Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 3.djvu/123

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THEOPHILUS TO AUTOLYCUS.
111

For, if it were possible for you, you would not grudge to spend the night in the libraries.


Chap. v.Philosophers inculcate cannibalism.

Since, then, you have read much, what is your opinion of the precepts of Zeno, and Diogenes, and Cleanthes, which their books contain, inculcating the eating of human flesh: that fathers be cooked and eaten by their own children; and that if any one refuse or reject a part of this infamous food, he himself be devoured who will not eat? An utterance even more godless than these is found,—that, namely, of Diogenes, who teaches children to bring their own parents in sacrifice, and devour them. And does not the historian Herodotus narrate that Cambyses,[1] when he had slaughtered the children of Harpagus, cooked them also, and set them as a meal before their father? And, still further, he narrates that among the Indians the parents are eaten by their own children. Oh! the godless teaching of those who recorded, yea, rather, inculcated such things! Oh! their wickedness and godlessness! Oh! the conception of those who thus accurately philosophized, and profess philosophy! For they who taught these doctrines have filled the world with iniquity.


Chap. vi.Other opinions of the philosophers.

And regarding lawless conduct, those who have blindly wandered into the choir of philosophy have, almost to a man, spoken with one voice. Certainly Plato, to mention him first who seems to have been the most respectable philosopher among them, expressly, as it were, legislates in his first book,[2] entitled The Republic, that the wives of all be common, using the precedent of the son[3] of Jupiter and the lawgiver of the Cretans, in order that under this pretext there might be an abundant offspring from the best persons, and that those who were worn with toil might be comforted by such intercourse."[4]

  1. It was not Cambyses, but Astyages, who did this; see Herod. i. 119.
  2. Not in the first, but the fifth book of the Republic.
  3. Minos.
  4. As this sentence cannot be intelligibly rendered without its original in Plato, we subjoin the latter: "As for those youths who excel either