Page from Aristotle's On Youth and Age
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Found in the coffin of Antigonus Gonatus in the dungeon at Aegae.
ix. On Youth and Age The old, through having lived for many years and having been so often deceived and having made so many mistakes themselves and since most things turn out badly, assert nothing with certainty and all things with less assurance than is needed. And they "think," but do not "know" anything. And being doubtful they always add perhaps and maybe and say everything that way, but nothing definitively. And they are cynical, for a cynical disposition supposes everything is for the worse. Further, they are suspicious because of distrust and distrustful because of experience. And for this reason they neither love nor hate strongly but, following the advice of Bias, they love as if they would one day hate and hate as if they would one day love. And they are small minded because of being worn down by life; for they desire nothing great or unusual but things necessary for life. And they are stingy; for one of the necessities is money, and they know from experience that it is difficult to acquire and easy to lose. And they are cowardly and fearful ahead of time about everything for their disposition is the opposite of the young, for the old are chilled, but the young are hot, so old age has prepared the way for cowardice; for fear is a kind of chilling. And they are fond of life and more so in their last day because of the presence of desire of what is gone, and people most desire what they lack. And they are fonder of themselves than is right; for this is also a form of small-mindedness. And they live for what is advantageous, and not for what is glorious, more than is right, through being fond of themselves. (The advantageous is good for the individual, the glorious absolutely). And they are more shameless than sensitive to shame; for since they do not care equally about what is fine and what is advantageous, they think little of their reputation. And they expect the worst, through experience-the greater part of things that happen are bad; at least most turn out for the worse - and through their cowardice, too. And they live in memory more than in hope; for what is left of life is short, what is past is long, and hope is for the future, memory for what is gone. This is the cause of their garrulity; for they keep talking about things that have passed; for they take pleasure in reminiscence, and the tedious enumeration of the glories of the past, like Nestor; as though we were all Epigone and theirs, furthermore, was the time of Chronos. And yet age, by sheer accumulation of experience, can also produce wisdom, which is the attainment of knowledge; for a storehouse that is stocked constantly over the years will have a water store on which to call in lean times than a warehouse that, however actively filled, has, only been in the process of filling for a very few. And what is said of individuals is also true of peoples; for is it not the case that the Egyptians, who are the oldest people in the world, are also as enfeebled and superstitious and jealous as old men? And yet also the wisest. And the Persians, who are also very ancient, are also both enfeebled and wise. Much has been learned from these barbarians, for writing was invented on the shores of Persia, and astronomy in Egypt; and perchance much may still be learned. Nectanebos taught the symbols of calculation used for the convenience of mathematicians from ancient times in Egypt -the cross for addition, the line for subtraction, the little star for multiplication, the roasting spit for division, and the parallel lines for equality, for nothing can be more equal than two parallel lines - and these may indeed be of use to our mathematicians, being more precise than out own notation. Some say Nectanebos himself invented these symbols, for his own use, and then passed them on, but our reasoning above proves this not to be the case, for the Egyptians are now too enfeebled by their own age to contrive new things, and only live through the reflected glory of their past, when they were still young and vigorous. It is this youth and vigor that is Greece's special province, for it contrasts splendidly with the senescent languor of Egypt, or Asia, or the Getae, and with the immaturity of the Hyperboreans, whose infancy precluded their producing any manner of wisdom, such that even their great sage Ikulu, as she admits, needed to travel to Greece to understand what she learned, partially formed and imperfectly grasped, in the North.