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CYNICS

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 692 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CYNICS  , a small but influential school of

ancient philosophers . Their name is variously derived from the
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building in Athens called Cynosarges, the earliest home of the school, and from the Greek word for a
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dog (KUwv), in contemptuous allusion to the uncouth and aggressive manners adopted by the members of the. school . Whichever of these; explanations is correct', it is noticeable that the Cynics agreed in taking a dog as their
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common badge or symbol (see
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DIOGENES) . From a popular conception of the intellectual characteristics of the. school comes the
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modern sense of " cynic," implying a sneering dispositionto disbelieve in the goodness of human motives and a contemptuous feeling of superiority . As regards the members of the school, the
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separate articles On ANTISTHENES,
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CRATES,DIOGENES and
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DEMETRIUS contain all
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biographical information .. We. are here concerned only to examine the general principles of the school in its
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internal and
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external relations as forming a definite philosophic unit . The importance of these principles lies not only in their intrinsic value as an ethical
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system, but also in the fact that they form the
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link between
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Socrates and the
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Stoics, between the essentially Greek philosophy of the 4th century n.c. and a system of thought which has exercised a profound and far-reaching influence on
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medieval and modern ethics . From the time of Socrates in unbroken succession up to the reign of Hadrian, the school was represented by men of strong individuality . The leading earlier Cynics were Antisthenes, Diogenes of
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Sinope, Crates of Thebes, and
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Zeno; in the later
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Roman period, the chief names are Demetrius (the friend of .
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Seneca),
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Oenomaus and Demonax . All these men adhered steadfastly to the principles laid down by Antisthenes . Antisthenes was a pupil of Socrates, from whom he imbibed the fundamental ethical precept that virtue, not pleasure, is the end of existence .

He was, therefore, in the forefront of that intellectual revolution in the course of which

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speculation ceased to move in the realms of the
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physical' and focused itself upon human reason in its application to the
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practical conduct of
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life . " Virtue," says Socrates, " is knowledge ": in the ultimate harmony of morality with reason is to be found the only true existence of, man . Antisthenes adopted this principle in its most literal sense, and proceeded to explain " knowledge " in the narrowest terms of practical
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action and decision, excluding from the conception everything except the problem of individual will realizing itself in the sphere of ordinary existence . Just as in logic the inevitable result was the purest nominalism, so in ethics he was driven to individualism, to the denial of social and
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national relations, to the exclusion of scientific study and of almost all that the Greeks understood by
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education . This individualism he and his followers carried to its logical conclusion . The ordinary pleasures of life were for them not merely negligible but positively harmful inasmuch as they interrupted the operation of the will .
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Wealth, popularity and power tend to dethrone the authority of reason and to pervert the soul from the natural to the artificial . Man exists for and in himself alone; his highest end is self-knowledge and self-realization in conformity with the dictates of his reason, apart altogether from the state and society . For this end, disrepute and poverty are advantageous, in so far as they drive back the man upon himself, increasing his self-control and purifying his intellect from the dross of the external . The good man (i.e. the wise man) wants nothing: like the gods, he is avrapKis (self -sufficing); " let men gain wisdom—or buy a rope "; he is a citizen of the
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world, not of a particular country (cf . Diogenes Laertius vi . 11 /thinly re 400 IrOuTEtay EtvaL rip, iv KOcr).ty) .

It is not surprising that the pioneers of such a system were criticized and ridiculed by their

fellows, and this by no means unjustly . We learn that Diogenes and Crates sought to force their principles upon their fellows in an obtrusive, tactless manner . The very essence of their philosophy was the negation of the graces of social courtesy; it was impossible to " return to nature " in the midst of a society clothed in the accumulated artificiality of evolved convention without shocking the ingrained sensibilities of its members . Nor is it unjust to infer that the sense of opposition provoked some of the Cynics to an overweening display of superiority . At the same time, it is absurd to regard the eccentricities of a few as the characteristics of the school, still more as a condemnation of the views which they held . In logic Antisthenes was troubled by the problem of the One and the Many . A nominalist to the core, he held that definition and predication are either false or tautological . Ideas do not exist save for the consciousness which thinks them . " A horse," said Antisthenes, " I can see, but horsehood I cannot see." Definition is merely a circuitous method of stating an identity: " a tree is a
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vegetable growth " is logically no more than " a tree is a tree." Cynicism appears to have had a considerable vogue in Rome in the 1st and 2nd centuries A.D . Demetrius (q.v.) and Demonax are highly eulogized by Seneca and Lucian respectively . It is probable that these later Cynics adapted themselves somewhat to the times in which they lived and avoided the crude extravagance of Diogenes and others . But they undoubtedly maintained the spirit of Antisthenes unimpaired and held an honourable place in Roman thought .

This very popularity had the effect of attracting into their ranks charlatans of the worst type . So that in Rome also Cynicism was partly the

butt of the satirist and partly the ideal of the thinker . Disregarding all the accidental excrescences of the
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doctrine, Cynicism must be regarded as a most valuable development and as a real asset in the sum of ethical speculation . With all its defective psychology, its barren logic, its immature technique, it emphasized two
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great and necessary truths, firstly, the absolute responsibility of the individual as the moral unit, and, secondly, the autocracy of the will . These two principles are sufficient ground for our gratitude to these " athletes of righteousness " (as Epictetus calls them) . Furthermore they are profoundly 1 See IONIAN SCHOOL OF PHILOSOPHY . important as the precursors of Stoicism . The closeness of the connexion is illustrated by Juvenal's
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epigram that a Cynic differed from a Stoic only by his cloak . Zeno was a pupil of Crates, from whom he learned the moral worth of self-control and indifference to sensual indulgence (see STOICS) . Finally it is necessary to point out two flaws in the Cynic philosophy . In the first place, the content of the word "know-ledge " is never properly
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developed . " Virtue is knowledge "; knowledge of what? and how is that knowledge related to the will ?

These questions were never properly answered by them . Secondly they

fell into the natural error of emphasizing the purely animal side of the " nature," which was their ethical criterion . Avoiding the artificial restraints of
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civilization, they were prone to fall back into animalism pure and
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simple . Many of them upheld the principle of community of wives (see Diogenes Laertius vi . 11); some of them are said to have outraged the dictates of public decency . It was
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left to the Stoics to separate the wheat from the chaff, and to assign to the words "knowledge" and " nature " a saner and more comprehensive meaning .

End of Article: CYNICS
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