Fresco from the Villa di Livia. Source: Lo Dolce Lume |
“the Gods exist … but they are not as the majority think them to be … For the assertions of the many [in 4th/3rd century BCE Athens] concerning the Gods are conceptions grounded … in false assumptions [O’Connor (trans), The Essential Epicurus, Prometheus Books at 62-63].”
In the same letter Epicurus goes on to argue
that the best kind of man “keeps a reverent opinion about the Gods, and is
altogether fearless of death and has reasoned out the end of nature” (ibid at
67). What is radical, and must have been profoundly radical in the ancient
world, is the affirmation in the Principle
Doctrines of Epicurus that a God is “free from trouble nor does it cause
trouble for anyone else; therefore it is not constrained either by anger or by
favour” (ibid at 69). However this is not to say that worship of the Gods is
therefore useless, for it is known that Epicurus and his followers in fact did worship
the Gods, but not in a greedy, grasping way, but rather as an act of reverence
for beings who exhibit “the ultimate beatitude” (Urmson & Ree (Ed), The Concise Encyclopedia of Western
Philosophy and Philosophers, Routledge at 93). The hope and belief was that
by doing so we can become Gods ourselves, for to live according to Epicureanism
is to “live as a God among men” (Epicurus, Letter
to Menoeceus).