Zeno of Citium ( c. 334 – c. 262 BC) was a
Greek thinker from
Citium (Κίτιον,
Kition),
Cyprus, and probably of
Phoenician descent.
Zeno was the founder of the
Stoic school of philosophy, which he taught in
Athens from about
300 BC.
Based on the moral ideas of the Cynics, Stoicism laid great emphasis on goodness and
peace of mind gained from living a life of
Virtue in accordance with
Nature. It proved very successful, and flourished as the dominant philosophy from the
Hellenistic period through to the
Roman era.
Life
Zeno was born c. 334 BC, in Citium in Cyprus. Most of the details known about his life come from the anecdotes preserved by
Diogenes Laërtius in his Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers.
Diogenes relates a legend that Zeno was a merchant; after surviving a shipwreck, Zeno wandered into a bookshop in Athens and was attracted to some writings about
Socrates. He asked the librarian how to find such a man. In response, the librarian pointed to
Crates of Thebes, the most famous
Cynic living at that time in
Greece.
Zeno is described as a haggard, tanned person, living a spare, ascetic life. This coincides with the influences of Cynic teaching, and was, at least in part, continued in his
Stoic philosophy. From the day Zeno became
Crates’s pupil, he showed a strong bent for philosophy, though with too much native modesty to assimilate Cynic shamelessness. Hence Crates, desirous of curing this defect in him, gave him a potful of lentil-soup to carry through the
Ceramicus; and when he saw that Zeno was ashamed and tried to keep it out of sight, Crates broke the pot with a blow of his staff. As Zeno began to run off in embarrassment with the lentil-soup flowing down his legs, Crates chided "Why run away, my little Phoenician?", "nothing terrible has befallen you".
Apart from Crates, Zeno studied under the philosophers of the
Megarian school, including
Stilpo, and the dialecticians
Diodorus Cronus, and
Philo. He is also said to have studied Platonist philosophy under the direction of
Xenocrates, and Polemo.
Zeno began teaching in the colonnade in the
Agora of Athens known as the
Stoa Poikile in
301 BC. His disciples were initially called Zenonians, but eventually they came to be known as Stoics, a name previously applied to poets who congregated in the Stoa Poikile.
Among the admirers of Zeno was king
Antigonus II Gonatas of
Macedonia, who, whenever he came to Athens, would visit Zeno. Zeno is said to have declined an invitation to visit
Antigonus in Macedonia, although their supposed correspondence preserved by
Laërtius is undoubtedly the invention of a later rhetorician. Zeno instead sent his friend and disciple
Persaeus, who had lived with Zeno in his house. Among Zeno's other pupils there were
Aristo of Chios,
Sphaerus, and
Cleanthes who succeeded Zeno as the head (scholarch) of the Stoic school in Athens.
- published: 31 Mar 2016
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