An alleged student of Antisthenes, Diogenes maintains his teacher’s asceticism and emphasis on ethics, but brings to these philosophical positions a dynamism and sense of humor unrivaled in the history of philosophy. " The most illustrious of the Cynic philosophers, Diogenes of Sinope serves as the template for the Cynic sage in antiquity. It is through their practices, the selves and lives that they cultivated, that we come to know the particular Cynic ēthos." The tradition records the tenets of Cynicism via their lives. The evidence regarding the Cynics is limited to apothegms, aphorisms, and ancient hearsay none of the many Cynic texts have survived. The triumph of the Cynic as a philosophical and literary character complicates discussions of the historical individuals, a complication further troubled by a lack of sources. The colorfulness of the Cynic way of life presents certain problems. Though they often suggest that they have discovered the quickest, and perhaps surest, path to the virtuous life, they recognize the difficulty of this route. The Cynics, as well as the Stoics who followed them, characterize the Cynic way of life as a “shortcut to virtue” (see Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, Book 6, Chapter 104 and Book 7, Chapter 122). As such askēsis-a Greek word meaning a kind of training of the self or practice-is fundamental. Their primary interests are ethical, but they conceive of ethics more as a way of living than as a doctrine in need of explication. To call the Cynics a “school” though, immediately raises a difficulty for so unconventional and anti-theoretical a group. "Cynicism originates in the philosophical schools of ancient Greece that claim a Socratic lineage.
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