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Silenus
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==Wisdom== <!-- Linked from 'Antinatalism'--> A theme in Greek philosophy and literature is the wisdom of Silenus, which posits an [[antinatalist]] philosophy: <blockquote>You, most blessed and happiest among humans, may well consider those blessed and happiest who have departed this life before you, and thus you may consider it unlawful, indeed blasphemous, to speak anything ill or false of them, since they now have been transformed into a better and more refined nature. This thought is indeed so old that the one who first uttered it is no longer known; it has been passed down to us from eternity, and hence doubtless it is true. Moreover, you know what is so often said and passes for a trite expression. What is that, he asked? He answered: It is best not to be born at all; and next to that, it is better to die than to live; and this is confirmed even by divine testimony. Pertinently to this they say that Midas, after hunting, asked his captive Silenus somewhat urgently, what was the most desirable thing among humankind. At first he could offer no response, and was obstinately silent. At length, when Midas would not stop plaguing him, he erupted with these words, though very unwillingly: 'you, seed of an evil genius and precarious offspring of hard fortune, whose life is but for a day, why do you compel me to tell you those things of which it is better you should remain ignorant? For he lives with the least worry who knows not his misfortune; but for humans, the best for them is not to be born at all, not to partake of nature's excellence; not to be is best, for both sexes. This should be our choice, if choice we have; and the next to this is, when we are born, to die as soon as we can.' It is plain therefore, that he declared the condition of the dead to be better than that of the living. : β Aristotle, ''Eudemus'' (354 BCE), surviving fragment quoted in Plutarch, ''Moralia. Consolatio ad Apollonium'', sec. xxvii (1st century CE) (S. H. transl.)</blockquote> This passage is redolent of [[Theognis]]' ''Elegies'' (425β428). Silenus' wisdom appears in the writings of [[Arthur Schopenhauer]], who endorsed this famous dictum. Via Schopenhauer, Nietzsche discusses the "wisdom of Silenus" in ''[[The Birth of Tragedy]]''. Both [[Socrates]] and [[Aesop]] were sometimes described as having a physical appearance like that of Silenus, with broad flat faces and fat bellies.<ref>Ulrike Egelhauf-Gaiser, "The Gleaming Pate of the ''Pastophoros'': Masquerade or Embodied Lifestyle?", in: ''Aspects of Apuleius' Golden Ass, III'' (Brill, 2012), p. 59, citing passages in [[Plato]] and [[Xenophon]].</ref> <gallery mode="packed" heights="180" caption="Drunken Silenus, from ancient to modern times"> File:Drunk papposilenus Louvre CA6530.jpg|Drunk papposilenus supported by two young men, Etruscan red-figure stamnos from Vulci, {{circa|300 BC}} ([[Louvre]]) File:Antalya Museum - Sarkophag 7c Silen.jpg|Silenus detail from a [[Roman sarcophagus|Roman-era marble sarcophagus]], 2nd century AD ([[Antalya Museum]]) File:Museum El Jem - Mosaic Silen with ass - Detail 1.jpg|Silenus carried toward his donkey ([[Roman mosaic|mosaic]] from [[Africa (Roman province)|Roman Africa]], present-day [[Tunisia]]) Pomponio Amidano - Drunken Silenus on an Ass.jpg|[[Pomponio Amidano]]: ''Drunken Silenus on an Ass'', {{circa|1600}} ([[Blanton Museum of Art]], [[Austin, Texas|Austin]]) Peter Paul Rubens - The Drunken Silenus - WGA20297.jpg|Peter Paul Rubens: ''The Drunken Silenus'', {{circa|1616}} ([[Alte Pinakothek]], [[Munich]]) </gallery>
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