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Stoicism: Finding the courage to live a better life by STEVEN GAMBARDELLA/ “The happiness of your life He was victorious

as victorious in all the wars he fought, but the price of victory was high: legions returning from Parthia
depends upon the quality of your thoughts” — Marcus Aurelius brought a plague with them that devastated the Empire’s population and may have killed his co-ruler.

The ancient philosophy of Stoicism is wildly popular at the moment. Long dead Stoic thinkers such as Meditations
Marcus Aurelius and Seneca the Younger have become best selling authors. is is largely thanks to the self- His personal notes, which went on to be published as e Meditations of Marcus Aurelius, have a marked
help industry, which has rediscovered and repackaged Stoicism as a kind of self-help philosophy. melancholy about them. e philosopher was a reluctant emperor, weary of conflict, and sought solace in
This repackaging is partly the reason why Stoicism is one of the most misunderstood and abused his own thoughts as Stoics believed they should.
philosophical schools. His writings were intended to be private and so his ideas are stripped of the philosophic context from which
Stoicism is often sold to us as a philosophy for “action”, for busy people who don’t have the time to they derive. Aurelius was not forming any arguments or theories, and therefore didn’t need to reference
contemplate over philosophical puzzles about life. the philosophers that came before him in any depth. He was simply journaling
Selectively quoting Seneca the Younger, Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus out of context would give anybody his philosophic thoughts.
the strong impression that that is the case. Marcus Aurelius is far too often quoted out of context. Pithy motivational statements are intellectual junk
In some ways “Stoicism”, as it is preached by many of its new adherents, is the new sophistry: a way of food. Aurelius was rigorously schooled in Stoic philosophy, and as a bone fide philosopher the emperor
actually avoiding contemplation and hard thinking. A “philosophy for action”, as well as being a deserves better.
contradiction in terms, is one that takes things for granted, that rests on given assumptions. His tutor Fronto wrote to Marcus, “it is better never to have touched the teaching of philosophy…than to
have tasted it superficially, with the edge of the lips.” The destined emperor took the tutor’s advice and
A System of Thought fully embraced the stoic philosophy until his death.

Stoicism informs action in its ethical guise, but is far more than an ethical philosophy. e Stoic thinkers of Marcus Aurelius’s philosophy in ten quotations
ancient Greece developed a theory of the universe, a physics, a system of logic, and a theory of reality that Below I have taken a “top 10” of Marcus Aurelius quotes and placed them in the context of stoic philosophy.
the ethics of stoicism simply derive from. The very basis of Stoicism is to not take things for granted, but to Accompanying each quote is a short expansion that will lay out the basic tenets of stoic philosophy in a
contemplate the very nature of our being. careful sequential order. These expansions will give you a better explanation on how the quotes could help
At the heart of Stoicism, like most other schools of philosophy, is the warm embrace of contemplation. For you contemplate life.
that reason their intellectual contribution to the ancient world was immense. The ultimate lesson of
Stoicism is this: to live a fulfilling life is to ask yourself difficult questions about what it is to be a human 1. The unity of all things
being. e Stoics prized reason above all else and reason requires discipline. “All things are linked with one another, and this oneness is sacred”
It is often said that philosophy is the attempt to answer the question “how should I live?” To attempt to The oneness of the universe is an ancient idea in philosophy. This is called “monism”.
answer that question requires coming up with a reasonable understanding of the world and your relation
to it. Monism is the belief that there is ultimately one substance which manifests in a plurality of appearances
It’s not necessarily about finding an “ultimate truth”, it’s about finding traction to walk with when so many (like fire, water, earth and flesh). Most stoics believed the one substance was God. Aurelius wrote: “there
other people are slipping around. is one substance and one law, namely, common reason in all thinking creatures, and all truth is one if, as
Knowing yourself and your place in the world will allow you to consider how you should live and make sure we believe, there is only one path of perfection for all beings who share the same mind.”
you are living up to the values that you set for yourself. Since God is in everything and not separated from us — there is no realm higher than nature, and God is
Meditation experts often give the following advice: if you’re “too busy” to meditate for ten minutes a day, all-pervading in nature — one should act in accordance with nature to be close to God.
you should meditate for an hour a day. Notable proponents of the idea of monism include Parmenides (c. 500 BC)
is is true of contemplation too. If you are too busy to contemplate life, you’re distracting yourself from and Baruch Spinoza (17th century). Zeno of Elias, a follower of Parmenides, attempted to demonstrate the
your life, you need to contemplate more. As Marcus Aurelius wrote: “the happiness of your life depends oneness of things with his famous paradoxes.
upon the quality of your thoughts.” Like everything in life, quality thoughts do not come
easy. 2. Everything is predetermined
Under the tutorship of Diognetus and Junius Rusticus, Marcus Aurelius embraced the asceticism of the
philosophic way of life. As a boy he wore a “rough” cloak and would sleep on the floor. He wrote that his “Everything that happens happens as it should, and if you observe
mother taught him “religious piety, simplicity in diet” and keeping clear of the “ways of the rich.” carefully, you will find this to be so.”
Marcus shared power for a while with Lucius Verus, his adoptive brother. e two inherited an empire at a If the universe comprises of different aspects of a divine one, then everything must be perfect. If everything
very troubled time in its history. Huge migrations of people began to put pressure on the Roman borders, is perfect, then everything can be no other way.
and Rome had become embroiled in several long wars with the Parthian Empire and several Germanic tribes The stoics believed that all events are predetermined (this is called “determinism” in philosophy) and that
in the north for Marcus’s entire reign. you have either no control or very little control over circumstances. Everything is fated. Many stoics
believed in divination (fortune-telling) methods such as astrology and lots (the ancient equivalent of tarot Since there are only perspectives that are more or less true (and never fully true), there can be no definitive
cards) since everything, no matter how seemingly insignificant, is interconnected in fate. judgement. Stoicism does not promise perfect knowledge. If there is no higher authority than reason and
nature is governed by reason, then no man can possess infallibility, not even the Roman emperor himself.
3. You have power over your mind, but not events. This comes down to the difference between intelligence and wisdom: the truly wise man knows the limits
“You have power over your mind — not outside events. Realize this, and of his intelligence.
you will find strength.”
You may not be able to change the course of events, but you do, however, have control over your own 7. Be virtuous in action, not in theory
thoughts and emotions. is is how stoicism is strongly associated with equanimity: things can go badly, but
we can control our response. To simply know this is to find mental strength. Mental strength is what the “Waste no more time arguing what a good man should be. Be one.”
stoics are famous for. Tragedy and life’s ups and downs are met with calm and dignity. The philosopher king is endorsing virtue ethics, the idea that good conduct emanates from good character.
Marcus Aurelius lost two infant children. In an extraordinary passage of Meditations, he wrote: “One man ere are two other major ethical formulae: “consequentialist” ethics: the theory that the best actions are
prays: ‘How I may not lose my little child’, but you must pray: ‘How I may not be afraid to lose him’.” those with the best outcomes, and “deontological” — or duty — ethics: that virtue resides only in the act
The difference between the stoic and the common man is in this example; the common man prays that he itself, not the consequences of the act.
is spared of misfortune, the stoic prays that he can find the strength to accept misfortune. The difference between these two is that the former would allow you to tell a “white lie” if you knew that
British public schools taught stoicism as part of a classical education and it is widely thought responsible for good would come of it, the latter position would argue that all lies are intrinsically bad and you should not
the famous British “stiff upper lip” — a sense of equanimity in tough, even tragic, circumstances. tell a lie regardless of the consequences.
Whereas consequentialism is guided by expected outcomes, and deontological ethics by principles, they
4. The impediment is the way are imperfect since they rely on our imperfect perspectives. Virtue ethics relies not on principles but on
“The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way character. The Stoic philosopher Epictetus argued that if you were to live in accordance with nature, you
becomes the way.” would act appropriately; there would be no need to either guess the consequences of your actions, nor
Since everything was determined — “everything that happens happens as it should” — you could not do learn rules to guide them.
anything about the obstacles you may face.
Instead the mind can only find an opportunity in the obstacle, because the mind is all that we truly have 8. You are what you think
control over.
The full quote is as follows: “Our actions may be impeded, but there can be no impeding our intentions or “The things you think about determine the quality of your mind. Your soul takes on the color of your
dispositions. Because we can accommodate and adapt. e mind adapts and converts to its own purposes thoughts.”
the obstacle to our acting. The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the If ethics lie in virtuous character, then how we conduct ourselves ultimately comes down to thought and
way becomes the way.” (My emphasis). reason. Emotions for the stoics are judgements and therefore cognitive. Greed, for example, is a false
In this respect Stoicism is a kind of alchemy of fate: problems and mistakes become golden lessons, judgement about the intrinsic value of money or possessions. Since the way of the stoic is to live in
tragedies can become opportunities for spiritual growth. accordance with nature, reason must be prized above all else, since the universe is governed by the laws of
reason.
5. There is no single truth we can know, only perspectives
“Everything we hear is an opinion, not a fact. Everything we see is a 9. The eternal meaning of our lives
perspective, not the truth.” “What we do in life ripples in eternity.”
The universe is perfect and true, but we are but one fragment of the whole so therefore cannot fully know So far we’ve learned that Marcus Aurelius and the stoics believed that the universe is God: it is perfect, true
that perfection and truth. Here Aurelius is practicing “perspectivism”, another ancient and common thread and eternal (what is perfect must be eternal). We are a part of the universe and what we do in our lives is
in philosophy that rejects the idea that we can access an ultimate truth. part of that eternity.
Unlike “relativism”, which sees no truth in the world whatsoever, perspectivism does not discount the idea People often evoke the enormity of the universe to show how tiny and inconsequential our lives are: just a
of truth. However, our understanding of things is flawed and socially mediated in a way that we cannot speck of dust. In a massive universe with a long lifespan that may be true. However, these people are
fully access the truth. Every opinion is a perspective that is to a greater or lesser extent close to the truth, discounting infinity. In an infinite universe our thoughts and actions take on na enormous significance since
but not the perfect truth. they are part of an infinite chain.

6. There is no, and there can be no, infallible human being 10. Contemplation will give you a happy life
“…the infallible man does not exist.” “The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts”
We should not shirk the complexity of the world we live in or the complexity of ourselves. If we
contemplate, we too can be free of emotional turmoil, spiritual weariness and muddled thinking.It takes
time and courage to contemplate. If we are blessed with the former, we should embrace the latter.

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