Dictionary Definition
banausic adj : (formal) ordinary and not refined;
"he felt contempt for all banausic occupations"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek βαναυσικός (banausikos) ‘of or for mechanics’, from βάναυσος (banausos) ‘mechanical, ironsmith’, from βαύνος (baunos) ‘furnace, forge’.Pronunciation
/bəˈnɔ:sɪk/Adjective
- Mechanical; materialistic, uncultured.
Quotations
- 1957: Lawrence
Durrell, Justine, Faber, page 67
- who almost by mistake pierced the hard banausic shell of Alexandria
- 2003: Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason, Penguin 2004, page 456
- 2007, The Times
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/court_and_social/modern_manners/article1726275.ece
- You could fake philosophical unconcern, implying that such banausic matters are best left to your estate agent and factor: “I quite forget: my people look after such things.”
Extensive Definition
Banausos (Ancient
Greek , plural , banausoi) is an epithet of the class of
manual
laborers or artisans
in Ancient
Greece. The related abstract
noun – banausia is defined by Hesychius
as "every craft () [conducted] by means of fire", reflecting the
folk
etymology of the word as coming from (baunos) "furnace" and
(auō) "to dry". The actual etymology of the words is unknown; they
are not attested outside Attic-Ionic
or before the 5th
Century B.C.. The epic heroes call their smiths
– dēmiourgoi.
Athenian usage
The use of banausos follows an economic transition in Greece: the use of coinage, the invention of the trireme and of hoplite armor, the prevalence of chattel slavery permitted the rise of a new hoplite class, who used the term to divide themselves from the artisans.Banausos was used as a term of invective, meaning
"cramped in body" (Politics 1341 a 7) and "vulgar in taste" (1337 b
7), by the extreme oligarchs in Athens in the 5th
century BC, who were led by Critias. These were
the Laconophiles
who yearned for the good old times when there was none of this
"equality" nonsense, and you could beat your neighbor's slave in
the street (see Ps.-Xenophon:
Constitution of Athens). In this usage, it refers to the laboring
class as a whole; i.e. the artisans, such as potters, stone
masons, carpenters, etc; professional singers; artists; musicians;
and all persons engaged in trade or retail. It makes no distinction
between slave or free. These extreme oligarchs were opposed both to
the moderate oligarchs, such as Theramenes; and
to the democrats, such
as Pericles, Cleon, and Thrasybulus.
They held power at Athens for less than a year, with the assistance
of a Spartan army; and, because of their use of exile, purges,
midnight arrests, and judicial murder, are remembered as the
Thirty
Tyrants. But while they vanished from the political scene, the
word remained.
Philosophers
Plato, the philosopher, was Critias's nephew, and used banausos in much the same sense; although in the Republic he preferred the installation of philosophers, such as himself, above the hoplites, who were in turn above the artisan. It was also current among the first generation of his pupils, such as Aristotle, who writes, "Those who provide necessaries for an individual are slaves, and those who provide them for society are handicraftsmen and day-laborers."Plato further held that commerce had a corrupting
influence in communities and acquisition of wealth destroyed their
– homonoia
(like-mindedness) and was the principal cause of – stasis
(faction). He also held that "merchants and craftsmen would be less
willing to defend the civic territory than farmers would" and
commerce and mercantilism had a morally corrupting influence.
Plato was concerned with the "best" state, which
requires citizens who are the best and because they possess
arete.
This is in contrast to the attitude, cited by Heraclitus: "We
will have none best among us; if any among us would be the best,
let him be so elsewhere and among others."
Plato argued, and Aristotle follows him in this,
although not in other things, that the pursuit of arete required
leisure. Technical education was necessary but did not make good
citizens. Leisure was a necessity of good citizenship something the
banausoi do not have. Banausia deforms the body rendering it
useless for military and political duties. Those occupations tire
out the body and therefore the mind preventing self education by
reading and conversing with others. "It accustoms a man's mind to
low ideas, and absorbs him in the pursuit of the mere means of
life."
Plato and Aristotle teach that the highest thing
in man is reason and therefore, the purpose of human perfection
lies with the activity of reason; i.e. the 'theoretic' or
contemplative life. Trade, industry and mechanical labour prevent
this idea. These activities are necessary for a good human
condition of life but when these activities are merely regarded as
means to making money and not as acts of service to truth, service
to others and arete, then these, occupations become base.
After the time of Alexander
the Great, however, philosophers largely avoided practical
politics. Thereafter banausos mostly appears in glossaries to Plato
and Aristotle.
Later philosophic schools had different politics.
For example Cassius Dio
defined democracy:(dēmocrateía) thus: "when every man gets the
honor that is his due."
Revivals
It has been conjectured that the Elizabethan use of "mechanical" (as in e.g. Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream) is a translation of banausos. This is certainly possible — the earliest recorded use of "mechanical" (OED s.v.) is from John Lyly, who used a linguistic style with many influences from Greek.Banausos (or rather – banausikos) has
also been adapted into English, as the rare word banausic; both as
a term of abuse, and to represent Greek usage. "Banausic" is not
found before 1845, with the
Victorian revival of classical learning.
One of the contributions of classical philology to the Kultur-movement in
Wilhelmine and
post-Wilhelmine Germany was the use
of banausisch as an insult — along with the myths that the German Soul is
essentially Greek, that the ancient Greeks were blond, and that the
modern Greeks are not descended from them. Today in German Banause
is used to mean an uncouth person indifferent to high culture, like
English philistine.
These ideas have become less accepted since WWII,
but they were occasionally reflected in the English-speaking world.
For example, Edith
Hamilton ingenuously accepted them as the best scholarship of
her schooldays. Again, a junior colleague of Sir Gilbert
Murray permitted himself (in 1935) the following, which goes
well beyond Greek usage:
- ''The aim of a journalist may either be to enlarge the circulation of a paper or to give his readers a true and intelligent picture of the world; of a lawyer either to extend his practice or to help justice be done; of a business man either to grow rich or to play his part as a 'nurse' of the community. These alternatives are not exclusive. But where the former predominates, the amount of arete generated will be small, and journalists, lawyers and industrialists will be banausoi rather than men.
Bibliography
- Chap II, "Opinions, Passions, and Interests", Republics, Ancient and Modern, Vol. I, Paul A. Rahe, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill and London, 1992.
- The People of Aristophanes, Victor Ehrenberg, New York, 1962. pp 113–146.
- Greek Popular Morality in the Time of Plato and Aristotle, Kenneth J. Dover, Oxford, 1974. pp 39–41; 172–174.
- "L'idée de travail dans la Grèce archaïque", André Aymard, Journal de psychologie 41, 1948. pp 29–45.
- "Hiérarchie du travail et autarcie individuelle", André Aymard, Études d'histoire ancienne, Paris, 1967. pp 316–333.
- "Work and Nature in Ancient Greece", Jean-Pierre Vernant, Myth and Thought among the Greeks, London, 1983. pp 248–270.
Commentary works
- "Humanism in Politics and Economics", Greek Ideals and Modern Life'', Sir R. W. Livingstone, Martin Classical Lectures, Vol. V, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA., 1935.
External links
- Globalism or an individual revolution with the term "banausic used.
- Classical and Hellenistic Greece see chapter by Sarah B. Pomeroy.
- The Economy of Ancient Greece
- Dictionary of Philosophy the entry "banausic".
banausic in German: Banause
banausic in Hebrew: באנאוסוי