The
Fall of Icarus (Lantern console, Utrecht, NL)
In my last blog, I
described how Idomeneo, King of Crete, opposed the will of a god and the forces
of the cosmic order in order to save his son’s life. I explained that Idomeneo’s
behaviour exemplifies the behaviour of the present world leaders, especially
the older ones, who, like Idomeneo, ignore the obligations imposed on them by
the human and cosmic order. After having written this blog, I realized that the
ancient Greeks had a word for such behaviour: Hubris (also hybris; Greek: ὕβρις).
It was one of the biggest crimes that a Greek citizen could commit. In Athens,
you could be severely punished for it. But what actually is hubris?
At school, I learned that it had to be translated as overconfidence or haughtiness.
However, I was told that it was a complex, much wider concept. And indeed, it
is. Not only has hubris a much wider meaning than just overconfidence or haughtiness,
but it’s meaning changed also through the ages. “In ancient times”, so Britannica, it meant “the
intentional use of violence to humiliate or degrade. The word’s connotation
changed over time, and hubris came to be defined as overweening presumption
that leads a person to disregard the divinely fixed limits on human action in
an ordered cosmos.” (my italics)
Hubris was often seen as extremely arrogant behaviour towards other persons,
for example by Aristotle in his Rhetorics
1378b. However, I think that disregarding the cosmic order is at least so
important as the personal aspect, if not the most important aspect, of hubris.
But the personal aspect doesn’t need to exclude the cosmic aspect. Actually,
the former is a manifestation of the latter, and that’s why it was considered a
crime. Indeed, “some poets—especially Hesiod (7th century BCE) and Aeschylus
(5th century BCE)—used hubris to describe wrongful action against the
divine order”, so Britannica.
However, as Sjoerd van
Hoorn explains, hubris isn’t only a violation of the divine or cosmic order
as such, it is also a psychic attitude. For Pindar and Theognis (Greek poets, 6th
century BCE) hybrid was a psychic concept. “Hybris is … an excess of
confidence or too great a happiness that does not suit a person … A human who
possesses practical wisdom is one who keeps measure, while immoderation
can end in crime on the one hand, but on the other hand it can amount to what
we still refer to in Dutch as ‘request the gods’ [= tempting fate], act in such
a way that you ask for problems, as it were”, so van Hoorn (my italics)
Above I have explained that hubris is a complex, wide concept that, through the
ages, had different meanings for the ancient Greeks, or at least different
connotations. Nevertheless, I think that we can say that the concept of hubris
has the following characteristics:
- Arrogant behaviour and contempt for the other, accompanied by humiliation,
insolence, and the like.
- Violation of the human, divine and cosmic order; if not disrespect for this
order. Instead of divine and cosmic order, most of us today would say the
natural order. The human order includes the legal order.