Letter 118: 1. You have sent suddenly upon me a countless multitude of questions, by which you must have purposed to blockade me on every side, or rather bury me completely, even if you were under the impression that I was otherwise unoccupied and at leisure; for how could I, even though wholly at leisure, furnish the solution of so many questions to one in...

Augustine of HippoDioscorus|c. 405 AD|augustine hippo
arianismchristologydonatismeducation booksfamine plaguefriendshipgrief deathillnessimperial politicspapal authorityproperty economicstravel mobilitywomen
Theological controversy; Church council; Persecution or exile

Augustine to Dioscorus, greetings.

You have sent me a list of questions drawn from Cicero's dialogues — philosophical puzzles about perception, knowledge, the nature of the gods, and the foundations of human reasoning. You want my answers as a Christian philosopher.

I will give you what I can, but I must begin with a warning: the questions of the pagan philosophers are not always as profound as they appear. Sometimes a question that seems unanswerable is simply badly framed. And sometimes the best answer is not a counter-argument but a redirection — not "here is the solution to your puzzle" but "here is why your puzzle does not matter as much as you think it does."

That said, I take philosophy seriously. I was trained in it. I taught it. And I believe that the best of pagan philosophy — Plato above all — was a preparation for the Gospel, even if the philosophers themselves did not know it. "Whatever things are true" — even when said by a pagan — "are true by the gift of God."

Your questions about sense perception: the Academic skeptics argued that nothing perceived by the senses can be trusted, because the senses sometimes deceive us. Dreams seem real while we dream them. A stick appears bent in water. Therefore — the skeptics concluded — we can never be certain of anything.

This is clever, but it collapses under its own weight. If nothing can be known, then the skeptics cannot know that nothing can be known. Their position is self-refuting. More importantly: the fact that the senses sometimes deceive does not mean they always deceive. The cure for occasional error is not universal doubt but careful judgment.

As for the nature of the gods: Cicero's characters debate endlessly about whether the gods care about human affairs. The Christian answer cuts through the debate entirely: there is one God, and he not only cares about human affairs — he entered into them. He became a man. He suffered. He died. He rose. The pagan gods sit on Olympus and play games with mortals. Our God walked among mortals and let them nail him to a cross.

I will continue working through your remaining questions, but I want to leave you with this: philosophy is a good servant and a terrible master. When it serves the truth, it sharpens the mind and clears the path. When it becomes an end in itself — when the intellectual pleasure of the puzzle replaces the desire for the truth the puzzle points toward — it becomes an obstacle to wisdom rather than a road to it.

Seek truth, Dioscorus. Not cleverness. The clever perish with their cleverness. The truth endures forever.

Farewell.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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