Demetrius of Phalerum Muses about
Theory & Practice

Discovered & Translated by Rabbi Ben Scolnic
Edited by Altay Coskun

 

It is both tempting and challenging to put your well-considered plans into practice: Do others give you a chance to rule, manage, or create something big that you have been preparing for? Have you taken the many needs and difficulties into account or reckoned with diverging interest or lack of patience among your fellow citizens? Do you have enough stamina to take things to completion? Have you got the ability to see the shortcomings of your first attempts and make adjustments?

The philosopher Demetrius ‘Phalereus’ spent a good chunk of time musing about these questions, but never gained credit for this. He hailed from the Athenian district of Phalerum and was a promising student of Theophrastus, the second leader of the Peripatos (the ‘Walk-Around’), the school that Aristotle had founded nearby the Temple of Apollo Lycius, whence it was also called the Lyceum. After the many reversals that Greece underwent following the death of Alexander the ‘Great’, the Macedonian ruler Cassander put Demetrius at the head of the Athenian state quite unexpectedly (317 BCE). Was he up to the job? Did he have enough trust in himself?

In his endless quest for political inspiration, Ben found hitherto unknown personal notes, which he assembled and translated for us.