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| Of the Foolish Beastliness of the Cynics. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 20.—Of the Foolish
Beastliness of the Cynics.
It is this which those canine or
cynic748
748 The one word being the Latin form,
the other the Greek, of the same adjective. | philosophers
have overlooked, when they have, in violation of the modest
instincts of men, boastfully proclaimed their unclean and shameless
opinion, worthy indeed of dogs, viz., that as the matrimonial act
is legitimate, no one should be ashamed to perform it openly, in
the street or in any public place. Instinctive shame has
overborne this wild fancy. For though it is related749
749 By Diogenes Laertius, vi. 69, and
Cicero, De Offic. i. 41. | that
Diogenes once dared to put his opinion in practice, under the
impression that his sect would be all the more famous if his
egregious shamelessness were deeply graven in the memory of
mankind, yet this example was not afterwards followed.
Shame had
more influence with them, to make them blush before men, than error
to make them affect a resemblance to dogs. And possibly, even in
the case of Diogenes, and those who did imitate him, there was but
an appearance and pretence of copulation, and not the reality.
Even at this day there are still Cynic philosophers to be seen; for
these are Cynics who are not content with being clad in the
pallium, but also carry a club; yet no one of them dares to do
this that we speak of. If they did, they would be spat upon, not
to say stoned, by the mob. Human nature, then, is without doubt
ashamed of this lust; and justly so, for the insubordination of
these members, and their defiance of the will, are the clear
testimony of the punishment of man’s first sin. And it was
fitting that this should appear specially in those parts by which
is generated that nature which has been altered for the worse by
that first and great sin,—that sin from whose evil connection no
one can escape, unless God’s grace expiate in him individually
that which was perpetrated to the destruction of all in common,
when all were in one man, and which was avenged by God’s
justice.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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