Hellenistic Philosophy Introductory

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

234 //-100 to //-101


Cicero On Goals 5.16-21 [11-100]



  1. Since there is so much disagreement about this [the goal of life]
    we should employ the division of Carneades, which our friend Antioch us
    is so fond of using. Carneades discerned not only all the views which
    philosophers had yet held about the highest good, but also all the views
    which are possible. So he claimed that no craft took its starting point
    from itself, since there is always something external which is the object
    of the craft. We need not prolong this point with examples; for it is
    obvious that no craft is concerned with itself, but the craft is distinct
    from its object. So just as medicine is the craft of health and helmsmanship
    is the craft of navigation, in the same way prudence is the craft of
    living; therefore it too must be constituted by and take its principle from
    something else. 17. It is a matter of general agreement that the concern
    of prudence and its goal must be what is adapted and accommodated to
    nature and such as to stimulate and stir up, all by itself, an impulse in
    the mind (which the Greeks call horme). But there is no agreement about
    what it is which thus moves us and which nature seeks from the moment
    of birth-and that is the source of all the disagreement among philoso-
    phers when they are considering what the highest good is. For the source
    of the entire debate about the limits of good and bad, when they investigate
    the extreme limits of each, is to be found in the primary natural affiliations;
    and when that is found, the whole debate about the highest good and
    [worst] bad [thing] is derived from it as from a source.

  2. Some philosophers think that our first impulse is to pleasure and
    that our first avoidance is of pain. Others think that freedom from pain
    is what we first welcome and that pain is the first object of avoidance.
    Others again take their start from the things which they call primary
    according to nature-a class in which they include the integrity and
    preservation of all of our parts, health, sound sense organs, freedom from
    pain, strength, good looks, and other things of this kind; similar to these
    are the primary natural things in the soul, which are as it were the sparks
    and seeds of the virtues. Since it is some one of these three which first
    stirs nature into action, either to pursue something or to avoid it, and
    since there can be no additional possibility beyond these three, it follows
    necessarily that the tasks of pursuit and avoidance are to be referred to
    one of these. Consequently, that prudence which we called the craft of
    living is concerned with some one of those three things and takes from
    it the basic principle for all of life.

  3. One's theory of what is right and honourable is derived from
    whichever of these three which one has decided is the thing which
    stimulates nature into action, and this theory can correspond with any

Free download pdf