Quotulatiousness

July 10, 2018

QotD: Epicurean philosophy

Filed under: Greece, History, Quotations — Tags: , , , — Nicholas @ 01:00

Epicurus was born in 341 B.C., only six years after Plato’s death. He was 18 when Alexander the Great died. This event conventionally separates the classical Greece of independent city-states from the Hellenistic period, when Alexander’s generals and their dynasties ruled vast kingdoms in the former Persian Empire. He set up his school in a Garden in the outskirt of Athens. There is very little that survived from his many books. But fortunately, the work of his Roman disciple Lucretius, who lived in the first century B.C., De Rerum Natura, or On the Nature of Things, was rediscovered in the 15th century.

Through this work, Epicureanism had a major influence on the development of science in the following centuries. Epicurus had borrowed and refined the atomic hypothesis of earlier philosophers, and De Rerum Natura was studied and discussed by most scientists and philosophers of the West. The physics of Epicureanism, which explains that worlds spontaneously emerge from the interaction of millions of tiny particles, still looks amazingly modern. It is the only scientific view coming out of the Ancient World that one can still read today and find relevant.

Those influenced by Epicureanism include Hobbes, Mandeville, Hume, Locke, Smith, and many of the British moralists up to the 19th century. They not only discussed the Atomic theory, but Epicurean ethics, his views on the origin of society, on religion, his evolutionary account of life, and other aspects of his philosophy.

To me, Epicureanism is the closest thing to a libertarian philosophy that you can find in Antiquity. Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, were all statists to various degrees, glorified political involvement, and devised political programs for their audiences of rich and well-connected aristocrats. Epicurus focused on the individual search for happiness, counselled not to get involved in politics because of the personal trouble it brings, and thought that politics was irrelevant. His school included women and slaves. He had no political program to offer and one can find no concept of collective virtues or order or justice in his teachings. On the contrary, the search for happiness implied that individuals should be as free as possible to plan their lives. To him, as one of his sayings goes “natural justice is a pledge guaranteeing mutual advantage, to prevent one from harming others and to keep oneself from being harmed.”

Martin Masse, “The Epicurean roots of some classical liberal and Misesian concepts“, speaking at the Austrian Scholars Conference, Auburn Alabama, 2005-03-18.

2 Comments

  1. Great to see one of the very few mentions of Epicurean Philosophy as a forerunner to Libertarian thought. There is a great deal to learn from Epicurus, despite his being almost completely ignored or distorted. Were you looking for this information or did you more or less stumble across it?

    Comment by Eric Reynolds — July 10, 2018 @ 10:24

  2. That piece was linked from a much longer discussion of Epicurus and his work by Dr. Sean Gabb – https://www.seangabb.co.uk/epicurus-father-of-the-enlightenment-2007-by-sean-gabb/.

    I didn’t know much about Epicurus, and Dr. Gabb’s article was very informative. I’ve used several chunks from that as QotD entries, with a few more to go.

    Comment by Nicholas — July 10, 2018 @ 18:52

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