Diogenes

Greek philosopher
born Sinope, Paphlygonia
died c. 320 bc, probably at Corinth, Greece
Main
archetype of the Cynics, a Greek philosophical sect that
stressed stoic self-sufficiency and the rejection of luxury.
He is credited by some with originating the Cynic way of
life, but he himself acknowledges an indebtedness to
Antisthenes, by whose numerous writings he was probably
influenced. It was by personal example rather than any
coherent system of thought that Diogenes conveyed the Cynic
philosophy. His followers positioned themselves as watchdogs
of morality.
Diogenes is the subject of numerous apocryphal stories,
one of which depicts his behaviour upon being sold into
slavery. He declared that his trade was that of governing
men and was appointed tutor to his master’s sons. Tradition
ascribes to him the famous search for an honest man
conducted in broad daylight with a lighted lantern. Almost
certainly forced into exile from Sinope with his father, he
had probably already adopted his life of asceticism (Greek
askesis, “training”) when he reached Athens. Referred to by
Aristotle as a familiar figure there, Diogenes began
practicing extreme anti-conventionalism. He made it his
mission to “deface the currency,” perhaps meaning “to put
false coin out of circulation.” That is, he sought to expose
the falsity of most conventional standards and beliefs and
to call men back to a simple, natural life.
For Diogenes the simple life meant not only disregard of
luxury but also disregard of laws and customs of organized,
and therefore “conventional,” communities. The family was
viewed as an unnatural institution to be replaced by a
natural state in which men and women would be promiscuous
and children would be the common concern of all. Though
Diogenes himself lived in poverty, slept in public
buildings, and begged his food, he did not insist that all
men should live in the same way but merely intended to show
that happiness and independence were possible even under
reduced circumstances.
The program for life advocated by Diogenes began with
self-sufficiency, or the ability to possess within oneself
all that one needs for happiness. A second principle,
“shamelessness,” signified the necessary disregard for those
conventions holding that actions harmless in themselves may
not be performed in every situation. To these Diogenes added
“outspokenness,” an uncompromising zeal for exposing vice
and conceit and stirring men to reform. Finally, moral
excellence is to be obtained by methodical training, or
asceticism.
Among Diogenes’ lost writings are dialogues, plays, and
the Republic, which described an anarchist utopia in which
men lived “natural” lives.