Difference between revisions of "Crates of Thebes" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Crates of Thebes''' ([[c.]] 368/365 - [[c.]] 288/285 [[Common Era|BCE]]), a [[Hellenistic Greece|Hellenistic]] [[philosopher]], was one of the [[Cynic]]s and the teacher of [[Zeno of Citium]]. Crates was from [[Thebes (Greece)|Thebes]] and was a student of [[Diogenes of Sinope]].  
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'''Crates of Thebes''' Crates of [[Thebes]] (c. 368/365 - c. 288/285 b.c.e.), a [[Hellenistic philosopher]], was one of the [[Cynicism|Cynics]] and the teacher of [[Zeno of Citium]]. Crates was from Thebes and was a student of [[Diogenes of Sinope]].  He gave up his wealth to live an ascetic life in pursuit of virtue. His habit of entering houses, uninvited, to give advice, earned him the nickname "Door-opener". He married Hipparchia, daughter of a wealthy Thracian family, who was said to have wholeheartedly taken up the Cynic lifestyle with Crates. The great importance of Crates' work is that he formed the link between Cynicism and the [[Stoicism|Stoics]], Zeno of Citium being his pupil.
  
It is said that he lost his ample fortune owing to the [[Macedon]]ian invasion, but a more probable story is that he sacrificed it in accordance with his principles, directing the banker, to whom he entrusted it, to give it to his sons if they should prove fools, but to the poor if his sons should prove philosophers.  
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== Life ==
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Crates was a Boeotian, from Thebes and was born around 368 b.c.e..  Our knowledge of his life comes from the biography in [[Diogenes Laertes]]’ “''Lives of Eminent Philosophers''” and from references to him made by other philosophers in their writings.  Much of the information is anecdotal, and may have been exaggerated to illustrate the Cynic point of view.  Crates studied under Diogenes of Sinope.  He was originally a man of wealth and there are several accounts of how he became reduced to poverty; one that he lost his fortune due to the [[Macedonian invasion]] led by [[Alexander the Great]], another that he sold everything and threw the money into a river, or that he distributed it to the poor. The most interesting story is that he entrusted all his wealth to a banker, instructing him to give it to his sons if they turned out to be ordinary people of ignorance, and to the poor if they turned out to be philosophers, because a philosopher already had all he needed.
  
He gave up his life to the attainment of virtue and the propagation of [[ascetic]] self-control. His habit of entering houses for this purpose, uninvited, earned him the nickname "Door-opener". He married [[Hipparchia the Cynic|Hipparchia]], daughter of a wealthy [[Thrace|Thracian]] family, who was said to have wholeheartedly taken up the Cynic lifestyle with Crates.
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Crates followed the tradition of [[Antisthenes]] and Zeno of Sinope, challenging established thought and openly flaunting the social and cultural customs of the time.  He taught in the streets and confronted people in their homes to make some point about virtue or self-sufficiency. He appears to have been very influential among the philosophers of his day, attending symposiums, conducting discourses and giving speeches. He is credited with being the first teacher of Zeno of Citium, who is considered the founder of the Stoic school.  According to Diogenes Laertes, Zeno asked a book seller where he could find a man like those who had written some philosophical treatises which had inspired him.  At that moment Crates happened to be passing by , and the bookseller pointed him out and told Zeno to follow him.
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Crates died around 365 B.C.E. at the age of eighty.
  
His writings were few. According to [[Diogenes Laertius|Diogenes Laërtius]], he was the author of a number of letters on philosophical subjects; but those extant under the name of Crates are spurious, the work of later rhetoricians. Diogenes Laërtius credits him with a short poem, and several philosophic tragedies. [[Plutarch]]'s life of Crates is lost. The great importance of Crates' work is that he formed the link between Cynicism and the [[Stoics]], [[Zeno of Citium]] being his pupil.
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== Marriage to Hipparchia ==
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The marriage between Crates and Hipparchia, the first known woman Cynic, is legendary. Antisthenes and Diogenes had both said that a philosopher should not marry.  Hipparchia’s family was from Maroneia  in Thrace.  Her brother Metrocles was a devoted disciple of Crates. Hipparchia herself became a dedicated Cynic, and fell in love with Crates, who was twenty years her elder. She rejected all her younger suitors and told her parents that she would commit suicide if she were not allowed to marry Crates. Diogenes Laertes relates that her parents called Crates to their home and asked him to discourage Hipparchia from marrying him, but she was insistent. Finally he removed his clothes and said, "This is the bridegroom whom you are choosing, and this is the whole of his property; consider these facts, for it will not be possible for you to become his partner, if you do not also apply your self to the same studies, and conform to the same habits that he does." (Diogenes Laertius, ''Life of Hipparchia'', II)
  
''This entry was originally from the [[1911 Encyclopedia Britannica]].''
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Hipparchia married Crates and assumed his lifestyle. She wore the same type of clothing and went everywhere with him, in opposition to the tradition of keeping women sequestered in the home.  On one occasion, in a confrontation with Theodorus, she asked, “do I appear to you to have come to a wrong decision, if I devote that time to philosophy, which I otherwise should have spent at the loom?"  She bore several children, and the Cynic Letters (probably written several hundred years later but attributed to various Cynics) mention that she gave birth easily because she “worked like an athlete,” and that she used cold water to bathe her babies.
  
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== Thought and Works ==
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According to Diogenes Laërtius, Crates was the author of a number of letters on philosophical subjects; but those extant under the name of Crates are spurious, the work of later rhetoricians. Diogenes Laërtius credits him with a short poem, and several philosophic tragedies.  Crates’ thought is mostly understood through his way of life and the stories related about him.
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Socrates emphasized disregard for pain or pleasure; Crates took this to extremes by deliberately subjecting himself to a life of hardship.  The Cynic precept that virtue is the only good meant that nothing had value which did not contribute to the attainment of virtue. Philemon, the comic poet, said about Crates that he wore a hot shaggy gown in the summer and mere rags in the winter, to inure himself to hardship.  Crates placed great emphasis on self-sufficiency, and often said that a philosopher is wealthy because he does not need what he does not have.  He sought to live in accordance with nature, in the most basic way.
  
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Crates also practiced anaidei, or shamelessness, the idea that anything which is virtuous enough to be done in privacy can be done in public.  He was known for challenging his acquaintances’ modesty with comments or gestures.  He used rhetoric and discourse to expose the weaknesses of popular beliefs, but had no use for theories which had no practical proof or application.
  
 
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The marriage of Hipparchia and Crates was also an expression of their Cynic principles. They appear to have profoundly influenced Zeno of Citium, who included, in his description of an ideal state, equality for men and women, public exercise together in public, and shameless love.
 
 
 
 
'''Hipparchia the Cynic''' was a female [[Greek]] [[philosophy|philosopher]] said to have been born around [[340 B.C.E.]].
 
 
 
Little is known about Hipparchia, for several reasons.  First, she was a member of the unpopular [[Cynic]] school, and second she was a woman and as such not supposed to be involved in what the Ancient Greeks perceived as the male pursuit of philosophy. These two factors are thought to have contributed to the fact that her writings were not preserved.  As such, our knowledge of Hipparchia comes from mentions of her in the surviving works of other philosophers.
 
 
 
Hipparchia was married to another Cynic philosopher named [[Crates of Thebes|Crates]] and in doing so chose the Cynic lifestyle.  This means that she chose a life void of material possessions and artificial social conventions.  For most Cynics this included marriage because of the cynic belief in rejecting social and political order in order to become an unconventional citizen of the universe. However their union could be reinterpreted as a rejection of having to conform to the beliefs of the cynics thus being an act of cynicism.
 
 
 
Another Cynic belief followed by Hipparchia was shamelessness. According to [[St. Augustine]], Hipparchia and her husband were said to follow this so closely that they consummated their marriage by having sex on a public porch. Finally after putting down [[Theodorus]] he proceeded to strip her of her robe however she showed no alarm from this act because of this belief in shamelessness.
 
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==

Revision as of 14:57, 3 June 2006

Crates of Thebes Crates of Thebes (c. 368/365 - c. 288/285 B.C.E.), a Hellenistic philosopher, was one of the Cynics and the teacher of Zeno of Citium. Crates was from Thebes and was a student of Diogenes of Sinope. He gave up his wealth to live an ascetic life in pursuit of virtue. His habit of entering houses, uninvited, to give advice, earned him the nickname "Door-opener". He married Hipparchia, daughter of a wealthy Thracian family, who was said to have wholeheartedly taken up the Cynic lifestyle with Crates. The great importance of Crates' work is that he formed the link between Cynicism and the Stoics, Zeno of Citium being his pupil.

Life

Crates was a Boeotian, from Thebes and was born around 368 b.c.e.. Our knowledge of his life comes from the biography in Diogenes Laertes’ “Lives of Eminent Philosophers” and from references to him made by other philosophers in their writings. Much of the information is anecdotal, and may have been exaggerated to illustrate the Cynic point of view. Crates studied under Diogenes of Sinope. He was originally a man of wealth and there are several accounts of how he became reduced to poverty; one that he lost his fortune due to the Macedonian invasion led by Alexander the Great, another that he sold everything and threw the money into a river, or that he distributed it to the poor. The most interesting story is that he entrusted all his wealth to a banker, instructing him to give it to his sons if they turned out to be ordinary people of ignorance, and to the poor if they turned out to be philosophers, because a philosopher already had all he needed.

Crates followed the tradition of Antisthenes and Zeno of Sinope, challenging established thought and openly flaunting the social and cultural customs of the time. He taught in the streets and confronted people in their homes to make some point about virtue or self-sufficiency. He appears to have been very influential among the philosophers of his day, attending symposiums, conducting discourses and giving speeches. He is credited with being the first teacher of Zeno of Citium, who is considered the founder of the Stoic school. According to Diogenes Laertes, Zeno asked a book seller where he could find a man like those who had written some philosophical treatises which had inspired him. At that moment Crates happened to be passing by , and the bookseller pointed him out and told Zeno to follow him. Crates died around 365 B.C.E. at the age of eighty.

Marriage to Hipparchia

The marriage between Crates and Hipparchia, the first known woman Cynic, is legendary. Antisthenes and Diogenes had both said that a philosopher should not marry. Hipparchia’s family was from Maroneia in Thrace. Her brother Metrocles was a devoted disciple of Crates. Hipparchia herself became a dedicated Cynic, and fell in love with Crates, who was twenty years her elder. She rejected all her younger suitors and told her parents that she would commit suicide if she were not allowed to marry Crates. Diogenes Laertes relates that her parents called Crates to their home and asked him to discourage Hipparchia from marrying him, but she was insistent. Finally he removed his clothes and said, "This is the bridegroom whom you are choosing, and this is the whole of his property; consider these facts, for it will not be possible for you to become his partner, if you do not also apply your self to the same studies, and conform to the same habits that he does." (Diogenes Laertius, Life of Hipparchia, II)

Hipparchia married Crates and assumed his lifestyle. She wore the same type of clothing and went everywhere with him, in opposition to the tradition of keeping women sequestered in the home. On one occasion, in a confrontation with Theodorus, she asked, “do I appear to you to have come to a wrong decision, if I devote that time to philosophy, which I otherwise should have spent at the loom?" She bore several children, and the Cynic Letters (probably written several hundred years later but attributed to various Cynics) mention that she gave birth easily because she “worked like an athlete,” and that she used cold water to bathe her babies.

Thought and Works

According to Diogenes Laërtius, Crates was the author of a number of letters on philosophical subjects; but those extant under the name of Crates are spurious, the work of later rhetoricians. Diogenes Laërtius credits him with a short poem, and several philosophic tragedies. Crates’ thought is mostly understood through his way of life and the stories related about him. Socrates emphasized disregard for pain or pleasure; Crates took this to extremes by deliberately subjecting himself to a life of hardship. The Cynic precept that virtue is the only good meant that nothing had value which did not contribute to the attainment of virtue. Philemon, the comic poet, said about Crates that he wore a hot shaggy gown in the summer and mere rags in the winter, to inure himself to hardship. Crates placed great emphasis on self-sufficiency, and often said that a philosopher is wealthy because he does not need what he does not have. He sought to live in accordance with nature, in the most basic way.

Crates also practiced anaidei, or shamelessness, the idea that anything which is virtuous enough to be done in privacy can be done in public. He was known for challenging his acquaintances’ modesty with comments or gestures. He used rhetoric and discourse to expose the weaknesses of popular beliefs, but had no use for theories which had no practical proof or application.

The marriage of Hipparchia and Crates was also an expression of their Cynic principles. They appear to have profoundly influenced Zeno of Citium, who included, in his description of an ideal state, equality for men and women, public exercise together in public, and shameless love.

External links


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