Diogenes was forced into exile when his father adulterated the State’s money. This act of defacing the currency became his philosophical motif since he saw himself as the architect of demolition. On reaching Athens, he met Antisthenes and after being forcibly rejected told the philosopher that he would stay near him for as long as he had something important to say.
He took a fiendish delight in pouring scorn on his famous contemporaries, especially Plato whose lectures he considered a waste of time. When he saw philosophers and physicians at their work, he deemed humans the most intelligent of all the animals, but when he saw interpreters of dreams and diviners and those who believed in their nonsense, he thought no animal sillier. When Plato invited him to his home for dinner, Diogenes wiped his dirty feet on Plato’s carpet claiming that he was trampling on ‘Plato’s pride’, to which the ever-sharp Plato replied: ‘He merely replaced one pride with another’. As Plato was conversing about his famous Forms and using such abstractions as table-hood and cup-hood, Diogenes said that while he could see table and cup he could not see table-hood and cup-hood. Unfazed, Plato told him that while he had the eyes to see the visible table and cup, he lacked the understanding by which ideal table-hood and cup-hood are discerned.
He loved witty repartee and was quick with humorous replies to the constant stream of questions put to him. Philosophy taught him to be prepared for every fortune. And the best way to begin philosophy is to carry a cheese around the market-square. He thought it right that Plato called him a dog because he came back repeatedly to those who sold him. When asked whether he really knew anything, he said that even if he was a pretender to wisdom that is itself a philosophy. To those who rejected philosophy, he wondered why they lived, if they did not care to live well. He said that he came from the cosmos, wished to be buried face down because soon down will be up, thought he would be buried by whoever wanted his house. He removed from his door the inscription ‘let nothing evil enter’, so that he would be able to get in. When asked what he was doing with a lamp in the daylight, his immortal reply was that he was looking for an authentic human being. He had no time for people who used ingratiating speech which is like honey used to choke one. He did not feel guilty about begging for money since it was repayment of his due. When boys threw stones at him, he pissed on them and when people laughed at him, he said that at least he was not laughed down. He was never bothered by people who laughed behind his back because he thought the asses probably laughed at them but as they didn’t care for asses, he didn’t care for them. He did not express his feelings more because he preferred to express his reason. He did not pursue wealth because he preferred courage, but preferred above all else, liberty. For him, the most beautiful thing in the world was freedom of speech. He thought that libertines are like fig-trees growing on a cliff: their fruit is not enjoyed by any man, but is eaten by vultures. He compared beautiful courtesans to a deadly-honeyed potion and thought that lovers derive their pleasures from misfortune. When asked about the right time to marry he said: For a young man, not yet; for an old man, never. That human beings choose to be miserable is his definition of madness and education can keep us sane because it is a controlling grace to the young, consolation to the old, wealth to the poor, and ornament to the rich. Overall, life is not evil but living evilly is, and death cannot be an evil thing because, when in its presence, we are not aware of it.
There are two stories of his death. One has it that he was bitten on the foot by a wild dog. The other is that he died at a grand old age by holding his breath. After his death it was written of him that he was rightly named Diogenes, a true-born son of Zeus, a hound of heaven.
Diogenes is not a cynic in the modern sense: he sought virtue and moral freedom in liberation from desire. To this end he rejected social and religious conventions: manners, dress, housing, normal food, decency, patriotism. By declaring that he was a citizen of the world, he coined the word ‘cosmopolitan’. He lived for some time in a wine vat, perfected the art of begging and took a perverse delight in the amused tolerance of his fellow citizens. When the great Alexander came to visit and asked him what he wanted, his immortal reply was: ‘Get out of my sunshine’.
The most important disciple of Diogenes is Crates who renounced a life of wealth in favour of one of practical asceticism. Known as the Watchdog and the Door-Opener, he was warmly received as a man of honourable wisdom, even acting as an umpire of family quarrels. He was revered as a household deity and was favourably compared to Heracles the slayer of wild beasts. Crates overthrew anger, lust, envy and greed in men’s hearts: from such pests as these he freed men. Many people said that he passed his whole life as though on perpetual holiday.
Unlike Diogenes, Crates did not beg, and even more surprisingly, married. A rich and beautiful young woman, Hipparchia, fell in love with the decrepit 60-year-old Crates and threatened to kill herself if he did not marry her. The girl’s parents were horrified and appealed to Crates to dissuade her from marriage. This he attempted unsuccessfully whereupon he took off his clothes revealing his possessions. He insisted that she could never be his mate unless she shared his pursuits. Even this desperate manoeuvre failed and the girl had her way. They married around 300 BC and the union is one of the few marital successes in the long list of philosophers. They had two children, allegedly conceived and born in the style of the Cynics, in public. Hipparchia became famous as a Cynic and was fondly called ‘the female philosopher’. Sadly, she faded from history after Crates’ death in old age. Stoic philosopher Epictetus argued that marriage distracts Cynics from their vocation and may even be inconsistent with it. If a Cynic marries he will be caught up in the trivia and compromises of domestic life. As Cynics have a duty to be overseer to humankind, those who marry, have children, and quarrel endlessly, will see their kingdom taken away from them. When the Cynics pointed to Crates’ successful marriage, Epictetus countered that they had forgotten that Hipparchia was a female Crates.
When he heard that Diogenes was dying, Crates advised Hipparchia to return quickly to Athens so that she may find Diogenes alive and learn from him how much philosophy can achieve even in the most terrifying circumstances. In another letter he tells his wife and fellow philosopher that it is not because they are indifferent to everything that others have called their philosophy Cynic, but because they robustly endure those things which are unbearable to those who are effeminate and subject to false opinion. He tells Hipparchia to stand firm and live the Cynic life, (for females are not by nature inferior to males, as female dogs are not by nature inferior to male dogs), in order that she might be freed even from nature, since all are slaves either by law or through wickedness. Reaffirming their commitment to the philosophical life Crates warns his wife about the dangers of ‘womanly behaviour’. He returns the tunic she wove for him because those who live a Cynic’s life are forbidden to wear such things, and he returns the gift so that he may encourage her to desist from attempting to show the masses how much she loves and serves her husband. He points out that if he had married her for this reason, she would be acting properly. But since they married for the sake of philosophy, she should renounce such pursuits and try to be of greater benefit to people through philosophising. For Crates, as for Diogenes, reason is a guide to life. So he tells her to acquire reason for herself for then she will secure a happy life. And she should seek wise men, even if she has to go to the ends of the Earth.
After the birth of his son Crates wrote to his wife that he had heard that she had given birth quite easily. He congratulates her for believing that hard work is the cause of her not having to work hard at giving birth. He opines that she would not have given birth so easily unless, while pregnant, she had continued to work hard as the athletes do. He tells her to take care of ‘this little puppy of ours’ and when he is able to speak and walk, he will be dressed with the uniform of the Cynic: staff, cloak and wallet.
According to Crates, we should proceed toward happiness even if it is through fire and shun not only the worst of evils – injustice and self-indulgence – but also pleasures. Rather, we should pursue self-control, perseverance and hard work. If we are Cynics we toil according to this philosophy, and to be a Cynic is to take a short-cut in doing philosophy. Living philosophy is more important than talking or writing philosophy. We should be judged by what we do so that a philosophy is judged by how we live. As Cynics we live our philosophy without compromise: we are the sum of our actions. Consequently, Crates tells us not to fear the name of Cynic, or to resent being called bad.