The Cynics: Counter-culture from Ancient Greece
The enduring ideas of practical philosophers who disdained social customs and conventions.
Today’s counter-culture and alternative movements question mainstream norms, such as putting too much value on material possessions. The Cynics, practical philosophers of ancient Greece and Rome, also rejected conventional desires to seek wealth, power and fame. They were not your usual kind of philosophers: rather than lecturing or writing about their ideas, they acted out their beliefs by denying themselves worldly possessions and tried to live as simply as possible. Their leader, Diogenes of Sinope, allegedly slept in a ceramic jar on the streets of Athens and ate raw meat like a dog, flouting convention to draw attention to his ideas.
So who were the Cynics? How influential was their movement? What made it last some 900 years? And why does the term 'cynicism' have a different meaning today?
Bridget Kendall is joined by three eminent scholars of Greek philosophy:
Dr. William Desmond, Senior Lecturer in Ancient Classics at Maynooth University in Ireland and author of several books on the Cynics;
Dr. Elena Cagnoli Fiecconi, Lecturer in Ancient Philosophy at University College London;
and Mark Usher, Professor of Classical Languages and Literature at the University of Vermont and author of new Cynic translations into English.
(Image: The meeting of Alexander and Diogenes, detail from a tapestry, Scotland. Credit: DEA/S. Vannini/Getty Images)
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- Thu 29 Dec 202210:06GMTBBC World Service
- Fri 30 Dec 202200:06GMTBBC World Service except South Asia
- Fri 30 Dec 202203:06GMTBBC World Service South Asia
- New Year's Day 202303:06GMTBBC World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- New Year's Day 202314:06GMTBBC World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
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