Ancient Christian Writers - The Works of the Fathers in Translation - St Augustine: Against the Academics
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Augustine's Confessions and his earliest philosophical writings, represented here, are his most accessible extant works. Although his pieces are against pagan Platonism they represent the thought world which he and many other educated persons, pagan and Christian, inhabited at the time.
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Ancient Christian Writers - The Works of the Fathers in Translation - St Augustine - Johannes Quasten
ST. AUGUSTINE
AGAINST THE ACADEMICS
TRANSLATED AND ANNOTATED
BY
JOHN J. O’MEARA
M. A., D. PHIL. (OXON)
Professor of Latin at University College
Dublin, Ireland
COPYRIGHT
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
1. THE DIALOGUES OF CASSICIACUM
2. THE INTERLOCUTORS
A. AUGUSTINE
B. ALYPIUS
C. LICENTIUS
D. TRYGETIUS
E. NAVIGIUS
F. ROMANIANUS
3. THE CONTRA ACADEMICOS AND THE ACADEMICA OF CICERO
4. THE IMPORTANCE OF THE CONTRA ACADEMICOS
A. AUGUSTINE AND NEO-PLATONISM
B. PLOTINUS OR PORPHYRY?
5. THE HISTORICITY OF THE DIALOGUES OF CASSICIACUM
A. THE EVIDENCE IN FAVOUR OF HISTORICITY
B. THE EVIDENCE AGAINST HISTORICITY
C. CONCLUSION ON THE QUESTION OF HISTORICITY
TEXT
BOOK ONE: TRUTH AND HAPPINESS
PREFACE
THE PROBLEM
IS THE MERE SEARCH FOR TRUTH SUFFICIENT FOR HAPPINESS?
WHAT IS ERROR?
WHAT IS WISDOM?
NEW DEFINITION OF WISDOM
EPILOGUE
BOOK TWO: THE DOCTRINE OF THE NEW ACADEMY
EXHORTATION TO ROMANIANUS
SUMMARY OF PREVIOUS DEBATE
DOCTRINE OF THE NEW ACADEMY
THE POSITION OF THE NEW ACADEMY
PROBABILITY AND VERISIMILITUDE
THE PROBABLE
WHAT WAS THE REAL TEACHING OF THE NEW ACADEMY?
BOOK THREE: WISDOM AND KNOWLEDGE
MAN’S NEED OF TRUTH
IS MAN INDEPENDENT OF FORTUNE?
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE WISE MAN AND THE PHILOSOPHER
THE WISE MAN KNOWS TRUTH
THE QUESTION OF ASSENT
TRUTH REVEALED ONLY BY A DIVINITY
AUGUSTINE’S REFUTATION OF THE NEW ACADEMY
THE TWO PRINCIPLES OF THE ACADEMY
SOMETHING CAN BE PERCEIVED
ASSENT CAN BE GIVEN
THE PROBABLE
INSUFFICIENT AND DANGEROUS
AUGUSTINE’S THEORY OF A SECRET DOCTRINE IN THE ACADEMY
PLATONISM AND CHRISTIANITY
NOTES
TO THE INTRODUCTION
TO BOOK ONE
TO BOOK TWO
TO BOOK THREE
INDEX
ST. AUGUSTINE
AGAINST THE ACADEMICS
Augustine, Retractationes 1. 1. 1, 4: When, therefore, I had abandoned both what I had achieved of the ambitions of this world and what I wished to achieve, and had betaken myself to the peace and calm of the Christian life, and before I was baptized, I wrote first the Against the Academics or On the Academics. I purposed by the most cogent reasoning I could muster to rid my mind of the arguments of the Academics. For they cause many to despair of finding truth and prevent the wise man from assenting to anything or granting anything at all as clear and manifest, since to them everything appears obscure and uncertain. These arguments were troubling me also. Through the Lord’s mercy and help I succeeded in my design. . . .
This work begins thus: O utinam, Romaniane, hominem sibi aptum.
INTRODUCTION
1
THE DIALOGUES OF CASSICIACUM
The Contra Academicos (three books), De beata vita, and De ordine (two books) form a series of dialogues which may be called the Dialogues of Cassiciacum. They are the earliest extant works of St. Augustine, and purport to be the touched-up records of actual disputations held by Augustine and his friends at Cassiciacum (near Milan) during the month of November A. D. 386. Shortly before this time Augustine had undergone a mental and moral crisis during which his physical health had been impaired. Shortly after, he retired to Milan to be baptized. These dialogues claim to give a reliable picture of the mind and way of life of one of the greatest figures of the West, precisely at the moment which was for him most critical and vital. They are inextricably bound up with one another: they were not written in order, but one book of one work was followed by one book of another, and so on.¹ According to the more usually received sequence, Contra Academicos 1 opened the series, and Contra Academicos 3 was the last but one in the group. Closely associated with these dialogues are the Soliloquia, which were, at least in part, written simultaneously with the whole series, and the early Epistolae of Augustine to his absent friends.
2
THE INTERLOCUTORS
A. Augustine
The life of Augustine is too well known for us to give anything but the merest outline of his career up to the date of his baptism in 387. There is, however, one aspect of his earlier life which must be stressed if we are to understand the full significance of his conversion, and appreciate the psychological attitude that was his when he wrote the work with which we are concerned. It is an aspect which is usually lost sight of because of the absorbing interest of the story of his moral and intellectual experiences before this date. We refer to the question of his worldly ambitions and success. As we look back through the ages to the scene of his wrestling with God, we tend to forget that Augustine’s problems were made much more difficult by the very human preoccupation of work to be done and a living to be made, not only for himself, but for those that depended on him. At the time of his conversion he had the prize of success well within his grasp. Was he to surrender all, jeopardize all, for an idea that only with difficulty convinced him? It was from his own experience of Grace at this juncture that he became its ardent apostle.
Augustine (Aurelius Augustinus) was born at Tagaste in Numidia in November, 354, of a heathen father, Patricius, and a Christian mother, Monnica.² After some schooling in his native town, he was sent to a teacher in the neighbouring city of Madauros, for Patricius had already seen that the boy showed great promise, and had determined that no chance would be denied his son. That son was later to censure his parents for their too great interest in a worldly career for him: for they were regardless how I should employ what they forced me to learn, except to satiate the insatiate desires of a wealthy beggary and a shameful glory.
³ Nevertheless, the boy responded to the encouragement given by his parents, and soon earned the compliment of being acclaimed above his fellow scholars for his excellence in declamation.⁴
His preliminary studies completed, he spent his sixteenth year at home in Tagaste—idle. His father meanwhile got together the means to send him to Carthage, there to take up studies to become a professional rhetorician: Who did not extol my father, for that beyond the ability of his means, he would furnish his son with all necessaries for a far journey for his studies’ sake? . . . But while in that my sixteenth year I lived with my parents, leaving all school for a while, . . . the briers of unclean desires grew rank over my head, and there was no hand to root them out.
⁵ Even his mother was so keen for his worldly success that she, too, was negligent about the fate of his soul.⁶
On his arrival in Carthage, Augustine immediately proceeded to win distinction: And now I was chief in the rhetoric school, whereat I joyed proudly, and I swelled with arrogancy.
⁷ Ambition began to stir in the heart of the young man himself. He hoped, doubtless, to arrive at the highest grade of his profession, if not actually the highest of the imperial civil service. All his hopes, however, were suddenly threatened by the death of his father. It was only with the greatest difficulty, and aided, probably, by Romanianus, a wealthy magnate of his native town, that his mother managed to keep him on at Carthage.
When he was nineteen years of age, he came upon the Hortensius of Cicero.⁸ The book made a profound and lasting impression on him. From it he conceived a passion for truth, which, at the time, he believed was to be found in the Sacred Scriptures. When, however, he opened the sacred book he felt disappointed. He cast about for some guide to truth and fell under the influence of the Manichees, who professed to lead men to truth merely by the light of reason and without employing any authority.⁹ For almost a decade Augustine was not only a Manichee, but an ardent apostle of Manicheism. The full import of this fact upon his mind and later development was enormous.¹⁰
When he had finished his studies, he returned to Tagaste, a Manichee, swelling with pride.
Monnica refused to receive him into her house, but his friend and patron, Romanianus,¹¹ was only too willing to help the young man.¹² Moreover, he paid him the compliment of following him into Manicheism, and entrusted to him the education of his son, Licentius. Soon, however, Augustine saw an opportunity of becoming a professional rhetorician at Carthage, whither he returned after a year’s absence. In his Confessions he gives a good picture of the bustle and anxiety of his life at this period: For this space of nine years . . . we lived seduced and seducing, deceived and deceiving, in divers lusts; openly, by sciences which they call liberal; secretly, with a false-named religion; here proud, there superstitious, everywhere vain. Here hunting after the emptiness of popular praise, down even to theatrical applauses, and poetic prizes, and strifes for grassy garlands, and the follies of shows, and the intemperance of desires. . . . In those years I taught rhetoric, and, overcome by cupidity, made sale of a loquacity to overcome by.
¹³ In his anxiety he began to take a deep interest in the occult dealings of divination.¹⁴ At this time, too, he wrote his first book: De pulchro et apto, which is, unfortunately, no longer extant. It dealt with the general problem of aesthetics, and seems to have been a bid for recognition by Rome. At any rate, it was dedicated to a certain Hierius, a Syrian, who had made good at Rome, and Augustine was soon on his way to the heart of the Empire. He hoped to emulate the Syrian.
About the time of the composition of the De pulchro et apto he seems to have read a good deal of philosophy—enough, at any rate, to give a philosophical flavour to this first work of his.¹⁵ He began also to see that the Manichean cosmology was childish in comparison with that of the professional philosophers. His doubts about Manicheism were transformed into profound dissatisfaction as a result of an interview with a certain Faustus, who, he had been assured, was to set his mind at ease. He naturally gravitated towards the scepticism of the New Academy.¹⁶ This at once encouraged him to concentrate upon material success, and left him disturbed in the depths of his being.
In the autumn of 383 Augustine set out for Rome. He denies that he went there solely to make more money, or gain greater distinction in his profession. His friends had assured him that these things were, indeed, to be had at Rome, and he admits that these considerations had some weight with him. His primary reason, he says, was that he had been led to expect that the pupils there would be better behaved than they were at Carthage. In this he was to be disappointed,¹⁷ although through his pupils he soon began to be known.¹⁸ About a year after his arrival in the city he was appointed, through the influence of the urban prefect, Symmachus, to be master of rhetoric at Milan, then the seat of the imperial court.¹⁹
At this point we would do well to consider the milieu in which Augustine lived and worked, and what his chances of high preferment were.
Hierius was not the only provincial who had gained considerable success in coming to Rome and Milan. Ausonius, for example, from being a teacher for thirty years at Bordeaux, became tutor of Gratian and thereby helped himself and his family to all the principal magistracies of the West.²⁰ Neoterius, who started life as a simple clerk, was taken up by Symmachus, and became prefect and eventually consul. Palladius, who came to Rome five years ahead of Augustine, became, on Symmachus’ recommendation, master of the offices. Symmachus helped Pacatus, who came to Rome six years later than Augustine and recited a panegyric before Theodosius, to be made proconsul of Africa in 390. Others, including Priscianus, Marinianus, and Theodorus, were helped by Symmachus, about the time when Augustine was appointed to his position in Milan, to the acquisition of very high offices.²¹
The career of the last-mentioned, Flavius Manlius (Mallius) Theodorus,²² is of particular interest, because he was a friend of Augustine and, as we can gather from various indications, must have had considerable influence upon him.²³ This man, to whom Augustine addressed the De beata vita, and to whose works he refers in the De ordine²⁴ (both works contemporary with the Contra Academicos) as models which he himself could follow in his dialogues, was born,²⁵ about the same time as Augustine, of poor parents, as it would seem, in Milan. He passed in the usual way through the rhetorical schools and legal profession into the imperial civil service. He then retired to Liguria to write philosophical dialogues,²⁶ but was soon recalled to public service. He was consul in 399.²⁷
Augustine might, then, hope for high preferment indeed. He found himself at Milan in a conspicuous position close to the emperor and his court. Before a year had elapsed, he had delivered a panegyric on the occasion of the consulship (385) of Bauto,²⁸ who held all power during the minority of Valentinian. Such distinction could, as we have seen, lead to the fulfilment of the highest ambitions. It is clear that Augustine was at this time consumed with anxiety over success, and overworked both in his profession and in canvassing powerful friends.²⁹ The tempo of his life increased to straining point: I panted after honours, gains, marriage, . . . and my heart was panting with these anxieties, and boiling with the feverishness of consuming thoughts.
³⁰
But other factors had begun to enter his life—to add, however, only more immediate confusion and turmoil in his soul. His moral and intellectual experiences were exacting indeed. From Ambrose he expected much help, but got little, if any, of that personal direction for which his soul yearned.³¹ Even while he pursued worldly ambitions, he began to think of abandoning them for a life devoted to the service of God. And yet he paused: We must not lightly abandon them, for it were a shame to return again to them. See, it is no great matter now to obtain some station, and then what should we more wish for? We have a store of powerful friends; if nothing else offer, and we be in much haste, at least a presidentship may be given us. . . .
³²
Let us take up very briefly the story of his moral and intellectual difficulties. His mother, although a good Christian, was but a woman of her day when she had wished to postpone the sacrament of baptism for Augustine until the surge of adolescence had passed. It is not surprising that Augustine, in the times and circumstances in which he lived, did not altogether resist the allurements of the flesh, and that neither the Hortensius nor Manicheism had any practical influence on his behaviour.
More serious were his difficulties about God’s nature,³³ the problem of evil in the world, and the Scriptures. In these questions Manicheism was to prove a positive hindrance. Eventually, he understood that the Catholic Church did not teach what he had been led to believe that it taught; in fact, Ambrose could make it appear that the Catholic teaching was defensible.³⁴
Many circumstances and considerations led him little by little to seek for baptism: his mother’s dreams of his conversion, in which, at that time, he put great credit; the fear of death, which seems to have affected him in his weakened state of health;³⁵ the Platonist books,³⁶ which opened up for him vistas of spiritual reality till then undreamt of; the reading of St. Paul and the Scriptures; the story of the conversion of a fellow countryman, rhetorician, and Platonist—Victorinus;³⁷ the importunate example of the monks of Egypt as presented to him by Pontitianus; and finally, the dramatic crisis in the garden from which Augustine represents himself emerging as an earnest convert.
Shortly after this crisis Augustine, in the autumn of 386, resigned his office—and with it all hope of worldly success—on the plea of impaired health, and retired to Cassiciacum, a country villa belonging to a friend, Verecundus, at some distance from Milan. There with his mother, Alypius, Licentius, Trygetius, and a few others, he adopted a mode of life which is sufficiently well reflected in the Contra Academicos and the other Dialogues of Cassiciacum. A few months later, early in 387, he was baptized in Milan. Although he recovered his health, he never returned to the career which had meant so much for him. An all-absorbing interest had entered his life. In his early writings, the Dialogues, we are privileged to see his mind adjusting itself to its new aspirations. It would be surprising indeed, if we see there no trace of his former thoughts also. We shall see, too, some of the splendour of the vision that enchanted him.
B. Alypius
Alypius³⁸ was a native of Tagaste where his parents were among the most distinguished people of the municipality. He was a blood-relation of Romanianus, the friend and patron of Augustine. He studied under the latter at Tagaste and Carthage, preceded him to Rome, accompanied him to Milan and Cassiciacum, and with him was baptized. He was marked out by his parents for a career at the bar, and in his professional duties showed integrity and courage. He was devoted to Augustine, sharing all his confidences, and, while showing much independence of mind, was, nevertheless, greatly influenced—to becoming a Manichee, for instance—by his master. He had great nobility of character, led a strict life, and was honest and vigorous in all things. Soon after his baptism he returned to Africa with Augustine, there shortly to become bishop of his native town, Tagaste.
C. Licentius
Licentius³⁹ was the son of Romanianus and was educated by Augustine, who always took a great interest in his welfare. He followed Augustine to Carthage, and is found again with him in Cassiciacum, where he was about to begin a study of philosophy. He is represented as being then very young.⁴⁰ He was something of a poet, unstable, impulsive, and ambitious. He caused untold anxiety to his father, to Augustine, and to all his friends. He gave up philosophy—if indeed he ever had any interest in it—and seems to have been remiss also in the practice of his religion. His one ambition was to be consul. R. Lanciani⁴¹ says that his body was discovered in St. Lorenzo in Rome in 1862, and that there was evidence to prove that he had attained senatorial rank, and had died a Christian.
D. Trygetius
The sum total of our information on this interlocutor is taken from the Dialogues of Cassiciacum themselves. We are told that he was a fellow citizen and pupil of Augustine; that he was fond of history; and that he had been in military service, which he had preferred to the