Epicurus

Greek philosopher
born 341 bc, Samos, Greece
died 270, Athens
Main
Greek philosopher, author of an ethical philosophy of simple
pleasure, friendship, and retirement. He founded schools of
philosophy that survived directly from the 4th century bc
until the 4th century ad.
Early life and training
Epicurus was born on the island of Samos of Athenian parents
who had gone there as military settlers. His father, a
schoolteacher, was named Neocles, his mother Chairestrate;
both were of the same village, the deme Gargettos. According
to his own report, Epicurus began his study of philosophy at
the age of 14. One account has him turning to philosophy
when his schoolmaster could not explain the concept of chaos
in Hesiod, an early Greek philosophical poet. His first
master is said to have been the Platonist Pamphilus of Samos.
Much more significant, however, is the report that Epicurus
was for three years (327–324) a student in the Ionian city
of Teos, where his teacher was Nausiphanes, a disciple of
the naturalistic philosopher Democritus. It may have been
from this source that Epicurus’ atomistic theory came, which
he used not as a means of studying physics but as the basis
for a philosophical system that ultimately sought ethical
ends.
At the age of 18, Epicurus went to Athens to perform the
two years of military training required for Athenian
citizenship. While there he may have heard Xenocrates,
second in succession after Plato as head of his Academy, and
Aristotle, who was then in Athens. One year later Epicurus
rejoined his parents at Colophon, where they had gone as
exiles when, at the close of the Lamian War, Athens lost
Samos to the Macedonians. For the next 10 years, there is
virtually no record. It seems probable that Epicurus
travelled and studied, and it is reasonable to suppose that
this was the period during which he developed his
philosophical outlook and confirmed it in exchanges with the
Platonists and Aristotelians. A letter written by him from
Teos, addressed to his mother, was preserved by Diogenes of
Oenoanda. At the age of 32, Epicurus began to teach, first
at Mytilene and subsequently at Lampsacus, a period that
lasted from 311/310 to 307/306.
In various places Epicurus met the disciples who were
destined to follow him to Athens and to become of great
significance as vehicles through whom the Epicurean school
would achieve its mature development: at Mytilene, he met
his first disciple, Hermarchus, who eventually succeeded him
as head of the Athenian school; and at Lampsacus, he met
Metrodorus and Polyaenus, whose death preceded the master’s
and whose sons Epicurus provided for in his will; Metrodorus’
brother, Timocrates; Leonteus and his wife, Themista, who
had been a hetaira (an independent courtesan); Colotes, whom
Epicurus flattered with the pet name Colotarion; and
Idomeneus and his wife, Batis, sister of Metrodorus.
Thus, apart from his two years in Athens, Epicurus spent
the first 35 years of his life in Asia. This need not mean,
however, that he developed an aversion to the literary
circles in Athens. Instead, his Asiatic ties, which he
continued to cultivate intensely all his life (including two
or three actual journeys to Asia Minor) seem to have been
reflected mainly in his choice of words and style and, more
significantly, in the ecumenical scope of his philosophy.
The schools at Athens and elsewhere
When Epicurus and his followers came to Athens in 306, he
bought a house and, in the garden, established a school,
which came to be known as Ho Kepos (The Garden). At this
time in Athens, cultural life was dominated by the Academy
of Plato and the Lyceum of Aristotle, both of which had
passed into the hands of successors. These schools attracted
both the best theoretical students and those concerned with
the application of philosophy to politics and public life.
Therefore, any school that hoped to endure through this
period had to enter into direct rivalry with the Academy and
the Lyceum by establishing itself—as did the Stoa a few
years later—in the city of Athens.
What Epicurus brought to Athens was more a way of life
than a school or a community. Unlike both of the famous
schools, it admitted women, and even one of Epicurus’
slaves, named Mouse. It taught the avoidance of political
activity and of public life, although, when one follower
from a school outside Athens rose to political power and
then fell, he was succoured by the school. Quite different
from the usual connotations borne by the term epicurean
today, life in the house and garden was simple. Water was
the usual drink, although a half-pint daily ration of wine
was allowed, and barley bread was eaten. During a famine
Epicurus saved his students by doling out a few numbered
beans daily. There was no communal property, as was the case
in Pythagorean schools. Whereas the relationships of the
members of the school were not platonic, in either the
contemporary or any later sense, there are only the attacks
of Stoic opponents to support any idea of sexual
irregularity. Epicurus wrote clearly but in no highly
organized way. There was much correspondence with students
in Athens and at other schools, some letters being concerned
with doctrinal matters but many seeming to be merely social
and friendly.
On the day in his 72nd year that Epicurus died painfully
of prostatitis, he dictated an affectionate and touching
letter to Idomeneus—probably intended, in fact, for all of
his friends in Lampsacus—which displayed the spirit in which
he had remained true to his philosophy of repose and
serenity even in the throes of pain. Epicurus’ will left the
house, garden, and some funds to trustees of the school.
Remaining funds were left to honour Epicurus’ deceased
family and to celebrate his birthday annually and his memory
monthly. His slaves were freed, and provision was made that
the daughter of Metrodorus should be wed to someone in the
Athenian school, with the approval of Hermarchus.
Writings and assessment
Diogenes Laërtius described Epicurus as a most prolific
writer and preserved three of his letters and the Kyriai
doxiai (“Principal Doctrines”). The three letters are (1) To
Herodotus, dealing with physics; (2) To Pythocles (probably
a disciple’s abridgement), on meteorology; and (3) To
Menoeceus, on ethics and theology. The Kyriai consists of 40
short aphoristic statements. Another major source is the
papyri from the Casa dei Papiri discovered at Herculaneum
(1752–54), which include not only parts of his great work
Peri physeōs (“On Nature”), originally in 37 books, but also
numerous fragments of correspondence with his friends.
Many of Epicurus’ methods made him comparable to a
religious figure. The breadth of his appeal in Rome during
the 1st century bc is indicated by the fact that the
poet-philosopher Lucretius based his work on Epicurus (Lucretius
in fact held Epicurus in reverential awe), by the references
to his thought by the statesman-moralist Cicero, and by the
detailing by the biographer Plutarch of how Cassius soothed
the mind of Brutus with his Epicurean ideas. Epicurus’
atomistic theory was revived in the 17th century by Pierre
Gassendi, a French philosopher-scientist.
Carlo Diano