The Philosopher Who Said No to Politics
Wes Cecil makes a claim that's almost impossible not to smile at: Epicurus is "in some ways the greatest philosopher ever because this is the entire collected works of epicurus right here." He's joking, but the point is real. What survives from ancient philosophy is staggeringly thin — and what we have from Epicurus is unusually complete. That rarity alone makes this piece worth your time.
The Survival Problem
Cecil walks through the archaeological luck that's kept Epicurus alive for us: Diogenes Laertius's compilation about 500 years after Epicurus's death, Vatican Library discoveries in the 1780s and 1850s, and "badly damaged texts" found outside Pompeii that might yield more translations in the next twenty years. This is the kind of intellectual history that feels like detective work — and Cecil tells it well.
The gap between when Epicurus lived (341–270 BC) and our first surviving writings about him is roughly 500 years. That alone explains why so much of what we know comes from secondhand sources.
He wants us to have no superstition at all. If you can achieve that, he thought, then we would have no fear.
This is the core of Epicurus's project: not hedonism in the modern sense, but "ataraxia" — tranquility, equity of mind and body, a joyous peacefulness. Cecil is careful to note this distinction several times, and it's well taken. When people accuse Epicurus of hedonism, what he's actually pursuing is "the pleasure of aderia" — meditative bliss, not indulgence.
The Garden Revolution
What makes this piece sing is the radicalism of Epicurus's social experiment. Cecil frames it as a direct assault on everything Athens represented:
"This ran counter to the entire belief system of Athenian way of life and in fact the whole Greek way of life — to be a citizen, to be a member of the civic organization, to work for serve the betterment of your community — this was the goal of life."
Epicurus said no. He set up his school in a garden — not a political meeting house, not a temple, not a public square. He invited women and slaves. "Good Lord," Cecil reacts, "now that is desperate" — and he's right. This is perhaps the earliest radical believer in human equality we have in recorded philosophy.
The rumors about orgies were immediate and persistent. Epicurus's response? "Sure, fine, whatever you guys think I don't care." Cecil captures this beautifully: invisibility was a feature, not a bug. You want a quiet group of friends away from the world.
The Anti-Political Philosopher
Cecil makes one of the piece's strongest points when he notes that even philosophers who disagreed with Epicurus "said nice things about him": "we think he's wrongheaded but what a hell of a guys he is we really like him." This is remarkable — genuine affection from intellectual opponents.
The natural philosophy side, Cecil admits, was "wrong" — every possible tenant of the foundation of science. But the ethical philosophy is where Epicurus's genius lives. The goal isn't pleasure as hedonism; it's tranquility understood as peaceful enjoyment:
This is what he's after — meditative bliss if you will.
Counterpoints
Critics might note that Cecil's enthusiasm sometimes overstates the case. Describing Epicurus as "the greatest philosopher ever" is a provocative hook, but it leans heavily on the survival of texts rather than their philosophical depth. The natural philosophy was wrong in ways that matter — and we shouldn't paper over that with enthusiasm.
Additionally, the claim about "no absolute transcendent souls" is presented as confident knowledge when it's actually what Epicurus argued. Readers should note this distinction: we're being told what he believed, not what's objectively true.
Bottom Line
Wes Cecil's piece succeeds because it finds genuine drama in a figure most people reduce to a lifestyle brand. The historical detail about women and slaves in philosophy schools is revelatory — and the argument that "politics is a recipe for bad adera" lands hard. The strongest thread is the connection between superstition, fear, and Epicurus's drive toward tranquility. What gets less attention is what we do with that insight today — but that's probably fine. Some conversations are worth starting, not finishing.