- Antipater of Tarsus
Antipater ( _el. Ἀντίπατρος) of Tarsus was a
Stoic philosopher, who lived c. 200-129 BC. He was the pupil and successor ofDiogenes of Babylon as leader of the Stoic school, and was the teacher ofPanaetius . He wrote works on thegods and ondivination , and inethics he took a higher moral ground than that of his teacher Diogenes.Life
Very little is known about his life, except that he was the disciple and successor of
Diogenes of Babylon as leader of theStoic school inAthens , and he was the teacher ofPanaetius . [Cicero, "de Divinatione", i. 3, "de Officiis", iii. 12.] The few extant accounts of his philosophical opinions would not be sufficient grounds for any great reputation, if it were not for the testimony of ancient authors to his merit.Plutarch speaks of him with Zeno,Cleanthes , andChrysippus , as one of the principal Stoic philosophers, [Plutarch, "de Stoic. Repugnant".] and Cicero mentions him as remarkable for acuteness. [Cicero, "de Officiis", iii. 12.] He seems to have taken the lead during his lifetime in the disputes constantly recurring between his own school and the Academy, although he is said to have felt himself so unequal in argument to his contemporaryCarneades in public debates, that he confined himself to writing; by which he was called "Pen-noise" ( _el. καλαμοϐόας). [Plutarch, "Moralia: On Talkativeness"; Eusebius, "Praeparatio Evangelica", xiv. 8.]Philosophy
He taught belief in
God as "a Being blessed, incorruptible, and of goodwill to men," and blamed those who ascribed to the gods "generation and corruption," which is said to have been the doctrine ofChrysippus . [Plutarch, "de Stoic. Rep."] Besides this treatise on the gods, he also wrote two books ondivination , a common topic among the Stoics, in which he proved the truth of the subject from the foreknowledge and benevolence of God, explained dreams to be supernatural intimations of the future, and collected stories of divination attributed toSocrates . [Cicero, "de Divinatione", i. 3, 20, 39, 54.] He is said to have believed that was a god, though it is not clear what was implied in this expression; [Stobaeus, "de Fato", 16] and it appears fromAthenaeus that he wrote a treatise entitled "On Superstition" ( _el. Περὶ Δεισιδαιμονίας). [Athenaeus, "Deipnosophists", viii.]Of his labours in moral philosophy nothing remains except a few scattered statements which concern points of detail, and have more to do with the application of moral precepts than with the principles themselves; such as they were, however, he took higher ground in solving them than his master Diogenes: [Cicero, "de Officiis", iii. 12, 13, 23.]
If a wise man should inadvertently accept
counterfeit money for good, will he offer it as genuine in payment of a debt after he discovers his mistake?" Diogenes says, "Yes," Antipater, "No," and I agree with him. If a man knowingly offers for salewine that is spoiling, ought he to tell his customers? Diogenes thinks that it is not required; Antipater holds that an honest man would do so. [Cicero, "de Officiis", iii. 23.]References
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