagration." That he believed this most foolish expression appears
from this, that he added something of his own for its embellishment. I ask,
therefore, for whom he thinks it best not to be born, when there is no one at
all who has any perception; for it is the perception which causes anything to be
good or bad. In the next place, why did he regard the whole of life as nothing
else than rocks, and a conflagration; as though it were either in our power not
to be born, or life were given to us by fortune, and not by God, or as though
the course of life appeared to bear any resemblance to a conflagration? The
saying of Plato is not dissimilar, that he gave thanks to nature, first that he
was born a human being rather than a dumb animal; in the next place, that he was
a man rather than a woman; that he was a Greek rather than a barbarian;(5)
lastly, that he was an Athenian, and that he was born in the time of Socrates. It
is impossible to say what great blindness and errors are produced by ignorance
of the truth would altogether contend that nothing in the affairs of men was
ever spoken more foolishly. As though, if he had been born a barbarian, or a
woman, or, in fine, an ass, he would be the same Plato, and not that very being
which had been produced. But he evidently believed Pythagoras, who, in order that
he might prevent men from feeding on animals, said that souls passed from the
bodies of men to the bodies of other animals; which is both foolish and
impossible. It is foolish, because it was unnecessary to introduce souls that have long
existed into new bodies, when the same Artificer who at one time had made the
first, was always able to make fresh ones; it is impossible, because the soul
endued with right reason can no more change the nature of its condition, than
fire can rush downwards, or, like a river, pour its flame obliquely.(1) The wise
man therefore imagined, that it might come to pass that the soul which was then
in Plato might be shut up in some other animal, and might be endued with the
sensibility of a man, so as to understand and grieve that it was burthened with
an incongruous body. How much more rationally would he have acted, if he had
said that he gave thanks because he was born with a good capacity, and capable of
receiving instruction, and that he was possessed of those resources which
enabled him to receive a liberal education! For what benefit was it that he was born
at Athens? Have not many men of distinguished talent and learning lived in
other cities, who were better individually than all the Athenians? How many
thousands must we believe that there were, who, though born at Athens, and in the
times of Socrates, were nevertheless unlearned and foolish? For it is not the
walls or the place in which any one was born that can invest a man with wisdom. Of
what avail was it to congratulate himself that he was born in the times of
Socrates? Was Socrates able to supply talent to learners? It did not occur to Plato
that Alcibiades also, and Critias, were constant hearers of the same Socrates,
the one of whom was the most active enemy of his country, the other the most
cruel of all tyrants.
CHAP. XX.--SOCRATES HAD MORE KNOWLEDGE IN PHILOSOPHY THAN OTHER MEN, ALTHOUGH
IN MANY THINGS HE ACTED FOOLISHLY.
Let us now see what there was so great in Socrates himself, that a wise
man deservedly gave thanks that he was born in his times. I do not deny that he
was a little more sagacious than the others who thought that the nature of
things could be comprehended by the mind. And in this I judge that they were not
only senseless, but also impious; because they wished to send their inquisitive
eyes into the secrets of that heavenly providence. We know that there are at
Rome, and in many cities, certain sacred things which it is considered impious for
men to look upon. Therefore they who are not permitted to pollute those
objects abstain from looking upon them; and if by error or some accident a man has
happened to see them, his guilt is expiated first by his punishment, and
afterwards by a repetition of sacrifice. What can you do in the case of those who wish
to pry into unpermitted things? Truly they are much more wicked who seek to
profane the secrets of the world and this heavenly temple with impious
disputations, than those who entered the temple of Vesta, or the Good Goddess, or Ceres.
And these shrines, though it is not lawful for men to approach them, were yet
constructed by men. But these men not only escape the charge of impiety, but,
that which is much more unbecoming, they gain the fame of eloquence and the glory
of talent. What if they were able to investigate anything? For they are as
foolish in asserting as they are wicked in searching out; since they are neither
able to find out anything, nor, even if they had found out anything, to defend
it. For if even by chance they have seen the truth--a thing which often
happens--they so act that it is refuted by others as false. For no one descends from
heaven to pass sentence on the opinions of individuals; wherefore no one can doubt
that those who seek after these things are foolish, senseless, and insane.
Socrates therefore had something of human wisdom,(2) who, when he
understood that these things could not possibly be ascertained, removed himself from
questions of this kind; but I fear that he so acted in this alone. For many of
his actions are not only undeserving of praise, but also most deserving of
censure, in which things he most resembled those of his own class. Out of these I
will select one which may be judged of by all. Socrates used this well-known
proverb: "That which is above us is nothing to us." Let us therefore fall down upon
the earth, and use as feet those hands which have been given us for the
production of excellent works. The heaven is nothing to us, to the contemplation of
which we have been raised;(3) in fine, the light itself can have no reference to
us; undoubtedly the cause of our sustenance is from heaven. But if he perceived
this, that we ought not to discuss the nature of heavenly things, he was
unable even to comprehend the nature of those things which he had beneath his feet.
What then? did he err in his words? It is not probable; but he undoubtedly
meant that which he said, that we are not to devote ourselves to religion; but if
he were openly to say this, no one would suffer it.
For who cannot perceive that this world, completed with such wonderful
method, is governed by some providence, since there is nothing which can exist
without some one to direct it? Thus, a house deserted by its inhabitant fails to
decay; a ship without a pilot goes to the bottom; and a body abandoned by the
soul wastes away. Much less can we suppose that so great a fabric could either
have been constructed without an Artificer, or have existed so long without a
Ruler. But if he wished to overthrow those public superstitions, I do not
disapprove of this; yea, I shall rather praise it, if he shall have found anything
better to take their place. But the same man swore(1) by a dog and a goose. Oh
buffoon (as Zeno the Epicurean(2) says), senseless, abandoned, desperate man, if he
wished to scoff at religion; madman, if he did this seriously, so as to esteem
a most base animal as God! For who can dare to find fault with the
superstitions oft the Egyptians, when Socrates confirmed them at Athens by his authority?
But was it not a mark of consummate vanity, that before his death he asked his
friends to sacrifice for him a cock which he had vowed to AEsculapius? He
evidently feared lest he should be put upon his trial before Rhadamanthus, the
judge, by AEsculapius on account of the vow. I should consider him most mad if he
had died under the influence of disease. But since he did this in his sound mind,
he who thinks that he was wise is himself of unsound mind. Behold one in whose
times the wise man congratulates himself as having been born!
CHAP. XXI.--OF THE SYSTEM OF PLATO, WHICH WOULD LEAD TO THE OVERTHROW OF
STATES.
Let us, however, see what it was that he learned from Socrates, who,
having entirely rejected natural philosophy, betook himself to inquiries about
virtue and duty. And thus I do not doubt that he instructed his hearers in the
precepts of justice. Therefore, under the teaching of Socrates, it did not escape
the notice of Plato, that the force of justice consists in equality, since all
are born in an equal condition. Therefore (he says) they must have nothing
private or their own; but that they may be equal, as the method of justice requires,
they must possess all things in common. This is capable of being endured, as
long as it appears to be spoken of money. But how impossible and how unjust this
is, I could show by many things. Let us, however, admit its possibility. For
grant that nil arc wise, and despise money. To what, then, did that community
lead him? Marriages also, be says, ought to be in common; so that many men may
flock together like dogs to the same woman, and he who shall be superior in
strength may succeed in obtaining her; or if they are patient as philosophers, they
may await their turns, as in a brothel. Oh the wonderful equality of Plato!
Where, then, is the virtue of chastity? where conjugal fidelity? And if you take
away these, all justice is taken away. But he also says that states would be
prosperous, if either philosophers were their kings, or their kings were
philosophers. But if you were to give the sovereignty to this man of such justice and
equity, who had deprived some of their own property, and given to some the
property of others, he would prostitute the modesty of women; a thing which was never
done, I do not say by a king, but not even by a tyrant.
But what motive did he advance for this most degrading advice? The state
will be in harmony, and bound together with the bonds of mutual love, if all
shall be the husbands, and fathers, and wives, and children of all. What a
confusion of the human race is this? How is it possible for affection to be preserved
where there is nothing certain to be loved? What man will love a woman, or what
woman a man, unless they shall always have lived together,--unless devotedness
of mind, and faith mutually preserved, shall have made their love indivisible?
But this virtue has no place in that promiscuous pleasure. Moreover, if all
are the children of all, who will be able to love children as his own, when he is
either ignorant or in doubt whether they are his own? Who will bestow honour
upon any one as a father, when he does not know from whom he was born? From
which it comes to pass, that he not only esteems a stranger as a father, but also a
father as a stranger. Why should I say that it is possible for a wife to be
common, but impossible for a son, who cannot be conceived except from one? The
community, therefore, is lost to him alone, nature herself crying out against it.
It remains that it is only for the sake of concord that he would have a
community of wives. But there is no more vehement cause of discords, than the desire
of one woman by many men. And in this Plato might have been admonished, if not
by reason, yet certainly by example, both of the dumb animals, which fight most
vehemently on this account, and of men, who have always carried on most severe
wars with one another on account of this matter.
CHAP. XXII.--OF THE PRECEPTS OF PLATO, AND CENSURES OF THE SAME.
It remains that the community of which we have spoken admits of nothing
else but adulteries and lusts, for the utter extinction of which virtue is
especially necessary. Therefore he did not find the concord which he sought, because
he did not see whence it arises. For justice has no weight in outward
circumstances, not even in the body,(3) but it is altogether employed on the mind of
man. He, therefore, who wishes to place men on an equality, ought not to take away
marriage and wealth, but arrogance, pride, and haughtiness, that those who are
powerful and lifted up on high may know that they are on a level even with the
most needy. For insolence and injustice being taken from the rich, it will
make no difference whether some are rich and others poor, since they will be equal
in spirit, and nothing but reverence towards God can produce this result. He
thought, therefore, that he had found justice, whereas he had altogether removed
it, because it ought not to be a community of perishable things, but of minds.
For if justice is the mother(1) of all virtues, when they are severally taken
away, it is also itself overthrown. But Plato took away above all things
frugality, which has no existence when there is no property of one's own which can be
possessed; he took away abstinence, since there will be nothing belonging to
another from which one can abstain; he took away temperance and chastity, which
are the greatest virtues in each sex; he took away self-respect, shame, and
modesty, if those things which are accustomed to be judged base and disgraceful
begin to be accounted honourable and lawful. Thus, while he wishes to confer
virtue upon all, he takes it away from all. For the ownership of property contains
the material both of vices and of virtues, but a community of goods contains
nothing else than the licentiousness of vices. For men who have many mistresses
can be called nothing else than luxurious and prodigal. And likewise women who
are in the possession of many men, must of necessity be not adulteresses,
because they have no fixed marriage, but prostitutes and harlots. Therefore he
reduced human life, I do not say to the likeness of dumb animals, but of the herds
and brutes. For almost all the birds contract marriages, and are united in pairs,
and defend their nests, as though their marriage-beds, with harmonious mind,
and cherish their own young, because they are well known to them; and if you put
others in their way, they repel them. But this wise man, contrary to the
custom of men, and contrary to nature, chose more foolish objects of imitation; and
since he saw that the duties of males and females were not separated in the
case of other animals, he thought that women also ought to engage in warfare, and
take a share in the public counsels, and undertake magistracies, and assume
commands. And therefore he assigned to them horses and arms: it follows that he
should have assigned to men wool and the loom, and the carrying of infants. Nor
did he see the impossibility of what he said, from the fact that no nation has
existed in the world so foolish or so vain as to live in this manner.(2)
CHAP. XXIII.--OF THE ERRORS OF CERTAIN PHILOSOPHERS, AND OF THE SUN AND MOON.
Since, therefore, the leading men among the philosophers are themselves
discovered to be of such emptiness, what shall we think of those lesser s ones,
who are accustomed never to appear to themselves so wise, as when they boast of
their contempt of money? Brave spirit! But I wait to see their conduct, and
what are the results of that contempt. They avoid as an evil, and abandon the
property handed down to them from their parents. And lest they should suffer
shipwreck in a storm, they plunge headlong of their own accord in a cairn, being
resolute not by virtue, but by perverse fear; as those who, through fear of being
slain by the enemy, slay themselves, that by death they may avoid death. So
these men, without honour and without influence, throw away the means by which they
might have acquired the glory of liberality. Democritus is praised because he
abandoned his fields, and suffered them to become public pastures. I should
approve of it, if he had given them. But nothing is done wisely which is useless
and evil if it is done by all. But this negligence is tolerable. What shall I
say of him who changed his possessions into money, which he threw into the sea? I
doubt whether he was in his senses, or deranged. Away, he says, ye evil
desires, into the deep. I will cast you away, lest I myself should be cast away by
you. If you have so great a contempt for money, employ it in acts of kindness and
humanity, bestow it upon the poor; this, which you are about to throw away,
may be a succour to many, so that they may not die through famine, or thirst, or
nakedness. Imitate at least the madness and fury of Tuditanus;(4) scatter
abroad your property to be seized by the people. You have it in your power both to
escape the possession of money, and yet to lay it out to advantage; for whatever
has been profitable to many is securely laid out.
But who approves of the equality of faults as laid down by Zeno? But let
us omit that which is always received with derision by all. This is sufficient
to prove the error of this madman, that he places pity among vices and diseases.
He deprives us of an affection, which involves almost the whole course of
human life. For since the nature of man is more feeble than that of the other
animals, which divine providence has armed with natural means of protection,(1)
either to endure the severity of the seasons or to ward off attacks from their
bodies, because none of these things has been given to man, he has received in the
place of all these things the affection of pity, which is truly called
humanity, by which we might mutually protect each other. For if a man were rendered
savage by the sight of another man, which we see happen in the case of those
animals which are of a solitary(2) nature, there would be no society among men, no
care or system in the building of cities; and thus life would not even be safe,
since the weakness of men would both be exposed to the attacks of the other
animals, and they would rage among themselves after the manner of wild beasts. Nor
is his madness less in other things.
For what can be said respecting him who asserted that snow was black? How
naturally it followed, that he should also assert that pitch was white! This is
he who said that he was born for this purpose, that he might behold the heaven
and the sun, who beheld nothing on the earth when the sun was shining.
Xenophanes most foolishly believed mathematicians who said that the orb of the moon
was eighteen times larger than the earth; and, as was consistent with this folly,
he said that within the concave surface of the moon there was another earth,
and that there another race of men live in a similar manner to that in which we
live on this earth. Therefore these lunatics have another moon, to hold forth
to them a light by night, as this does to us. And perhaps this globe of ours may
be a moon to another earth below this.(3) Seneca says that there was one among
the Stoics who used to deliberate whether he should assign to the sun also its
own inhabitants; he acted foolishly in doubting. For what injury would he have
inflicted if he had assigned them? But I believe the heat deterred him, so as
not to imperil so great a multitude; lest, if they should perish through
excessive heat, so great a calamity should be said to have happened by his fault.
CHAP. XXIV.--OF THE ANTIPODES, THE HEAVEN, AND THE STARS.
How is it with those who imagine that there are antipodes(4) opposite to
our footsteps? Do they say anything to the purpose? Or is there any one so
senseless as to believe that there are men whose footsteps are higher than their
heads? or that the things which with us are in a recumbent position, with them
hang in an inverted direction? that the crops and trees grow downwards? that the
rains, and snow, and hail fall upwards to the earth? And does any one wonder
that hanging gardens s are mentioned among the seven wonders of the world, when
philosophers make hanging fields, and seas, and cities, and mountains? The origin
of this error must also be set forth by us. For they are always deceived in
the same manner. For when they have assumed anything false in the commencement of
their investigations, led by the resemblance of the truth, they necessarily
fall into those things which are its consequences. Thus they fall into many
ridiculous things; because those things which are in agreement with false things,
must themselves be false. But since they placed confidence in the first, they do
not consider the character of those things which follow, but defend them in
every way; whereas they ought to judge from those which follow, whether the first
are true or false.
What course of argument, therefore, led them to the idea of the antipodes?
They saw the courses of the stars travelling towards the west; they saw that
the sun and the moon always set towards the same quarter, and rise from the
same. But since they did not perceive what contrivance regulated their courses, nor
how they returned from the west to the east, but supposed that the heaven
itself sloped downwards in every direction, which appearance it must present on
account of its immense breadth, they thought that the world is round like a ball,
and they fancied that the heaven revolves in accordance with the motion of the
heavenly bodies; and thus that the stars and sun, when they have set, by the
very rapidity of the motion of the world(6) are borne back to the east. Therefore
they both constructed brazen orbs, as though after the figure of the world,
and engraved upon them certain monstrous images, which they said were
constellations. It followed, therefore, from this rotundity of the heaven, that the earth
was enclosed in the midst of its curved surface. But if this were so, the earth
also itself must be like a globe; for that could not possibly be anything but
round, which was held enclosed by that which was round. But if the earth also
were round, it must necessarily happen that it should present the same
appearance to all parts of the heaven; that is. that it should raise aloft mountains,
extend plains, and have level seas. And if this were so, that last consequence
also followed, that there would be no part of the earth uninhabited by men and
the other animals. Thus the rotundity of the earth leads, in addition, to the
invention of those suspended antipodes.
But if you inquire from those who defend these marvellous fictions, why
all things do not fall into that lower part of the heaven, they reply that such
is the nature of things, that heavy bodies are borne to the middle, and that
they are all joined together towards the middle, as we see spokes in a wheel; but
that the bodies which are light, as mist, smoke, and fire, are borne away from
the middle, so as to seek the heaven. I am at a loss what to say respecting
those who, when they have once erred, consistently persevere in their folly, and
defend one vain thing by another; but that I sometimes imagine that they either
discuss philosophy for the sake of a jest, or purposely and knowingly
undertake to defend falsehoods, as if to exercise or display their talents on false
subjects. But I should be able to prove by many arguments that it is impossible
for the heaven to be lower than the earth, were is not that this book must now be
concluded, and that some things still remain, which are more necessary for
the present work. And since it is not the work of a single book to run over the
errors of each individually, let it be sufficient to have enumerated a few,
from which the nature of the others may be understood.
CHAP. XXV.--OF LEARNING PHILOSOPHY, AND WHAT GREAT QUALIFICATIONS ARE
NECESSARY FOR ITS PURSUIT.
We must now speak a few things concerning philosophy in general, that
having strengthened our cause we may conclude. That greatest imitator of Plato
among our writers thought that philosophy was not for the multitude, because none
but learned men could attain to it. "Philosophy," says Cicero,(1) "is contented
with a few judges, of its own accord designedly avoiding the multitude." It is
not therefore wisdom, if it avoids the concourse of men; since, if wisdom is
given to man, it is given to all without any distinction, so that there is no one
at all who cannot acquire it. But they so embrace virtue, which is given to
the human race, that they alone of all appear to wish to enjoy that which is a
public good; being as envious as if they should wish to bind or tear out the eyes
of others that they may not see the sun. For what else is it to deny wisdom to
men, than to take away from their minds the true and divine light? But if the
nature of man is capable of wisdom, it was befitting that both workmen, and
country people, and women, and all, in short, who bear the human form, should be
taught to he wise; and that the people should be brought together from every
language, and condition, and sex, and age. Therefore it is a very strong argument
that philosophy neither tends to wisdom, nor is of itself wisdom, that its
mystery is only made known by the beard and cloak of the philosophers.(2) The
Stoics, moreover, perceived this, who said that philosophy was to be studied both
by slaves and women; Epicurus also, who invites those who are altogether
unacquainted with letters to philosophy; and Plato also, who wished to compose a
state of wise men.
They attempted, indeed, to do that which truth required; but they were
unable to proceed beyond words. First, because instruction in many arts is
necessary for an application to philosophy. Common learning must be acquired on
account of practice in reading, because in so great a variety of subjects it is
impossible that all things should be learned by hearing, or retained in the memory.
No little attention also must be given to the grammarians, in order that you
may know the right method of speaking. That must occupy many years. Nor must
there be ignorance of rhetoric, that you may be able to utter and express the
things which you have learned. Geometry also, and music, and astronomy, are
necessary, because these arts have some connection with philosophy; and the whole of
these subjects cannot be learned by women, who must learn within the years of
their maturity the duties which are hereafter about to be of service to them for
domestic uses; nor by servants, who must live in service during those years
especially in which they are able to learn; nor by the poor, or labourers, or
rustics, who have to gain their daily support by labour. And on this account Tully
says that philosophy is averse from the multitude. But yet Epicurus will receive
the ignorant.(3) How, then, will they understand those things which are said
respecting the first principles of things, the perplexities and intricacies of
which are scarcely attained to by men of cultivated minds?
Therefore, in subjects which are involved in obscurity, and confused by a
variety of intellects, and set off by the studied language of eloquent men,
what place is there for the unskilful and ignorant? Lastly, they never taught any
women to study philosophy, except Themiste(4) only, within the whole memory of
man; nor slaves, except Phaedo(5) only, who is said, when living in oppressive
slavery, to have been ransomed and taught by Cebes. They also enumerate Plato
and Diogenes: these, however, were not slaves, though they had fallen into
servitude, for they had been taken captive. A certain Aniceris is said to have
ransomed Plato for eight sesterces. And on this account Seneca severely rebuked the
ransomer himself, because he set so small value upon Plato. He was a madman, as
it seems to me, who was angry with a man because he did not throw away much
money; doubtless he ought to have weighed gold as though to ransom the corpse of
Hector, or to have insisted upon the payment of more money than the seller
demanded. Moreover, they taught none of the barbarians, with the single exception
of Anacharsis the Scythian, who never would have dreamed of philosophy had he
not previously learned both language and literature.
CHAP. XXVI.--IT IS DIVINE INSTRUCTION ONLY WHICH BESTOWS WISDOM; AND OF WHAT
EFFICACY THE LAW OF GOD IS.
That, therefore, which they perceived to be justly required by the demands
of nature, but which they were themselves unable to perform, and saw that the
philosophers could not effect, is accomplished only by divine instruction; for
that only is wisdom. Doubtless they were able to persuade any one who do not
even persuade themselves of anything; or they will crush the desires, moderate
the anger, and restrain the lusts of any one, when they themselves both yield to
vices, and acknowledge that they are overpowered by nature. But what influence
is exerted on the souls of men by the precepts of God, because of their
simplicity and truth, is shown by daily proofs. Give me a man who is passionate,
scurrilous, and unrestrained; with a very few words of God,
"I will render him as gentle as a sheep."(1)
Give me one who is grasping, covetous, and tenacious; I will presently restore
him to you liberal, and freely bestowing his money with full hands. Give me a
man who is afraid of pain and death; he shall presently despise crosses, and
fires, and the bull of Phalaris.(2) Give me one who is lustful, an adulterer a
glutton; you shall presently see him sober, chaste, and temperate. Give me one
who is cruel and bloodthirsty: that fury shall presently be changed into true
clemency. Give me a man who is unjust, foolish, an evil-doer; forthwith he shall
be just, and wise, and innocent for by one laver(3) all his wickedness shall be
taken away. So great is the power of divine wisdom, that, when infused into
the breast of man, by one impulse it once for all expels folly, which is the
mother of faults, for the effecting of which there is no need of payment, or
books, or nightly studies. These results are accomplished gratuitously, easily, and
quickly, if only the ears are open and the breast thirsts for wisdom. Let no
one fear: we do not sell water, nor offer the sun for a reward. The fountain of
God, most abundant and most full, is open to all; and this heavenly light rises
for all,(4) as many as have eyes. Did any of the philosophers effect these
things, or is he able to effect them if he wishes? For though they spend their
lives in the study of philosophy, they are neither able to improve any other person
nor themselves (if nature has presented any obstacle). Therefore their wisdom,
doing its utmost, does not eradicate, but hide vices. But a few precepts of
God so entirely change the whole man, and having put off the old man, render him
new, that you would not recognise him as the same.
CHAP. XXVII.--HOW LITTLE THE PRECEPTS OF PHILOSOPHERS CONTRIBUTE TO TRUE
WISDOM. WHICH YOU WILL FIND IN RELIGION ONLY.
What, then? Do they enjoin nothing similar? Yes, indeed, many things; and
they frequently approach the truth. But those precepts have no weight, because
they are human, and are without a greater, that is, that divine authority. No
one therefore believes them, because the hearer imagines himself to be a man,
just as he is, who enjoins them. Moreover, there is no certainty with them,
nothing which proceeds from knowledge. But since all things are done by conjecture,
and many differing and various things are brought forward, it is the part of a
most foolish man to be willing to obey their precepts. since it is doubted
whether they are true or false; and therefore no one obeys them, because no one
wishes to labour for an uncertainty. The Stoics say that it is virtue which can
alone produce a happy life. Nothing can be said with greater truth. But what if
he shall be tormented, or afflicted with pain? Will it be possible for any one
to be happy in the hands of the executioners? But truly pain inflicted upon the
body is the material of virtue; therefore he is not wretched even in tortures.
Epicurus speaks much more strongly. The wise man, he says, is always happy; and
even when shut up in the bull of Phalaris he will utter this speech: "It is
pleasant, and I do not care for it." Who would not laugh at him? Especially,
because a man who is devoted to pleasure took upon himself the character of a man
of fortitude, and that to an immoderate degree; for it is impossible that any
one should esteem tortures of the body as pleasures, since it is sufficient for
discharging the office of virtue that one sustains and endures them. What do
you, Stoics, say? What do you, Epicurus? The wise man is happy even when be is
tortured. If it is on account of the glory of his endurance, he will not enjoy it,
for perchance he will die under the tortures. If it is on account of the
recollection of the deed, either he will not perceive it if souls shall perish, or,
if he shall perceive it, he will gain nothing from it.
What other advantage is there then in virtue? what happiness of life? Is
it that a man may die with equanimity? You present to me the advantage of a
single hour, or perhaps moment, for the sake of which it may not be expedient to be
worn out by miseries and labours throughout the whole of life. But how much
time does death occupy? on the arrival of which it now makes no difference
whether you shall have undergone it with equanimity or not. Thus it happens that
nothing is sought from virtue but glory. But this is either superfluous and
short-lived, or it will not follow from the depraved judgments of men. Therefore there
is no fruit from virtue where virtue is subject to death and decay. Therefore
they who said these things saw a certain shadow(1) of virtue: they did not see
virtue itself. For they had their eyes fixed on the earth, nor did they raise
their countenances on high that they might behold her
"Who showed herself from the quarters of heaven."(2)
This is the reason why no one obeys their precepts; inasmuch as they either
train men to vices, if they defend pleasure; or if they uphold virtue, they
neither threaten sin with any punishment, except that of disgrace only, nor do they
promise any reward to virtue, except that of honour and praise only, since they
say that virtue is to be sought for its own sake, and not on account of any
other object. The wise man therefore is happy under tortures; but when he suffers
torture on account of his faith, on account of justice, or on account of God,
that endurance of pain will render him most happy. For it is God alone who can
honour virtue, the reward of which is immortality alone. And they who do not
seek this, nor possess religion, with which eternal life is connected, assuredly
do not know the power of virtue, the reward of which they are ignorant; nor
look towards heaven, as they themselves imagine that they do, when they inquire
into subjects which do not admit of investigation, since there is no other cause
for looking towards heaven, unless it be either to undertake religion, or to
believe that one's soul is immortal. For if any one understands that God is to be
worshipped, or has the hope of immortality set before him, his mind(3) is in
heaven; and although he may not behold it with his eyes, yet he does behold it
with the eye of his soul. But they who do not take up religion are of the earth,
for religion is from heaven; and they who think that the soul perishes
together with the body, equally look down towards the earth: for beyond the body,
which is earth, they see nothing further, which is immortal. It is therefore of no
profit that man is so made, that with upright body he looks towards heaven,
unless with mind raised aloft he discerns God, and his thoughts are altogether
engaged upon the hope of everlasting life.
CHAP. XXVIII.--OF TRUE RELIGION AND OF NATURE. WHETHER FORTUNE IS A GODDESS,
AND OF PHILOSOPHY.
Wherefore there is nothing else in life on which our plan and condition
can depend but the knowledge of God who created us, and the religious and pious
worship of Him; and since the philosophers have wandered from this, it is plain
that they were not wise. They sought wis-dom, indeed; but because they did not
seek it in a right manner, they sunk down to a greater distance, and fell into
such great errors, that they did not even possess common wisdom. For they were
not only unwilling to maintain religion, but they even took it away; while, led
on by the appearance of false virtue, they endeavour to free the mind from all
fear: and this overturning of religion gains the name of nature. For they,
either being ignorant by whom the world was made, or wishing to persuade men that
nothing was completed by divine intelligence, said that nature was the mother
of all things, as though they should say that all things were produced of their
own accord: by which word they altogether confess their own ignorance. For
nature, apart from divine providence and power, is absolutely nothing. But if they
call God nature, what perverseness is it, to use the name of nature rather than
of God!(4) But if nature is the plan, or necessity, or condition of birth, it
is not by itself capable of sensation; but there must necessarily be a divine
mind, which by its foresight furnishes the beginning of their existence to all
things. Or if nature is heaven and earth. and everything which is created.
nature is not God, but the work of God.
By a similar error they believe in the existence of fortune, as a goddess
mocking the affairs of then with various casualties, because they know not from
what source things good and evil happen to them. They think that they are
brought together to do battle with her; nor do they assign any reason by whom and
on what account they are thus matched; but they only boast that they are every
moment carrying on a contest for life and death with fortune. Now, as many as
have consoled any persons on account of the death and removal of friends, have
censured the name of fortune with the most severe accusations; nor is there any
disputation of theirs on the subject of virtue, in which fortune is not
harassed. M. Tullius, in his Consolation, says that he has always fought against
fortune, and that she was always overpowered by him when he had valiantly beaten back
the attacks of his enemies; that he was not subdued by her even then, when he
was driven from his home and deprived of his country; but then, when he lost
his dearest daughter, he shamefully confesses that he is overcome by fortune. I
yield, he says, and raise my hand.(1) What is more wretched than this man, who
thus lies prostrate? He acts foolishly, he says; but it is one who professes
that he is wise. What, then, does the assumption of the name imply? What that
contempt of things which is laid claim to with magnificent words? What that dress,
so different from others? Or why do you give precepts of wisdom at all, if no
one has yet been found who is wise? And does any one bear ill-will to us because
we deny that philosophers are wise, when they themselves confess that they
neither have knowledge nor wisdom? For if at any time they have so failed that
they are not even able to feign anything, as their practice is in other cases,
then in truth they are reminded of their ignorance; and, as though in madness,
they spring up and exclaim that they are blind and foolish. Anaxagoras pronounces
that all things are overspread with darkness. Empedocles complains that the
paths of the senses are narrow, as though for his reflections he had need of a
chariot and four horses. Democritus says that the truth lies sunk in a well so
deep that it has no bottom; foolishly, indeed, as he says other things. For the
truth is not, as it were, sunk in a well to which it was permitted him to
descend, or even to fall, but, as it were, placed on the highest top of a lofty
mountain, or in heaven, which is most true. For what reason is there why he should
say that it is sunk below rather than that it is raised aloft? unless by chance
he preferred to place the mind also in the feet, or in the bottom of the heels,
rather than in the breast or in the head.
So widely removed were they from the truth itself, that even the posture
of their own body did not admonish them, that the truth must be sought for by
them in the highest place.(2) From this despair arose that confession of
Socrates, in which he said that he knew nothing but this one thing alone, that he knew
nothing. From this flowed the system of the Academy, if that is to be called a
system in which ignorance is both learnt and taught. But not even those who
claimed for themselves knowledge were able consistently to defend that very thing
which they thought that they knew. For since they were not in agreement(3) with
one another, through their ignorance of divine things they were so
inconsistent and uncertain, and often asserting things contrary to one another, that you
are unable to determine and decide what their meaning was. Why therefore should
you fight against those men who perish by their own sword? Why should you
labour to refute those whom their own speech refutes and presses?(4) Aristotle, says
Cicero, accusing the ancient philosophers, declares that they are either most
foolish or most vainglorious, since they thought that philosophy was perfected
by their talents; but that he saw, because a great addition had been made in a
few years, that philosophy would be complete in a short time. What, then, was
that time? In what manner, when, or by whom, was philosophy completed? For that
which he said, that they were most foolish in supposing that philosophy was
made perfect by their talents, is true; but he did not even himself speak with
sufficient discretion, who thought that it had either been begun by the ancients,
or increased by those who were more recent, or that it would shortly be brought
to perfection by those of later times. For that can never be investigated
which is not sought by its own way.
CHAP. XXIX.--OF FORTUNE AGAIN, AND VIRTUE.
But let us return to the subject which we laid aside. Fortune, therefore,
by itself, is nothing; nor must we so regard it as though it had any
perception, since fortune is the sudden and unexpected occurrence of accidents. But
philosophers, that they may not sometimes fail to err, wish to be wise in a foolish
matter; and say that she is not a goddess, as is generally believed, but a god.
Sometimes, however, they call this god nature, sometimes fortune, "because he
brings about," says the same Cicero, "many things unexpected by us, on account
of our want of intelligence and our ignorance of causes." Since, therefore,
they are ignorant of the causes on account of which anything is done, they must
also be ignorant of him who does them. The same writer, in a work of great
seriousness, in which he was giving to his son precepts of life drawn from
philosophy, says, "Who can be ignorant that the power of fortune is great on either side?
For both when we meet with a prosperous breeze from her we gain the issues
which we desire, and when she has breathed contrary to us we are dashed on the
rocks."(1) First of all, he who says that nothing can be known, spoke this as
though he himself and all men had knowledge. Then he who endeavours to render
doubtful even the things which are plain, thought that this was plain, which ought
to have been to him especially doubtful; for to a wise man it is altogether
false. Who, he says, knows not? I indeed know not. Let him teach me, if he can,
what that power is, what that breeze, and what the contrary breath. It is
disgraceful, therefore, for a man of talent to say that, which if you were to deny it,
he would be unable to prove. Lastly, he who says that the assent must be
withheld because it is the part of a foolish man rashly to assent to things which
are unknown to him, he, I say, altogether believed the opinions of the vulgar and
uninstructed, who think that it is fortune which gives to men good and evil
things. For they represent her image with the horn of plenty and with a rudder,
as though she both gave wealth and had the government of human affairs. And to
this opinion Virgil(2) assented, who calls fortune omnipotent; and the
historian(3) who says, But assuredly fortune bears sway in everything. What place, then,
remains for the other gods? Why is she not said to reign by herself, if she
has more power than others; or why is she not alone worshipped, if she has power
in all things? Or if she inflicts evils only, let them bring forward some cause
why, if she is a goddess, she envies men, and desires their destruction,
though she is religiously worshipped by them; why she is more favourable to the
wicked and more unfavourable to the good; why she plots, afflicts, deceives,
exterminates; who appointed her as the perpetual harasser of the race of men; why, in
short, she has obtained so mischievous a power, that she renders all things
illustrious or obscure according to her caprice rather than in accordance with
the truth. Philosophers, I say, ought rather to have inquired into these things,
than rashly to have accused fortune, who is innocent: for although she has some
existence, yet no reason can be brought forward by them why she should be as
hostile to men as she is supposed to be. Therefore all those speeches in which
they rail at the injustice of fortune, and in opposition to fortune arrogantly
boast of their own virtues, are nothing else but the ravings of thoughtless
levity.
Wherefore let them not envy us, to whom God has revealed the truth: who,
as we know that fortune is nothing, so also know that there is a wicked and
crafty spirit who is unfriendly to the good, and the enemy of righteousness, who
acts in opposition to God; the cause of whose enmity we have explained in the
second book.(4) He therefore lays plots against all; but those who are ignorant of
God he hinders by error, he overwhelms with folly, he overspreads with
darkness, that no one may be able to attain to the knowledge of the divine name, in
which alone are contained both wisdom and everlasting life. Those, on the other
hand, who know God, he assails with wiles and craft, that he may ensnare them
with desire and lust, and when they are corrupted by the blandishments of sin,
may impel them to death; or, if he shall have not succeeded by stratagem, he
attempts to cast them down by force and violence. For on this account he was not
at once thrust down by God to punishment at the original transgression, that
by his malice he may exercise man to virtue: for unless this is in constant
agitation, unless it is strengthened by continual harassing, it cannot be perfect,
inasmuch as virtue is dauntless and unconquered patience in enduring evils.
From which it comes to pass that there is no virtue if an adversary is wanting.
When, therefore, they perceived the force of this perverse power opposed to
virtue, and were ignorant of its name, they invented for themselves the senseless
name of fortune; and how far this is removed from wisdom, Juvenal declares in
these verses:(5)--
"No divine power is absent if there is prudence; but we make you a
goddess, O Fortune, and place you in heaven."
It was folly, therefore, and error, and blindness, and, as Cicero says,(6)
ignorance of facts and causes, which introduced the names of Nature and Fortune.
But as they are ignorant of their adversary, so also they do not indeed know
virtue the knowledge of which is derived from the idea of an adversary. And if
this is joined with wisdom, or, as they say, is itself also wisdom, they must be
ignorant in what subjects it is contained. For no one can possibly be furnished
with true arms if he is ignorant of the enemy against whom he must be armed;
nor can he overcome his adversary, who in fighting does not attack his real
enemy, but a shadow. For he will be overthrown, who, having his attention fixed on
another object, shall not previously have foreseen or guarded against the blow
aimed at his vitals.
CHAP. XXX.--THE CONCLUSION OF THE THINGS BEFORE SPOKEN; AND BY WHAT MEANS WE
MUST PASS FROM THE VANITY OF THE PHILOSOPHERS TO TRUE WISDOM, AND THE KNOWLEDGE
OF THE TRUE GOD, IN WHICH ALONE ARE VIRTUE AND HAPPINESS.
I have taught, as far as my humble talents permitted, that the
philosophers held a course widely deviating from the truth. I perceive, however, how many
things I have omitted, because it was not my province to enter into a
disputation against philosophers. But it was necessary for me to make a digression to
this subject, that I might show that so many and great intellects have expended
themselves in vain on false subjects, lest any one by chance being shut out by
corrupt superstitions, should wish to betake himself to them as though about to
find some certainty. Therefore the only hope, the only safety for man, is
placed in this doctrine, which we defend. All the wisdom of man consists in this
alone, the knowledge and worship of God: this is our tenet, this our opinion.
Therefore with all the power of my voice I testify, I proclaim. I declare: Here,
here is that which all philosophers have sought throughout their whole life; and
yet, they have not been able to investigate, to grasp, and to attain to it,
because they either retained a religion which was corrupt, or took it away
altogether. Let them therefore all depart, who do not instruct human life, but throw
it into confusion. For what do they teach? or whom do they instruct, who have
not yet instructed themselves? whom are the sick able to heal, whom can the
blind guide? Let us all, therefore, who have any regard for wisdom, betake
ourselves to this subject. Or shall we wait until Socrates knows something? or
Anaxagoras finds light in the darkness? or until Democritus draws forth truth from the
well? or Empedocles extends the paths of his soul? or until Arcesilas and
Carneades see, and feel, and perceive?
Lo, a voice from heaven teaching the truth, and displaying to us a light
brighter than the sun itself.(1) Why are we unjust to ourselves, and delay to
take up wisdom, which learned men, though they wasted their lives in its pursuit,
were never able to discover. Let him who wishes to be wise and happy hear the
voice of God, learn righteousness, understand the mystery of his birth, despise
human affairs, embrace divine things, that he may gain that chief good to
which he was born. Having overthrown all false religions, and having refuted all
the arguments, as many as it was customary or possible to bring forward in their
defence; then, having proved the systems of philosophy to be false, we must now
come to true religion and wisdom, since, as I shall teach, they are both
connected together; that we may maintain it either by arguments, or by examples, or
by competent witnesses, and may show that the folly with which those
worshippers of gods do not cease to upbraid us, has no existence with us, but lies
altogether with them. And although, in the former books, when I was contending
against false religions, and in this, when I was overthrowing false wisdom, I showed
where the truth is, yet the next book will more plainly indicate what is true
religion and what true wisdom.