Bias of Priene
Template:Short description Template:Infobox philosopher
Bias (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Langx Template:Fl) of Priene was a Greek sage. He is widely accepted as one of the Seven Sages of Greece and spent his life working as a legal advocate free of charge for those who had been wronged. He also served as an envoy for Priene during mediation in a conflict with Samos, but he was unsuccessful. Bias is known for his belief that most men are bad. He is also reported as saying that it is unfortunate not to be able to bare misfortune, that one should fear the gods and credit them for one's good deeds, and that wealth and material possessions are unimportant. Several tales are associated with Bias, saying that he refused a tripod rewarded to him for being the wisest man alive, that he paid the ransom for kidnapped girls from Messenia, and that he fooled the Lydian king Alyattes into thinking Priene was too well-stocked to besiege. Bias is said to have died while arguing a case before the court in his old age. He was celebrated in his home town of Priene, and he received praise from Heraclitus, who was known for disdaining historical figures.
LifeEdit
Bias was born at Priene (modern-day Güllübahçe, Turkey) and was active in the sixth century BC.Template:Sfn He was the son of TeautamesTemplate:Sfn and a younger contemporary of Solon.Template:Sfn He is said to have been descended from the Thebans who founded Priene; claims of Theban lineage were common among the Ionian aristocracy at the time.Template:Sfn The exact span of Bias's life is unclear, as he has been described in the context of the Second Messenian War in the mid-7th century, the reign of the Lydian king Alyattes in the early-6th century, and the conquests of the Akkadian Empire in the mid-6th century.Template:Sfn Diogenes Laertius reports that Duris of Samos called Bias a labourer while others described Bias as wealthy.<ref>Diogenes Laërtius, i. 82</ref> As with other figures of this period, the distinction between historical events and legend is not always clear.Template:Sfn
Bias is one of the four people who are consistently grouped as one of the Seven Sages of Greece, being named by Plato and Diogenes Laertius, among others.Template:Sfn He was not a statesmen like many of the other Sages, but he was active in politics as an advocate.Template:Sfn He instead offered legal services for those who had been wronged, without requiring payment.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bias unsuccessfully advocated for Priene in a territorial dispute between Priene and Samos, and he is described as visiting Samos as an envoy.Template:Sfn Of the stories depicting Bias, this is the one most confidently determined to be true.Template:Sfn This is the earliest known example of mediation, as opposed to arbitration, being used to end a conflict in ancient Greece.Template:Sfn
According to Herodotus, Bias proposed a mass migration of the Ionians to create a unified settlement in Sardinia so they would be safe from attacks by Persia.Template:Sfn Bias is among the earliest figures known to have discussed the Ionians as a single group.Template:Sfn Herodotus also said that either Bias or Pittacus of Mytilene convinced the Lydian king Croesus not to build a fleet of ships to wage naval war with Greece, warning him that the seafaring Greeks would have the advantage.Template:Sfn
According to Milesian legend, Bias was one of the Seven Sages who passed along a tripod that was awarded to the wisest living man. It had initially been given to Thales of Miletus, but Thales declared Bias wiser and gave it to him. Bias then passed it on to another of the Seven Sages and it continued changing hands.Template:Sfn It is said that Bias eventually either suggested that the tripod be dedicated to Apollo or to Heracles.Template:Sfn A local legend of Priene held that Bias paid the ransom for a group of Messenian girls who had been kidnapped by pirates, and that he treated them well as he returned them to their parents.Template:Sfn This was followed by an alternate version of the story of the tripod, where it is said that a bronze tripod was found and awarded to him for his deeds, but he chose to dedicate it to Apollo.Template:Sfn
Bias is said to have stopped the Lydian king Alyattes from besieging Priene by having two fattened mules sent out, demonstrating they had so much food to sustain them that even the animals could eat well.Template:Sfn He is also said to have fooled them by gathering sand and laying corn on top so it appeared they had more food than they actually did.Template:Sfn According to Diogenes Laertius, Alyattes later invited Bias to his court, only for Bias to respond that Alyattes should "make his diet of onions", meaning that he should cry.<ref>Diogenes Laërtius, i. 83</ref>
Diogenes Laertius tells that when Bias was on a ship with impious men, Bias asked them not to pray for safety from a storm because it would only alert the gods to their presence, and that he refused to define piety to the impious because it did not concern them.<ref name="i86">Diogenes Laërtius, i. 86</ref>
Bias is said to have died while making an argument before the court. As the judges decided in Bias's favour, he died with his head in his grandson's lap.Template:Sfn
BeliefsEdit
Bias is known for a quote on human nature, which is variously translated as "the majority of men are bad",Template:Sfn "most men are bad",Template:Sfn or "most men are bad, few good".Template:Sfn He also believed that friends should be treated as potential enemies and enemies should be treated as potential friends.Template:Sfn According to Diogenes Laertius, Bias advocated the use of persuasion over force and believed it was preferable to settle a dispute among enemies, which would turn one of them into a friend, than to settle disputes among friends, which would turn one of them into an enemy.<ref>Diogenes Laërtius, i. 87–88</ref> He is said to have believed one should try to be well-liked by the citizens where one resides.<ref name="i85">Diogenes Laërtius, i. 85</ref>
Diogenes Laertius wrote on Bias's beliefs regarding misfortune and suffering. He said that Bias considered the inability to bare misfortune as being unfortunate in itself, and that Bias cited nobly enduring changes for the worse as an example of something difficult to do. Diogenes Laertius also reported that Bias discouraged excessive worry about the misfortunes of others,<ref name="i86" /> and that he believed one should prepare for both a short life and a long life.<ref name="i87">Diogenes Laërtius, i. 87</ref>
Bias considered material possessions unimportant. When Priene was attacked, he left without bringing his possessions because he believed his "letters and wisdom" constituted all of his belongings.Template:Sfn According to Diogenes Laertius, Bias believed that individual strength comes from nature and anyone can become wealthy by chance, but promoting one's country comes from reason.<ref name="i86" /> He reported that Bias deemed making money to be the most pleasurable occupation,<ref name="i87" /> but that he said that one should not seek things that are impossible to obtain.<ref name="i86" /> Bias is also said to have discouraged praise for the wealthy if they were otherwise unworthy.<ref name="i88">Diogenes Laërtius, i. 88</ref>
Bias said that one should have "piety in fear", reflecting the common belief that fearing the gods was respectful.Template:Sfn Diogenes Laertius reported that Bias said one should admit the existence of gods and credit them for one's good actions.<ref name="i88" />
Bias believed that one should be cautious in making a decision and commit to it once it is made.Template:Sfn Diogenes Laertius said that Bias considered it a sign of madness when one was too quick to speak.<ref name="i87" />
LegacyEdit
Bias's belief that most men are bad earned him the praise of Heraclitus, who considered him the greatest of the Seven Sages.Template:Sfn Bias was the one exception to Heraclitus's scorn of his predecessors.Template:Sfn Theophrastus and Satyrus the Peripatetic similarly considered Bias to be the greatest of the Seven Sages.Template:Sfn Bias's beliefs on the temporary nature of friendship and enmity was referenced by Sophocles in his play Ajax; the character Ajax the Great says that emotional relations should instead be absolute commitments, and that death is the only way to escape their impermanence.Template:Sfn
Bias was famous in Priene, and it established a heroic cult around him following his death.Template:Sfn The city erected a heroon in his honour, and it minted coins in the second century BC depicting him with his tripod.Template:Sfn Diogenes Laertius included Bias in his Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, which is where most information about Bias has been preserved for modern study.Template:Sfn He said that Demodocus of Leros and Hipponax both used Bias as an example of one who mastered pleading cases.<ref>Diogenes Laërtius, i. 84</ref>
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
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