Abstract

Introduction The Defence of Epicurus against Commonly Held Opinions was originally intended as an introduction to Quevedo's Stoic Doctrine (see Chapter 19). The earliest draft of the treatise consisted of little more than a string of quotations about Epicurus and Epicureanism taken from the works of the Roman Stoic Seneca. The sympathetic treatment accorded to Epicurus by Seneca formed the basis of Quevedo's view that the authentic principles of Epicureanism, as opposed to the slanderous misrepresentations of this philosophical system put forward by certain classical authors, were fundamentally the same as those of Senecan Stoicism. It was for this reason that Quevedo regarded a defence of Epicurus against his detractors as an appropriate way to introduce his detailed account of Stoic philosophy. In expanding the draft to its present state, Quevedo added material from a number of authorities – classical, Christian and contemporary – to the Senecan core of the treatise: Juvenal, Petronius, Diogenes Laertius, Sextus Empiricus, Jerome, Augustine, Francisco Sanchez de las Brozas and Michel de Montaigne are cited as witnesses for the defence by Quevedo. His purpose throughout is to undermine the ‘commonly held opinions’ about Epicurus and his sect which had circulated since antiquity and which had so damaged the reputation of his philosophy. He tackles the widely held view that Epicureans were shameless hedonists, single-mindedly devoted to bodily pleasures, by referring to the many testimonies to Epicurus's almost saintly abstemiousness and his incredible bravery in the face of painful illnesses.

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