Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BCE)known as Cicero or
Tullywas a Roman lawyer, philosopher, and statesman, educated in Rome. He became the
best orator Rome had and one of the best translators and writers in Latin. Scholars still
consider his works "high Latin." More than just an "ivory tower"
intellectual, though, Cicero was also a courageous political activist. Risking his life,
he exposed the conspiracy of Catiline to overthrow the republic.
An ardent republican, he refused to join the political alliance of
Julius Caesar, Crassus, and Pompey, realizing that its success would mean the end of the
republic. Even today, "Star Wars" episodes remind us of the difference between a
republic (a state run on laws and principles) and an empire (run on the whims of
rulers)a difference first noted for us by Cicero.
Cicero wrote philosophy to help himself recover from the death of
his beloved daughter and to endure the tyranny of Julius Caesar and Romes shift from
a republican to an imperial nation (though he played no role in the assassination of
Caesar). He eventually paid a terrible price for refusing to join one of the imperial
factions: the ruling triumvirate of Octavian (later Augustus Caesar), Antony, and Lepidus
had him executed.
The Good Life
Many people today use the phrase "the sword of Damocles"
without knowing where it comes from. We didnt until we found it in Ciceroand
it relates to the inner life of tyrants. For those of us who are supposed to admire the
wealthy and powerful, Cicero reminds us of the price theyre paying to play the power
game. This account is from Cicero: On the Good Life, translated by Michael Grant,
book V of "Discussions at Tusculum":
Dionysius himself [the king of Syracuse in the time of Plato]
pronounced judgment on whether he was happy or not. He was talking to one of his
flatterers, a man called Damocles, who praised the monarchs wealth and power, the
splendors of his regime, the immensity of his resources, and the magnificence of his
palace. Never, Damocles declared, had there been a happier man than Dionysius the king.
"Very well, Damocles," replied the ruler, "since my
life strikes you as so attractive, would you care to have a taste of it yourself and see
what my way of living is really like?" Damocles agreed with pleasure.
So Dionysius had him installed on a golden couch covered with a
superb woven coverlet embroidered with beautiful designs, and beside the couch was placed
an array of sideboards loaded with gold and silver plate. . . There were perfumes and
garlands and incense, and the tables were heaped up with a most elaborate feast. Damocles
thought himself a truly fortunate person.
But in the middle of all this splendor, directly above the neck of
the happy man, Dionysius arranged that a gleaming sword should be suspended from the
ceiling, to which it was attached by a horsehair. And so Damocles had no eye for his
lovely waiters or for the artistic plate. Indeed, he did not even feel like reaching out
his hand towards the food. Presently the garlands, of their own accord, just slipped from
his head. In the end he begged the tyrant to let him go, declaring that his desire to be
happy had evaporated. (pp. 84-85)
On Clear and Free Thinking
As a philosopher, Cicero was one of the earliest to argue against
dogmatism. He defined himself as a skeptic in the Platonic tradition. That is, contrary to
the labeling he receives from scholars these days ("a Stoic"), Cicero conceives
of himself as a follower of Plato. (The reason that scholars cant handle this
self-identification on Ciceros part is that they keep trying to turn Plato into an
absolutist.)
What this means is that Cicero feels free to search for higher
meaning in life (Platos "ideas") while refusing to absolutize his values.
Cicero wants guiding principles to live by while remaining open to learning. He
doesnt need certainty to feel secure in his intellectual adventures, and he wants
the freedom from dogmatism to allow him to continue those adventures.
Whats refreshing about Ciceros skepticism is that this
openness used to be associated with mature thinking. These days, of course, the
"mature" person is supposed to never change opinions. Those people who change
their minds are looked down on as frivolous thinkers, having no intellectual ground to
stand on. Meanwhile, the religious or scientific "experts" we meet in the
mediaor if were unlucky, in personare absolutely convinced that
theyre right and that everyone else should convert to their religious or scientific
"truths." Cicero would have found these "experts" to be close-minded
and immature.
The freedom Cicero found in his skepticism was the freedom not to
be bound by circumstances, to find ways to rise above situations that would otherwise
defeat human beings. He also wanted this freedom to help himself and others rise above the
temptations that led the wealthy and the powerful to create the inhuman conditions that he
saw developing in the empire.
These excerpts are from On Duties, which translator Michael
Grant says, "has perhaps exercised more influence on the thought and standards of the
western world than any other secular work ever written", which Cicero, a Platonist,
wrote for his son, an Aristotelian:
Whereas the philosophical school I support [the Academy] maintains
that nothing can be known for certain, here I am not only presenting views on all manner
of subjects but actually trying to lay down rules indicating what our obligations are.
But I must ask our critics to understand our position. For in
spite of our negative attitude towards the certainty of knowledge, we are far from being
intellectual drifters who flounder about without any idea what we are looking for. To be
without any sort of principles to base our discussions and our lives upon would totally
rule out any intellectual life or indeed any life at all. . .
In fact, nothing prevents me from accepting what seems to be
probable and rejecting what does not. Such an approach avoids the presumption of dogmatism
and keeps clear of irrationality, which is the negation of all accurate thinking.
On the other hand, our people always argue against all categorical
assertions. Their reason for so doing is that you can only get a clear view of what is
probable by setting out, comparing, and weighing the arguments on both sides of every
question. (p. 123)
Life and death, wealth and want, exercise an overwhelming effect
on the entire human race. It is only when human beings become capable of displaying
high-minded detachment and disregarding such outward circumstances, whether good or
badwhen they get totally immersed in some noble, honorable purposethat we
cannot help admiring their splendid qualities.
The ability to rise above outward circumstances, then, wins
special admiration, and that is why justicewhich is the peculiar mark of a good
personis universally regarded as marvelous. And quite rightly. For if someone
possesses this virtue, it means that he has freed himself from the fear of death, pain,
exile, and poverty. In other words, he does not regard it as more important to achieve the
reverses of these conditions than to behave like a decent person.
Above all, people admire someone who refuses to be influenced by
money. To prove oneself in that particular direction is the equivalent of emerging
triumphantly from a fiery ordeal. (p. 139)