through europe - cynicism http://th-rough.eu/taxonomy/term/517/0 en Cynics: the radical atheism of the heavenly dogs http://th-rough.eu/writers/campagna-eng/cynics-radical-atheism-heavenly-dogs <span class='print-link'></span><p class="rtejustify"> Dressed in rags, if dressed at all, their heads half-shaved, eating, defecating and masturbating in public, ranting in the middle of the marketplace, the Cynics are among the most controversial figures of ancient Western philosophy. With a move that long predated the witty self-deprecation of groups like the Cubists or Afroamerican &lsquo;nigga&rsquo; rappers, Cynic philosophers presented themselves as &lsquo;dogs&rsquo; (<em>kynoi</em>) &ndash; and as such they behaved in public. By taking their place just under the bottom of the social order, the dog-philosophers simultaneously declared themselves to be above it: such was the most famous thinker of the early Cynic school, Diogenes the &lsquo;son of Zeus&rsquo;, the &lsquo;heavenly dog&rsquo;, the &lsquo;king&rsquo;. According to a famous anecdote, when Diogenes &ndash; who at some point was captured and sold as a slave &ndash; was asked by the trader in what he was proficient, he replied: &lsquo;In ruling men&rsquo;. Then he pointed to a rich man in the crowed and said. &nbsp;&lsquo;Sell me to this man; he needs a master.&rsquo;<a href="#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1" title="">[1]</a></p> <p><a href="http://th-rough.eu/writers/campagna-eng/cynics-radical-atheism-heavenly-dogs" target="_blank">read more</a></p> campagna-eng consolations of anarchy cynicism cynics diogenes hellenistic philosophy individualist anarchism radical atheism English Wed, 02 Oct 2013 13:47:35 +0000 Federico Campagna 348 at http://th-rough.eu