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THE STOIC Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius

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Page 1: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

THE STOIC

Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius

Page 2: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life of every man is short and yours is almost finished while you do not respect yourself but allow your happiness to depend upon……others.

Marcus Aurelius, Emperor of Rome

Page 3: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

Stoicism initially emerged as a reaction against the belief that pleasure is always good and pain is always bad or evil.

We can define Stoicism as the philosophy that counsels self-control, detachment and acceptance of one´s fate as identified by the objective use of reason.

Stoic is an individual who attemps to live according to Stoic doctrine.

Page 4: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

Rather than persuing pleasure and trying to avoid pain, the Stoics seek serenity (peace of mind) through self discipline.

Stoicism asserts that seeking anything but self control results in avoidable unhapiness, in Stoic view, happiness comes only through detachment of all externals. Everything is a matter of attitude. The disciplined, reasonable person can be happy under any and all conditions.

Page 5: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

Stoics believe that nothing can make you happy or unhappy without your consent. All unhappiness is the result of bad thinking, poor character, and confusing what we can control with what we cannot control.

Hedonism

One of the most earliest and persistent theory of happiness is:

“Pursue pleasure (whatever suits you) and avoid pain (whatever causes you suffering and discomfort). The technical name for this kind of philosophy is hedonism.

Page 6: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

Hedonism is the general term for any philosophy that says pleasure = good and pain = evil. Some hedonists stress the pursuit of pleasure, and others emphasize avoiding pain, for a strict hedonist, nothing that provides pleasure can be bad.

The Meaning of Life is Pleasure

Aristippus (c.430-359 B.C.E.) lived in the town of Cyrene on the coast of North Africa in what is now Libya. Aristippus was a clever and friendly young man, fond of pleasures of all sorts.

Page 7: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

He heard about Socrates while attending the Olimpic Games with a friend and was so impressed that he rushed to Athens to meet Socrates. Aristippus quickly became a member of the closest, most involved groups of Socrates´ followers and did some teaching himself.

Eventually Aristippus came home and opened a school of philosophy in Cyrene, his doctrine of unrefined hedonism is known as Cyrenaic Hedonism.

Aristippus taught that pleasure is the principle motive for living and that pleasure is always good– regardless of its source.

Page 8: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

The consequence of such view is that whatever feels good is good, lacking any objective standard of comparison, the Cyrenaic hedonist concludes that the individual is the measure of that which is pleasure, that it is pleasure, of that which is pain, that is pain.

And since any pleasure is by definition good , it follows that, I ought to be doing whatever I enjoy doing.

Page 9: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

EPICUREANISM

Though Epicurus (341-279 B.C.E.) was born in the Asia Minor city of Samos, he was an Athenian citizen because his father had moved to Samos as an Athenian colonist. When he was eighteen years old, Epicurus went to Athens to complete a two-year military service required of Athenian Males.

The Macedonian king of Greece, Alexander the Great, had just died, and the Athenians, who had resented his rule, revolted against the regent he had imposed on them.

Page 10: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

It took less than a year for this revolt to be crused, but Epicurus drew an important lesson from it: Political activities and ambitions are pointless.

Epicurus remained in Athens for a long time and studied with followers of both Plato and Aristotle. He never accepted Plato´s philosophy and came to reject Aristotle´s as well. He referred to himself as self-taught and never acknowledged any philosophical teacher or master.

He saw himself as a moral reformer who had discovered a brand new message, one that could save others from unhappiness.

Page 11: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

Vain is the word of a philosopher which does not heal any suffering of man. For just as there is no profit in medicine if it does not expel the diseases of the body, so there is no profit in philosophy either if it does not expel the suffereing of the mind.

Page 12: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

Epicurus called his school “The Garden”. A serene retreat from the social, political and even philosophical turmoil of Athens, Epicurus´s Garden became as well known for good living and pleasant socializing as it was for its philosophy.

One of the unusual features of The Garden was that it welcomed everyone. It was one of the very few places in Greece where women were allowed and encouraged to interact with men as equals. Epicurus made no distinction based on social status or race.

Page 13: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

He accepted all who came to learn: prostitutes, housewifes, slaves, aristocrats. His favorite pupil was his own slave, Mysis.

In his time the mere acceptance of all races, sexes, and social classes would have been enough to brand Epicurus as a dangerous and ungrateful rebel, regardless of his philosophical ideas, yet he went beyond theoretical tolerance, welcoming and encouraging all comers, even in our time, such an attitude is often met with fear and criticism when it is put into practice.

Page 14: Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. You shame yourself, my soul, you shame yourself, and you will have no further opportunity to respect yourself; the life

THE GARDEN