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Zeno of Citium

Zeno of Citium

334 BCE262 BCE · Athens

Zeno of Citium (c. 334–262 BCE) was born in the Phoenician-Greek port city of Citium on Cyprus, of mixed Phoenician and Greek descent, and trained as a merchant. By the well-known tradition reported by Diogenes Laertius, a shipwreck on a voyage to Athens cost him his cargo of Phoenician purple; wandering into an Athenian bookseller's shop he read Xenophon's Memorabilia and asked where men like Socrates were to be found. The bookseller pointed to Crates of Thebes, the Cynic, passing in the street. Zeno spent the next decade and more studying with Crates, then with Stilpo of Megara and the logicians of the Megarian school, and finally with the Platonists Xenocrates and Polemo at the Academy. Out of this synthesis of Cynic ethics, Megarian dialectic, and Platonist metaphysics he forged a new philosophy.

Around 301 BCE Zeno began teaching at the Stoa Poikilē — the painted colonnade in the Athenian Agora frescoed with the battles of the city — and his followers came to be called Stoics from the meeting place. He taught rigorously in small groups, declining the public-rhetorical mode of the sophists. Athens honored him publicly during his lifetime and at his death; according to Diogenes Laertius he declined offered Athenian citizenship in order to remain loyal to Citium. The same tradition reports that Antigonus II Gonatas of Macedon favored him and repeatedly invited him to court; Zeno declined and sent his pupil Persaeus in his stead. (The correspondence between the two preserved by Diogenes Laertius is generally regarded as a later forgery.) These reports place him in the political-philosophical world of the early Hellenistic age.

Zeno organized philosophy into three interlocking parts. His physics, drawing deeply on Heraclitus, conceived the cosmos as a single rational living being wholly pervaded by a divine, active artisan-fire — the logos — that structures matter and history. In logic he developed the theory of katalēpsis, the cognitive impression that compels assent and grounds genuine knowledge against skeptical doubt. The most influential limb was his ethics: virtue is the only true good, vice the only true evil, and all else — health, wealth, reputation, even life itself — morally indifferent though practically preferable. To live well is to live in accordance with nature, which for the Stoa means in accordance with the cosmic logos one shares as a rational being. The sage, having extirpated the passions, achieves apatheia and is invulnerable to fortune.

His immediate successors Cleanthes and Chrysippus completed and elaborated the system — Chrysippus especially, in some 700 lost treatises, made Stoicism the most technically rigorous philosophy of the Hellenistic period. Through the Roman Stoa — Seneca, Musonius Rufus, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius — Zeno's ethical vision became the philosophical voice of educated Rome. On one influential scholarly reading, Stoic logos-theology informed early Christian thought, the cosmic logos being seen as a background to the Word of John 1; Stoic providence and natural law shaped medieval scholasticism, the Renaissance recovery of Justus Lipsius's Neostoicism, the Enlightenment (Spinoza, Adam Smith), and Kantian deontology. The contemporary academic and popular Stoic revival, of which there is now a thriving annual literature, is the latest chapter in a continuous tradition that began at the Painted Porch.

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Stop 1 of 2334 BCEBorn

Citium (Cyprus)

What they did here

Born of Phoenician descent in Citium, a Greek-Phoenician trading city on Cyprus; pursued his family's mercantile trade.

See other sages who lived in Citium (Cyprus)

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Influenced byCrates of ThebesZeno of CitiumShapedCleanthes