Man’s ways are chance and not sagacity. From Chaeremon: Nauck, Trag. Graec. Frag. p. 782. Cf. Cicero, Tusculan Disputations , v. 9 (25). Is it true also that man’s ways are not justice either, or equality, or self-control, or decorum, but was it the result of chance and because of chance that Aristeides Cf. Plutarch’s Life of Aristides , chap. xxv. (p. 334 B). persevered in his poverty when he could have made himself master of great wealth, and that Scipio, Cf. Plutarch’s Moralia 200 B. having captured Carthage, neither took nor saw any of the spoil? Was it the result of chance and because of chance that Philocrates, Demosthenes, Or. xix. ( De falsa legatione ), 229 (p. 412). The money was the price of treason according to Demosthenes. having received money from Philip, proceeded to spend it on trulls and trout, and was it due to chance that Lasthenes and Euthycrates lost Olynthus, measuring happiness by their bellies and the most shameless deeds ? Demosthenes, Or. xviii. ( De corona ), 296 (p. 324). These men also Demosthenes puts in his list of traitors. Was it the result of chance that Alexander, Cf. Plutarch’s Life of Alexander , chap. xxi. (p. 676 B ff.). the son of Philip, forbore to touch the captive women himself and punished those who offered them insult, and, on the other hand, was it because the Alexander who was the son of Priam yielded to the dictates of an evil genius or of chance that he lay with the wife of his host, and by her abduction filled two of our three continents with war and woes? For if these things happen because of chance, what is to hinder our saying that cats, goats, and apes because of chance are given over to greediness, lustfulness, and mischievous tricks? If self-control, justice, and bravery exist, how is it possible to reason that intelligence does not exist; and if intelligence exists, must not sagacity exist also? For self-control is a kind of intelligence, they say, and justice requires the presence of intelligence. Cf. Moralia , 441 A and 1034 C. Or rather, that particular sagacity and intelligence which render men virtuous in the midst of pleasures we call continence and self-control, in perils and labours we call it perseverance and fortitude, in private dealings and in public life we call it equity and justice. Wherefore, if we impute the works of sagacity to chance, let the works of justice and of self-control be also ascribed to chance, and, by Heaven, let thieving, stealing purses, and licentious living all be ascribed to chance, and let us abandon all our reasoning processes and resign ourselves to chance, to be driven and carried, as dust or rubbish by a violent wind, hither and thither. If, then, sagacity does not exist, it is a fair inference that there can be no sagacious planning about what is to be done, and no consideration or searching for what is to the best advantage, but Sophocles Oedipus Tyrannus , 110. indulged in idle talk when he said: Whatever is pursued May be achieved; neglected it escapes; and so too in another place where he tries to distinguish different classes of actions: What can be taught I learn; what can be found I seek; but God I ask to answer prayer. From an unknown play of Sophocles; Nauck, Trag. Graec. Frag. , Sophocles, No. 759. For what is there which can be found out or learned by mankind if the issue of all things is determined by chance? And what deliberative assembly of a State can there be which is not abolished, or advisory council of a king which is not dissolved, if all things are under the dominion of chance, which we reproach for being blind because we, like blind men, stumble against it? Cf. Kock. Com. Att. Frag. iii. p. 121, Menander, No. 417. How can we help doing so when we pluck out sagacity, as it were our own eyes, and take as our guide in life a blind leader?