After Plato’s death, the Academy continued to exist for many centuries under various heads. When Plato’s nephew, Speusippus (died c. 338 bce), was elected as his successor, Plato’s greatest disciple, Aristotle (384–322 bce), left for Assus, a Greek city-state in Anatolia, and then went to the island of Lesbos. But soon thereafter he was called to the Macedonian court at Pella to become the educator of the crown prince, who later became Alexander the Great (356–323 bce). After Alexander became king, Aristotle returned to Athens and opened there a school of his own, the Lyceum, whose members were known as Peripatetics.
Philosophy
Aristotle became a member of the Academy at the age of 17, in the year 367 bce, when the school was under the acting chairmanship of Eudoxus of Cnidus (c. 395–c. 342 bce), a great mathematician and geographer (Plato was away in Sicily at the time). It is a controversial question as to how far Aristotle, during the 20 years of his membership in the Academy, developed a philosophy of his own differing from that of his master. But two things can be considered as certain: (1) that he soon raised certain objections to Plato’s theory of Forms, for one of the objections attributed to him is discussed in Plato’s dialogue Parmenides, which Plato must have written soon after his return from Sicily, and (2) that it was during his membership in the Academy that Aristotle began and elaborated his theoretical and formal analysis of the arguments used in various Socratic discussions—an enterprise that, when completed, resulted in the corpus of his works on logic. Aristotle rightly claimed to have invented this discipline; indeed, until rather recent times it was said that he completed it in such a way that hardly anything could be added.
Certainly quite some time before his return to Athens to open a school of his own, Aristotle declared that it is not necessary to assume the existence of a separate realm of transcendent Forms, of which the individual things that human beings perceive with their senses are but imperfect copies; that the world of perceived things is the real world; and that, in order to build up a system of knowledge about certain types or groups of things, it is necessary merely to be able to say that something is generally true of them. Thus, it would be wrong to say that, having abandoned the theory of Forms, Aristotle was left with a completely contingent world. The last chapters of his Posterior Analytics show, on the contrary, that he merely replaced Plato’s transcendent Forms with something (katholou) corresponding to them that the human mind can grasp in individual things.
Aristotle retained another important element of the theory of Forms in his teleology, or doctrine of purposiveness. According to Plato, individual things are imperfect copies of perfect Forms. Aristotle pointed out, however, that all living beings develop from an imperfect state (from the seed, the semen, through the germinating plant, or embryo, to the child and young adult) to the more perfect state of the fully developed plant or the full-grown mature animal or human—after which they again decay and finally die, having reproduced. But not all individuals reach the same degree of relative perfection. Many of them die before reaching it; others are retarded or crippled or maimed in various ways in the process. It is, therefore, of the utmost importance for human beings to find out what the best conditions are for reaching the most perfect state possible. This is what the gardener tries to do for the plants; but it is even more important for humankind to do in regard to itself. The first question, then, is what kind of perfection a human being, as human, can reach. In answering this question, Aristotle observed that human beings, as social animals par excellence, can reach as individuals only some of the perfections possible for humans as such. Cats are more or less all alike in their functions; thus each can fend for itself. With bees and termites, however, it is different. They are by nature divided into worker bees, drones, and queen bees, or worker termites, soldier termites, and queens. With human beings the differentiation of functions is much more subtle and varied. People can lead satisfactory lives only on the basis of a division of labour and distribution of functions. Some individuals are born with very great talents and inclinations for special kinds of activity. They will be happy and will make their best possible contribution to the life of the community only if they are permitted to follow this inclination. Others are less one-sidedly gifted and more easily adaptable to a variety of functions. These people can be happy shifting from one activity to another. This fact represents an enormous advantage the human species has over all other animals, because it enables it to adapt to all sorts of circumstances. But the advantage is paid for by the fact that no human individual is able to develop all of the perfections that are possible for the species as a whole.
There is another possible and, in its consequences, real disadvantage to such adaptability: the other animals, tightly confined to the limits set by nature, are crippled almost exclusively by external factors, but humans, in consequence of the freedom of choice granted to them through the variety of their gifts, can and very often do cripple and harm themselves. All human activities are directed toward the end of a good and satisfactory life. But there are many subordinate aims that are sensible ends only as far as they serve a superior end. There is, for example, no sense in producing or acquiring more shoes than can possibly be worn. This is self-evident. With regard to money, however, which has become exchangeable against everything, the illusion arises that it is good to accumulate it without limit. By doing so, humans harm both the community and themselves because, by concentrating on such a narrow aim, they deprive their souls and spirits of larger and more rewarding experiences. Similarly, an individual especially gifted for large-scale planning needs power to give orders to those capable of executing his plans. Used for such purposes, power is good. But coveted for its own sake, it becomes oppressive to those subdued by it and harmful to the oppressor because he thus incurs the hatred of the oppressed. Because of their imperfections, humans are not able to engage in serious and fruitful activities without interruption. They need relaxation and play, or amusement. Because the necessities of life frequently force them to work beyond the limit within which working is pleasant, the illusion arises that a life of constant amusement would be the most pleasant and joyful. In reality nothing would be more tedious.
Aristotle’s teleology seems to be based entirely on empirical observation. It has nothing to do with a belief in divine providence and is not, as some modern critics believe, at variance with the law of causality. It forms the foundation, however, of Aristotle’s ethics and political theory. Aristotle was an avid collector of empirical evidence. He induced his students, for instance, to study the laws and political institutions of all known cities and nations in order to find out how they worked and at what points their initiators had been mistaken regarding the way in which they would work. In later times, Aristotle came to be considered (and by many is still considered) a dogmatic philosopher because the results of his inquiries were accepted as absolutely authoritative. In reality, however, he was one of the greatest empiricists of all times.
Disciples and commentators
After Aristotle’s death his immediate disciples carried on the same kind of work, especially in the historical field: Theophrastus wrote a history of philosophy and works on botany and mineralogy, Eudemus of Rhodes (flourished before 300 bce) wrote histories of mathematics and astronomy, Meno wrote a history of medicine, and Dicaearchus of Messene (flourished c. 320 bce) wrote a history of civilization and a book on types of political constitutions. The next two generations of Peripatetics spread out in two directions: literary history, in the form of histories of poetry, epic, tragedy, and comedy, as well as biographies of famous writers, and physical science. Straton of Lampsacus (died c. 270 bce) created a new kind of physics based on experiments, and the great astronomer Aristarchus of Samos (c. 310–230 bce) invented the heliocentric system. The school then went for some time into eclipse until, in the 1st century ce, after the rediscovery of Aristotle’s lecture manuscripts, there arose a great school of commentators on his works, which had an enormous influence on medieval philosophy.
Hellenistic and Roman philosophy
The period after the death of Aristotle was characterized by the decay of the Greek city-states, which then became pawns in the power game of the Hellenistic kings who succeeded Alexander. Life became troubled and insecure. It was in this environment that two dogmatic philosophical systems came into being, Stoicism and Epicureanism, which promised to give their adherents something to hold onto and to make them independent of the external world.
Stoicism
The Stoic system was created by Zeno of Citium (c. 335–c. 263 bce), who went to Athens as a merchant. He stayed at Athens, heard the lectures of various philosophers, and—after he had elaborated his own philosophy—began to teach in a public hall, the Stoa Poikile (hence the name Stoicism).
Zeno’s thought comprised, essentially, a dogmatized Socratic philosophy, with added ingredients derived from Heracleitus (c. 540–c. 480 bce). The basis of human happiness, he said, is to live “in agreement” with oneself, a statement that was later replaced by the formula “to live in agreement with nature.” The only real good for a human being is the possession of virtue; everything else—wealth or poverty, health or illness, life or death—is completely indifferent. All virtues are based exclusively on right knowledge, self-control (sōphrosynē) being the knowledge of the right choice, fortitude the knowledge of what must be endured and what must not, and justice the right knowledge “in distribution.” The passions, which are the cause of all evil, are the result of error in judging what is a real good and what is not. Because it is difficult to see, however, why murder, fraud, and theft should be considered evil if life and possessions are of no value, the doctrine was later modified to distinguish between “preferable things,” such as having the necessities of life and health, “completely indifferent things,” and “anti-preferable things,” such as lacking the necessities of life or health—while insisting still that the happiness of the truly wise person could not be impaired by illness, pain, hunger, or any deprivation of external goods. In the beginning, Zeno also insisted that an individual is either completely wise, in which case he would never do anything wrong and would be completely happy, or he is a fool. Later he made the concession, however, that there are people who are not completely wise but who are progressing toward wisdom. Although these people might even have true insight, they are not certain that they have it, whereas the truly wise person is also certain of having true insight. The world is governed by divine logos—a word originally meaning “word” or “speech,” then (with Heracleitus) a speech that expresses the laws of the universe, then (finally) “reason.” This logos keeps the world in perfect order. Human beings can deviate from or rebel against this order, but, by doing so, they cannot disturb it but can only do harm to themselves.
Zeno’s philosophy was further developed by Cleanthes (c. 331–c. 232 bce), the second head of the school, and by Chrysippus (c. 280–c. 206 bce), its third head. Chrysippus elaborated a new kind of logic, which did not receive much attention outside the Stoic school until recent times; this “propositional logic” has been hailed by some logicians as superior to the “conceptual logic” of Aristotle. Panaetius of Rhodes (c. 180–109 bce) adapted Stoic philosophy to the needs of the Roman aristocracy, whose members then governed the Western world, and made a great impression on some of the leading figures of the time, who tried to follow his moral precepts. In the following century, a time of civil war, slave rebellions, and the decay of the Roman Republic, Poseidonius of Apamea (c. 135–c. 51 bce), who was also one of the most brilliant historians of all times, taught that the Stoic takes a position above the rest of humankind, looking down on its struggles as on a spectacle. In the period of the consolidation of the empire, Stoicism became the religion of the republican opposition. The most famous Stoic was the younger Cato (95–46 bce), who committed suicide after the victory of Julius Caesar (c. 100–44 bce). It was also the guiding philosophy of Seneca the Younger (c. 4 bce–65 ce), the educator and (for a long time) the adviser of the emperor Nero (37–68), who tried to keep Nero on the path of virtue but failed and finally was forced to commit suicide on Nero’s orders. Despite the oddities of Zeno’s original doctrine, Stoicism gave consolation, composure, and fortitude in times of trouble to many proud individuals to the end of antiquity and beyond.