Adrian Murdoch, 'The Last Pagan'

Mar 17, 2012 22:30

I thoroughly recommend Adrian Murdoch's The Last Pagan, which arrived this morning. It's impossible not to love the young man who wrote:
"Some men have a passion for horses, others for birds, others again for wild beasts; but I, from childhood, have been infused with a passionate longing to acquire books";
That an Emperor should "behave toward the people and the magistrates like a citizen who obeys the laws, not like a king who is above the laws";
"The fabrication of the Galileans is a fiction of men."
And
Moreover, is it not excessively strange that God should deny to the human beings whom he had fashioned the power to distinguish between good and evil? What could be more foolish than a being unable to distinguish good from bad? For it is evident that he would not avoid the latter, I mean things evil, nor would he strive after the former, I mean things good. And, in short, God refused to let man taste of wisdom, than which there could be nothing of more value for man. For that the power to distinguish between good and less good is the property of wisdom is evident surely even to the witless; so that the serpent was a benefactor rather than a destroyer of the human race. Furthermore, their God must be called envious. For when he saw that man had attained to a share of wisdom, that he might not, God said, taste of the tree of life, he cast him out of the garden, saying in so many words, "Behold, Adam has become as one of us, because he knows good from bad; and now let him not put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life and eat and thus live forever." Accordingly, unless every one of these legends is a myth that involves some secret interpretation, as I indeed believe, they are filled with many blasphemous sayings about God. For in the first place to be ignorant that she who was created as a help meet would be the cause of the fall; secondly to refuse the knowledge of good and bad, which knowledge alone seems to give coherence to the mind of man; and lastly to be jealous lest man should take of the tree of life and from mortal become immortal, - this is to be grudging and envious overmuch.

julian ii, history, books, julian the philosopher, neo-platonism

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