On the Stoic acceptance of Fate.

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Fate gets a lot play in Stoic circles, and we even use it to poke fun at our fellow philosophers, the Cynics.  It starts out with a typical Cynic-style chreia.

On a road there is a dog tied to the cart.  The dog cannot help being tied to the cart, it is merely the situation as he finds it.  The cart begins rolling down the road, headed to some destination or other.  The dog has two choices:  he can fight against the rope and cart, pulling, getting dragged, yelping, and struggling; or, he can trot along side the cart to wherever it is going.

Regardless, the dog is going where the cart is going.  There’s no helping that.  The only choice is whether he goes willingly, and thus makes it easier on himself and more enjoyable, or he gets dragged biting, snapping, and pulling the whole way.

This is the Stoic conception of Fate, generally.  Now, we as modern practitioners tend to break it down into a few more types and genera.  We can view Fate as the chain of causes across the whole cosmos which is cause => effect.  If a thing is dropped on Earth, it is fated to fall, generally (unless it’s nature is otherwise, like helium).  It is a simple, mechanistic view of the universe.  This is the modern, atheist view.

Some might view Fate as the will of God, or the cosmos.  Nature’s Providence.  The “good end” to which all this is moving.  This would be the theological view.  Some others view Fate as a force itself, something if not godly, then at least worthy of being capitalized.

So how does fate and nature and our choices all mesh?

Another chreia, then:

A cylinder has a certain nature for roundness.  And when it is pushed, it rolls.  The cause is the pushing, but it’s nature determined what happens.  The cylinder rolls while the block slides.  Similar causes, affected by their nature, yielding different results.

Causes yield effects.  This is made more complicated as rational creatures are causa sui or ’causes in themselves.’  Namely, we have some measure of free will which is also a cause.  Unlike the previous example, we are both the shape and the push.  We have a certain amount of flexibility, to be true to our nature or fight against it.  To push, or to be inert.

As rational creatures we are a causa sui.
(This accpetance both of determinism and free will is called Compatiblism, more here.)

To my mind, a mixing of the two main camps is the better thought model:

An unending chain of universal causes from the beginning of time has been shaped to provide *me*  (and you), with the opportunity for virtue.  We are not enslaved by the vicissitudes of Fate, no.  It instead provides us with the situations, contexts, and possibility to exercise the greatest value humans are capable of:  excellence.

So, how can we, in the face of this cosmic test, do anything but try to meet it with the best we have to offer?  That is our Fate… if we choose it.

2015 Stoic Commencement Address

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In this post, someone asked what a Stoic commencement address would look like.  I thought this would be an interesting thought experiment in couching Stoic lessons in that format without the technical jargon that often features in our discussions.


To the graduating class of 2015:

Congratulations on your achievement, and I wish you excellence in your coming endeavors whatever they may be.  Some will enter the workforce immediately, others will commit themselves to some form of national service like the armed forces, and some will go on to college or university.  You are preparing yourselves, regardless, for big changes, new adventures, and exciting challenges.

High school, however, is a microcosm of the larger world.  For instance, while all of you here have made this achievement, your paths have been very different.  Some of you struggled and fought to make Bs, others acquired As easily.  Some maybe skated by, “D is for diploma,” right?  Classes varied from remedial, grade level, to honors and Advanced Placement.  You each took a different journey.  The same will be true in your coming fields.

I have something uncomfortable to tell you.  Soon, this achievement will fall by the wayside.  Enjoy today, but tomorrow, this will be in the past.  Once you’re in college your high school GPA is of little importance.  The same for the workforce or military.  Once you take the next step, the previous one matters less.  Each new challenge becomes the focus, and previous victories will become smaller in comparison.

For those going on to higher education, once you leave those institutions and enter the workforce your college GPA will become less important.  At your first ten year work anniversary, no one will say “Remember when she got a 4.0 four semesters in a row?”  It will fade.

But one thing, however, will not fade.  One thing is far more permanent.  The character you build in yourself while working hard for a B, or cruising easily in a cake class for an A will stick around.  You will, day by day, step by step, build and create the person you will be for the rest of your life.  Character.  Character development is not something that happens in the future.  It is not an activity one takes up once “things are settled.”  Character development happens regardless, the only question is, will you do it consciously or accidentally?

Many of us have a person, maybe a grandparent, neighbor, or family friend.  Some good, older person.  We admire their character and think, “I’d like to be like that one day.” If we want that, the time is now, because if we wait until the future to work on that, it will be too late.

Character is like a boat or a ship.  We take the rude and rough materials that we are presented with.  We start with a tree, which is felled and carried to the worksite.  Once we begin to examine and work with the tree, we find defects, burls, gnarls, and knots.  These are not up to us, we don’t chose them.  Maybe someone or something else had, but that is not important.  We have what we’re given.  Ours is to make the best of it.

So we take out our tools and begin to work the tree, ripping planks and boards from its trunk.  These planks are rough, splintery, and not too pretty to look at.  This is where we are now.  You’ve made choices, built habits with new and green wood, still wet from the earth.

Next, we begin to plane down the planks, smoothing the surface, taking off the rough parts, and producing a useful plank.  This is a lot of work.  Based on the grain, the shape, the bend, the flexibility of this plank we choose to use it for the hull, or decking, or a decorative handrail artfully carved.  Each one, its natural character determining its use can be taken and fitted to our ship.  And when it’s finished, we have one plank, with many more to go.  Each of these choices, these planks helps build our ship.  But if done haphazardly, what kind of vessel will we have?  It is only by conscious, focused, and neutral judgement that each part can be fitted to its appropriate use.

A shoddy ship might float in the harbor, where it is safe, but that’s not what ships are made for.  We must take it out into the wild and fierce waves, test it against the untamed seas of real life.

When you go into the world, as a worker, manager, teacher, or other role:  you will find folks doing the minimum, doing less than, and other yet excelling.  It is not yours to compete with them but to compete with yourself.  To quietly, doggedly, and determinedly do better tomorrow than you did today.  You might end up with the same salary, the same awards, and the same qualifications of these others, but those things are temporary and transient.  They will pass.

But that character you build in the process is yours for the rest of your life.  Did you do your work with honor?  Did you do it with determination and discipline?  Did you do it with kindness, lend a helping hand?  Did you cheat?  Did you lie?  Did you steal?  Which ship are you building?

You have a short period of time where it is slightly easier to change course, the degree of change is small here, but further into the journey it will be many and many miles to correct your course.  If you’re headed in a rough direction, change now, at the beginning.  Suit your ship for the seas ahead, build it well, and track your right course.

I leave you with this, congratulations on this achievement, and there is the possibility for glory on the horizon for you.  Your ship stands in the yards, not yet complete, but its shape is beginning to become visible.  Which one will you build?

A refutation of an Epicurean “argument.”

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Okay, so this post was shared on one of the Facebook groups, I replied in a comment, but I thought a more in depth refutation would be useful.  The original post will be in plain text, with my in-line refutations in Bold and off-set.  Strap in.


Why do I speak harshly about “Stoicism”? Hopefully many of you don’t even know what Stoicism is, and consider it to be just another forgotten ancient philosophy.

An attempt to cast Stoicism in a negative light because it is pre-modern.  Fails, because the Epicurean school which he espouses is just as old, so if Stoicism is bad because it’s old, then Epicureanism must be also.

Unfortunately, that is not entirely the case. The essence of Stoicism is well summarized in the graphic which I will link below, and which started the recent exchange. You could substitute any number of other philosophies or religions as a similar target, but in truth the basic ideas of all of these get smashed together in a stew as “stoicism.”

Explicitly states that he will be arguing against some sort of synthetic mish-mash, not Stoicism-proper.  Prepare for the onslaught of Strawman Arguments! 

That stew represents the great majority of thought in both religion and secular philosophy in the modern world.

Oh?  Care to prove that? 

Epicurus spoke for the right of each individual to pursue pleasant living, but he was not so blind as to believe that every individual can achieve that. There are many obstacles to pleasant living. And what is the greatest obstacle?

I guess we have to figure that our for ourselves?

Viewpoints that allege that there is a “higher purpose” than to live pleasantly, and that seek to substitute their own view of what men should strive for in place of that which Nature provided when she gave us the faculty of happiness.

Incomplete sentence, I’m not sure what the author is alleging here.  I assume that it is the position that pleasure is the highest good.  This is the same axiomatic difference between the Schools… again.

Modern stoicism seeks to brush under the rug its soggy foundations, and to try to convince people that “virtue” is worth living for in and of itself.

This is an axiom of the Stoic school, and indeed most of the Socratic schools.  It’s an axiom, which means it either needs to be accepted or rejected.  Not proven.  What’s a soggy foundation and why does that matter for this discussion, even if it were a thing?

The modern stoics assure you that you can reject their “divine fire” origin of the universe, you can reject their Spock-like worship of “logic” over the facts of reality, and you can reject their praise of a life of anesthesia from all pain (AND joy) as the goal of living. You can reject all these, they say, because “our goal is happiness too!”

Some modern Stoics, typically the athiests, make this statement that you can rejected Stoic Phyiscs.  Not all do.  I see it as romantic and poetic language which bears shocking similarity to modern physics.

I assume ‘Spock-like worship’ is an ad hominem of sorts.  

There are eupathos or ‘healthy emotions’ like cheerfulness in Stoicism.   [LINK:  Donald Robert’s site].  The Epicurean is either ignorant of this or is ignoring it to score debate points.  Either way, no-go.

But what a perversion of a word! Modern Stoicism likes to talk about “happiness” without ever defining the term in recognizable ways.  But when you dig deep enough, you will always find that Stoic happiness has nothing to do with pleasure.

The term eudaimonia which is translated poorly in English by ‘happiness’ has very little to do with hedone or pleasure. This is an axiomatic difference between Epicureanism and Stoicism. Congrats! They’ve re-stated the 2,000 year old distinction between the schools. Again.  Well done.

Additionally, nearly every modern Stoic source devotes significant time (and early) to explaining the (admittedly) jargony way we use the word.  It’s an unfair characterization that we “hide” the meaning.  Stoicism does have a very particular and specific vocabulary, and this was used as a critique even during the early and middle Stoa.  It’s a fair point, but not enough to dismiss the School in its entirety.

Instead, you will find the stoics snuggling up to “pain” as if it is somehow valuable in itself.

Like the pain experienced when we exercise for health?  Some hardships are for a higher good than mere pleasure.   Methamphetamine intoxication might feel good, but destroys the body.  This is why pleasure cannot be a good nor an evil, it’s an indifferent. 

They have always done this and they always will. And that is because the essence of Stoicism is the rejection of the faculty of pleasure given us by nature.

I would say it’s the domestication of pleasure, not the rejection.  I suspect this is a distinction the author might not appreciate, however.

There were specific groups in the ancient world who were labeled “enemies of the human race” for their intolerant religious views.

Oh?  Which ones?  Is making “enemies of the human race” even advisable?  Seems kind of tyrannical… we’ll come back to that.

Well my friends the intolerance of the stoics for the pleasure of the ordinary man on the street beats far stronger in the heart of the establishment today than the irrationality of religion ever did.

Marcus said “educate them or put up with them,”  that’s kind of the definition of ‘tolerance,’ no?  

There is also an argumentum ad populum.  At one point, most folks believed slavery was right.  They were wrong, and the popularization of this idea didn’t make it right.  The Stoics will not force you to stop chasing pleasure, the fickle thing it is, but we might try and suggest you re-think the choice.

Suddenly Stoics are the establishment?  I thought it was a dead and forgotten ancient philosophy?

In seeking to dowse the flames of what they call emotional turbulence, they are really dowsing the flame of ALL emotion, especially the joy and delight that they hate so much.

Asked and answered, see eupathos.  [LINK:  Donald Robert’s site]

And their views have gradually leached so deeply into society that otherwise well-meaning people can no longer interpret even Epicurus himself in any way other than consistently with their ascetic view of human life.

Unsubstantiated assertion.  Is Stoicism old and meaningless or so powerful to obliterate all other interpretations?  Which argument are we having?

Even here, we see loose talk of “painlessness” as the goal of life, and “tranquility” as the absence of all engagement with the world, as if that were possible for any but the dead (whom the stoics emulate as best they can).

Stoicism does not assume mere tranquility is good (Irvine is the exception, here), but ‘human excellence’ virtue or arete is.  If it were mere tranquility, we could all take opium every waking moment to achieve that.  Hey… that almost seems like an Epicurean option!  

Epicurean philosophy arose in a garden where people were truly devoted to pleasure – the alpha and omega of a blessed life.

This is assumed to be a ‘good’ but that is the point of contention between the two Schools.  Stating the axiom isn’t useful in the debate.

Asceticism and hatred of joy and delight were the furthest things from their minds.

Actually, Epicurus states one should live simply so that the pleasure taken in material things is more dear and sharper.  Eating simple foods allows you to enjoy the sweet all the more.  The author seems ignorant of *both* school in the discussion.  

A normal person can tell the difference between Epicureanism and Stoicism, you know, because of the spelling.

The Epicurean movement would never have prospered in the ancient world had it been

Is this true?  On what grounds?

— it would have been immediately recognized by all as the hypocrisy which does truly exist, in Stoicism.

Unsubstantiated  claim of hypocrisy.

Nietzche nailed this on the head far better than I can.

We actually agree on this point.

For those who have not seen this quote, it is one to read over and over again, and to internalize til the understanding behind it becomes second nature:

“You desire to LIVE “according to Nature”? Oh, you noble Stoics, what fraud of words! Imagine to yourselves a being like Nature, boundlessly extravagant, boundlessly indifferent, without purpose or consideration, without pity or justice, at once fruitful and barren and uncertain: imagine to yourselves INDIFFERENCE as a power–how COULD you live in accordance with such indifference? To live–is not that just endeavoring to be otherwise than this Nature? Is not living valuing, preferring, being unjust, being limited, endeavouring to be different? And granted that your imperative, “living according to Nature,” means actually the same as “living according to life”–how could you do DIFFERENTLY? Why should you make a principle out of what you yourselves are, and must be? In reality, however, it is quite otherwise with you: while you pretend to read with rapture the canon of your law in Nature, you want something quite the contrary, you extraordinary stage-players and self-deluders! In your pride you wish to dictate your morals and ideals to Nature, to Nature herself, and to incorporate them therein; you insist that it shall be Nature “according to the Stoa,” and would like everything to be made after your own image, as a vast, eternal glorification and generalism of Stoicism! With all your love for truth, you have forced yourselves so long, so persistently, and with such hypnotic rigidity to see Nature FALSELY, that is to say, Stoically, that you are no longer able to see it otherwise– and to crown all, some unfathomable superciliousness gives you the Bedlamite hope that BECAUSE you are able to tyrannize over yourselves–Stoicism is self-tyranny–Nature will also allow herself to be tyrannized over: is not the Stoic a PART of Nature? . . . But this is an old and everlasting story: what happened in old times with the Stoics still happens today, as soon as ever a philosophy begins to believe in itself. It always creates the world in its own image; it cannot do otherwise; philosophy is this tyrannical impulse itself, the most spiritual Will to Power, the will to “creation of the world,” the will to the causa prima.”

This person then has the rest of the argument backwards. Reasoning what is natural is not a prescription for nature to follow, it is for us to follow. They’ve read Nietzsche. Cool. Did they understand what they read? Probably not, since their interpretation of Stoicism is so far off.
Self-tyranny is a contradiction. That’s called “freedom of choice.” If one wants to be a mere pleasure seeking robot, one can do that. It’s not advisable from a Stoic perspective, however it’s possible. If I seek to regulate my behaviors and thinking, that’s my choice. There’s not external force involved, which a tyranny necessarily has. The term is totally irrelevant to the discussion.

There is one philosophy that does NOT become a system based on “logic” with true believers who think they can “reason” their way into telling Nature what to do.

Why is “not based on logic” something worth while?  Are we looking for divine revelation, or maybe something that just reinforces our biases?  Hang on, if ‘logic’ is such an evil, why make a (poorly formed) argument against the Stoics?  Isn’t that an exercise in logic?

There is one philosophy that does NOT seek to create the world in its own image, and to dowse the flame of joy and delight which is the motive power of every living thing.

Suggesting that folks live according to the world *as it is* is not trying to re-shape it to one’s own nature.  It’s a standard practice in debate to (in good faith), to portray your opponent’s positions accurately and well.  That’s not happening here.

There is one philosophy that does not rebel against, but indeed elevates to the center, the faculty that Nature gave us to live our lives.

I’m going to be honest, I don’t know what this means.  It’s probably not our ruling faculty, the hegemonikon of reason, though.

There is one philosophy that recognizes “Divine Pleasure, the Guide of Life” as the true “goddess of nature” for both men and all other living things, and yields to her the respect and gratitude to which she is entitled. And that is the philosophy of Epicurus.

This person has systematically redefined words, then argued against these straw-definitions, and thinks they’ve done something worth while. They’re wrong, there, too.  By simply parroting the basic position of the school, while failing to support them, the author acts as if the argument is won, but it hasn’t even been argued in good faith.

Over all: congrats on the sophistry.

On ascetic practices in Stoicism

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“Lo, God has sent you one who shall show indeed that it is possible. ‘Look at me, I have no house or city, property or slave: I sleep on the ground, I have no wife or children, no miserable palace, but only earth and sky and one poor cloak. Yet what do I lack? Am I not quit of pain and fear, am I not free? When has any of you ever seen me failing to get what I will to get, or falling into what I will to avoid? When did I blame God or man, when did I accuse any? Has any of you seen me with a gloomy face? How do I meet those of whom you stand in fear and awe? Do I not meet them as slaves? Who that sees me but thinks that he sees his king and master?’ There you have the true Cynic’s words…”
— Epictetus, Discourses III.22

The Stoics are descended from the Cynics, through Zeno of Citium who studied under Crates.  Indeed, Epictetus mentions in his Discourses Diogenes of Sinope more often than he does Zeno, the very founder of the Stoic School.  Both the Stoics and the Cynics hold that virtue is the only good, and the only thing necessary for eudaimonia.  On this, they agree.  On the matter of things indifferent (Gr: ἀδιάφορα), they differ heartily.

Desmond, in his book “Cynics, notes that Epictetus is one of the more Cynical of the Hellenic Stoics.  While this is true if you are comparing them to the Roman Stoics as a standard, it’s not true if you consider that we should be doing that comparison the other way ’round.  The Roman Stoics should be measured against their earlier Greek forebears.  The Romans, especially Seneca, Cato, and Marcus, had a level of material wealth and social role obligations that their Hellenic cousins simply never did.

The Romans took the tripartite study of philosophy, and discarded much of the things which did not mesh with their cultural norms.  The Cynic’s parrhesia (Gr: παρρησία), or freedom of speech, and their flouting of social norms were entirely contrary to the Roman values of decorum and social compliance.  From Cicero on, we have a trend of Romanizing the rough edges, the Cynic edges, off of Stoicism.  However, to ignore this lineage, and the Cynic-like tendencies of the early Stoa is a mistake.

So, the Cynic lives with his wallet or sack, worn-out cloak, and staff.  This is his uniform, and the extent of his worldly possessions.  The Cynics were practicing a voluntary austerity and asceticism which set them apart from the wider Hellenic culture.  They made plain their distaste for the material preoccupations of their day, and history is replete with annotations, aphorisms, and quotes holding up their mirror of non-conformity to the wider culture.

So, what sorts of ascetic practices, looking to our Cynic forebears for inspirations, might the aspiring Stoic adopt today?

  • Simple food:  The Cynics extolled the virtues of the lupin bean, and simple lentil soup, and crusty bread.  Lupins are expensive and hard to come by where I live, but lentils are cheap and readily available.  Zenonian Lentil soup might be a good start.
  • Simple drinks:  The Cynics praised the drinking of water over other choices, although Diogenes did say his favorite wine was “someone else’s.”  Note:  “The Water-Drinking Cynic” (Hydrokyon).
  • Simple clothes:  The Cynics had a uniform, and indeed many Stoics did, too.  The tribōn or philosopher’s cloak, minimalist protection from the environment.  The modern might reduce the wardrobe to a few identical pieces.  Jeans, a solid color t-shirt, and a light jacket, maybe?
  • Simple, natural grooming:  A simple, utilitarian hair cut, not for style but to remove what’s useless or in the way, and for men an uncut beard.
  • Simple shoes:  Barefoot if possible, for most of us it may not be, sandals might be a reasonable substitute.
  • Rough sleeping:  Avoid the soft beds, sleeping instead on the ground or a rough pallet, with naught but a simple blanket or cloak.
  • Walking:  Which errands could we rather walk for, instead of taking our vehicles or public transportation?

Ascetic training was a core part of ancient Stoic practice, and it has been sadly divorced in the modern times.  At minimum, if we will not practice these labors daily, once a month we should expose ourselves to some hardship so we might inure ourselves from the fickleness of Fate.

Is asceticism a part of your Stoic practice?  Why or why not?  Would you consider adding it to your practice?

Musonius’ Stoic

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Musonius Rufus has a variety of prescriptions for the aspiring Stoic.  Some of which might be surprising to those not familiar with what he have left of his writings.

If you’ve not read Musonius before, there’s a version available here.

Musonius’ Stoic can be male or female.  One of the very forward-thinking classical Stoics, Musonius notes that men and women both should study philosophy.  In the same way that philosophy can make good men better, the same holds true for women.  While Musonius does see some differences between the sexes, both biological and cultural, our ruling faculties, our souls are of a common nature.

“Moreover, not men alone, but women too, have a natural inclination toward virtue and the capacity for acquiring it, and it is the nature of women no less than men to be pleased by good and just acts and to reject the opposite of these.”
— Lecture III

Musonius’ Stoic would dress simply, wearing enough clothes to protect the body, but not cater to some vane and vicious desire.  He argues that we could wear a cloak or simple garments like a chiton.  The modern Stoic might choose a “uniform” of sorts.  A pair of jeans, a solid colored t-shirt and simple jacket.

“…he said that one ought to use clothing and shoes in exactly the same way as armour, that is for the protection of the body and not for display.”
— Lecture XIX

Musonius argues against sandals, and says his students should go barefoot, but the modern Stoic might choose sandals over closed shoes for the reason of not covering the body more than necessary.

“…going barefoot gives the feet great freedom and grace when they are used to it.”
— Lecture XIX

Musonius Stoic would have a simple hair style, maybe a cheap buzz-cut for men, as the purpose of such grooming is to remove excess, not to style and primp.

“He used to say that a man should cut the hair from the head for the same reason that we prune a vine, that is merely to remove what is useless.”
— Lecture XXI

If the Musonius’ Stoic is male, then he should be bearded so far as he is able to grow one.

“… neither should the beard be cut from the chin (for it is not superfluous), but it too has been provided for us by nature as a kind of cover or protection. Moreover, the beard is nature’s symbol of the male just as is the crest of the cock and the mane of the lion; so one ought to remove the growth of hair that becomes burdensome, but nothing of the beard; for the beard is no burden so long as the body is healthy and not afflicted with any disease…”
— Lecture XXI

If one passed Musonius’ Stoic while he or she was taking meal, we would find that person eating what we would call a mostly raw or at least vegetarian diet, eating fresh local foods in season, eschewing meat-products.

“As one should prefer inexpensive food to expensive and what is abundant to what is scarce, so one should prefer what is natural for men to what is not. Now food from plants of the earth is natural to us, grains and those which though not cereals can nourish man well, and also food (other than flesh) from animals which are domesticated. Of these foods the most useful are those which can be used at once without fire, since they are also most easily available; for example fruits in season, some of the green vegetables, milk, cheese, and honey. Also those which require fire for their preparation, whether grains or vegetables, are not unsuitable, and are all natural food for man.”
— Lecture XVIIIA

If Musonius’ Stoic invited us over for the evening, we would find the living arrangements to be simple, understated, and utilitarian.

“Since we make houses too for a shelter, I argue that they ought to be made to satisfy bare necessity, to keep out the cold and extreme heat and to be a protection from the sun and the winds for those who need it.”
— Lecture XIX
‘Whatever is difficult to obtain or not convenient to use or not easy to protect is to be judged inferior; but what we acquire with no difficulty and use with satisfaction and find easy to keep is superior. For this reason earthenware and iron and similar vessels are much better than those of silver or gold, because their acquisition is less trouble since they are cheaper, their usefulness is greater…’
— Lecture XX

We would also probably find Musonius’ Stoic to be in the presence of a spouse or partner, as he would say we are fitted by nature one for the other.  The family, he argues, is the support for all of society, and the philosopher, too, has a duty here.

“Again when someone said that marriage and living with a wife seemed to him a handicap to the pursuit of philosophy, Musonius said that it was no handicap to Pythagoras, nor to Socrates, nor to Crates, each of whom lived with a wife, and one could not mention better philosophers than these.”
— Lecture XIV

Likely, Musonius’ Stoic would also have a garden, or in some way produce some of their own food.

“…it would not be unreasonable to consider it even better for a strong person, namely earning a living from the soil, whether one owns his own land or not.”
— Lecture XI

The picture Musonius paints of the Stoic student is an interesting one.  The Stoic lives an almost Spartan, utilitarian life.  He or she focuses on family, community, and living simply.  Musonius sets a pretty strict prescription for how we aspiring Stoics should live.

Most of us cannot wrap a simple cloak about ourselves while go about our daily occupation, but can we simplify?  Yes, very likely.  Can we cut back on eating out, eat more local, fresh, and in-season foods?  Can we take the time to prepare meals for ourselves and our families which are healthy, and nourishing to the body?  Probably.

We may not measure up to Musonius’ descriptions, but we can definitely make progress closer to it.

On the unitary nature of the cosmos

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We often read about the classical Stoics as being monists, with a squirrely dodge of active/passive functions. Yet here, Epictetus seems to clearly be discussing bodies and souls as two distinct parts… right?

We do see the description of the world-soul or God, that we are in some way part and parcel of that nature, but it seems like he’s setting up a dualist perspective here… isn’t he?

“Have the very leaves, and our own bodies, this connection and sympathy with the whole, and have not our souls much more? But our souls are thus connected and intimately joined to God, as being indeed members and distinct portions of his essence.”
— Epictetus, Discourses i.14.1

So, is this a mere short-hand of speech, a way to speak to his particular audience, does it represent a doctrinal position, or is it something else entirely? How does this excerpt jive with the conception of Stoics being strict monists?

Stoic monism can be a tricky thing, for one because all of the Western tradition has been touched by Cartesian Dualism, this fundamental separation of spirit and body, or mind and body (for a more secular twist).  This idea, that we are some sort of spirit-thing inhabiting a body, that there is a core and irreconcilable divide between what’s physical and what’s conscious runs so deep in Western thought that it is difficult even to grasp the notion that there are other ideas, let alone what they’d look like in the mind of a real person.

I admit, freely, this is a challenge for me, the basic tenet of the West (and the East in many ways) is “I am more than this body.”  Even if we, after careful deliberation, come back to this position, it behooves us to give a good-faith attempt at the classical idea, since we are interested in other, related classical ideas.

So, what is Stoic monism?  How do we attempt to parse this cosmos in which we find ourselves?  The classical Stoics posited that nothing exists which is not a body.  This is in direct opposition to the idea of Platonic forms in which there is some ideal version “good,” or as for more mundane things, there is not just this cup, there is an ideal of “cupness” which all cups are in some measure closer to or further from.  Now, there is a category of things which “subsist” rather than exist (incorporeals), but that’s beyond the scope of this essay, and is essay-fodder for another time.

Let us say, then, that every thing in existence is a body.  This is a necessary consequence of a definition, common at the time, whichsaid that a body (primarily, there are other qualifiers) is anything which can act or be acted upon.  The classical Stoics were focused on creating an inclusive theory of the world, in that it needed to account for all it could, be internally consistent, and leave nothing out.  So,then to say that important things like the soul, consciousness, or honor exist, how do we account for them?  Well, what about things like “justice,”  or “liberty,” or “hate.”  Are these bodies too?  Actually they are.  Now hang on a minute, you might reasonably here ask, I thought we didn’t stomach the idea of “cupness” but now you’re telling me that “justice” is a body?

Indeed, that’s the case.  The Stoics would not fall into the rhetorical Platonic trap of saying “all things exist are a body, but ‘honor’ isn’t a body, so honor doesn’t exist.’  Their system confronted this challenge head on.  “Yup, honor is a body too.”  Since the definition of body is “anything which acts or is acted upon” and some folks undertake certain actions or refrain from the based on ideas like honor, liberty, duty, etc. these are necessarily bodies as well.

So, in a previous essay, I discussed that consciousness or mind might be a developmental stage of matter.  This wasn’t just a hypothetical “what if” it’s borne of the need to to posit an idea which meets the data we see in the universe, and is in line with the core doctrines of our School.  If mind is a function of matter, then we do not need to accept that “I am more than this body,” since the body includes this thing which I experientially identify with:  my ruling faculty.  This can be done when we understand ‘the breath of life,’ pneuma.

The Stoics have a conception of a thing called pneuma (Gr: πνεῦμα) or breath.  It is the active type of body.  There are two types of bodies, the active and the passive, but both are still bodies, both are still matter.  Thus, we maintain a monist perspective.  Pneuma is a body which pervades and permeates everything.  Classically these are conceived as one kind of stuff, merely two principle functions of it.  But, as John Sellars does in Stoicism, even if we give the dualists the benefit of the doubt, our conclusion stays the same.

Modern westerners say “but two things cannot coexist in the same space-time.”  The classical Stoics had several ideas of how things mix, and that matters (pun intended) while talking about active pneuma mixing with the passive matter.  Here are the types:

  1. Juxtaposition:  The parts of two substances are next to each other but remain separate when mixed:  take salt and sugar for instance.
  2. Fusion: in which a new entity is created from the mixing: take the use of oils and spices while cooking.
  3. Total blending: That every part of the new mixture contains both the elements of the mixed parts, but such that they retain their qualities, and could in theory be separated again:  take water and wine (extracted with an oil sponge, I’m told this works).

So, if pneuma  and passive matter are indeed separate, but mixed, like third way, we have a homogeneous substance of which its constituents parts can still be extracted, but in the mixture is one whole.  Thus, still a monist perspective.

So, what is pneuma?  It is the active, generative principle of the universe.  Theist or Deist Stoics would say it is God enlivening the cosmos (regular or passive matter).  This mixture of pneuma in passive matter is why the classical Stoics said that the universe was effectively God, being enlivened by this active sort of body.  Pneuma is that which acts, and the rest of the cosmos is that which is acted upon:  the definition of bodies met, and the system whole and intact.

Pneuma has several  quality which occur in various configurations, we’re told, the first of which is called tension.  The amount of pneumatic tension in a body determines its apparent substance.  It’s what makes a stone different from a log, both being made up of the same elements.  Pneuma as ‘physis’ is the enlivening force of the cosmos, which makes living things live.  Then, it has the quality of ‘psychê,’ which gives the basic sort of ‘animal soul’ to things which move.  Finally, we have the ‘logica psychê’ which is the power of reason and judgment in mature humans (and possibly other critters as well).

Pneuma exists across all scales of the universe: on the micro-level, our own ruling faculty, and again on the cosmic scale as the world-soul, the Logos, or God.  In this explanation of passive bodies and active bodies, we maintain that only bodies exist (meeting the definition requirements) with an internally consistent schema, and the core doctrines of the School intact.

“There is but one light of the sun, though it be intercepted by walls and mountains, and other thousand objects. There is but on common soul, though divided into innumerable particular essences and natures.”
— Marcus, Meditations xii.23.

Now, whether you think this pneuma is “woo stuff” of a magic-seeking mindset, or a good explanation of something humans have been desperately trying to understand for millennia, one must recognize the accomplishment of and beautiful structure of such a system which posits an interesting alternative to the basic premise of Cartesian Dualism.

On the grounding of ethics

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One of the common assertions used to discard the classical tripartite study of philosophy is ‘Stoic Ethics are not founded on their Physics.’  This assertion, often phrased as a demand for proof that the Ethics do follow from the Physics.  It’s very easy to ask a hard question, and it’s not as easy to answer it.  Many new Stoics find themselves floundering at this question, and in the inability to argue well, the case is lost.  So let’s look at the question:  Are Stoic Ethics predicated on Stoic Physics?

All human fields of study are built on axioms.  Axioms are unproven assertions that are taken for granted.  In mathematics, one such assertion is that 1+1=2.  Everything else is built on this, now while there are some who claim to prove that 1+1=2, the average person, the average university student even, cannot prove this (especially if you find “succession” and “recursion” arguments unconvincing).  It’s an axiom, for most.

Stoicism has some axioms as well.  Let’s look at some core axioms to Stoic Philosophy:

1.)  The existence of ‘adequate impressions’ or katalepsis (Gr: κατάληψις). (Epistemology, Logic)
2.)  Eudaimonia (Gr: εὐδαιμονία) as the telos of human life, and virtue is the only good, and the only thing necessary for it. (Ethics)
3.)  The cosmos is conscious and providential. (Theology, Physics)

You might wonder why I bring up these axioms, and that’s precisely to prove the point that at some point, some unproven thing must be accepted.  Else:  we’re forced to acknowledge that the Pyrrhonians are correct, (but I bet they still drive with their eyes open).  Understand:  such assumptions exist.  We’ll come back to this later.

Now, Physics as the classical Stoics understood it, was the study of nature (Gr: φύσις).  Their assumption was that without understanding the cosmos as it is, how can we begin to understand our right place in it?  For them, this included the natural process of the universe, human psychology, and all other things relevant. It’s a solid question, one which prompted the scientific inquiry (which may have become a preoccupation or end-in-and-of-itself, since) of the past five hundred years.

Now, the Epicureans argued that the infants’ crying out for food, warmth, and comfort is pleasure seeking behavior.  It was this, they argued, that showed the basic impetus for action is seeking of pleasure, and avoidance of pain.  The Stoics disagreed, they argued that the infants’ crying out for those things were indicative of an instinct for self-preservation.

You might think that’s splitting hairs a little finely, since these things are both pleasurable and life sustaining, but it is not.  For instance, let us look at exercise of the body.  Many people will say the enjoy it, but this is after the body is well accustomed to it.  Take your average couch potato and begin him on a running or weight training regimen.  This will very likely extend his life in the long run, it’s healthy.  But is it pleasant?  Most assuredly not.  In fact, the body is broken down, injured, exhausted.  Health decreases on the short term during this adaptation phase.  Here we can clearly see there is a difference between what’s preserving behavior and what’s pleasurable behavior.  The Epicurean then, is stuck seeing pleasure later in life, while the Stoic is then concerned with preservation of things valuable (which will reasonably extend beyond the self, shortly).

So, this natural instinct for self-preservation, this affinity for one’s own self is an interesting trait.  The classical Stoics thought so, too.  In more advanced critters, like humans, we see this affinity for one’s self extended to others.  Many animals show it, however, as an affinity for family members.  Some extend it towards their whole species.  Humans, as rational and socials critters, can extend it beyond all the others not just to our species, but indeed to all rational creatures.  This is called Oikeiôsis (Gr: οἰκείωσις).  This expansion of self-interest is the motivation for rushing into a burning building to save children, or the stranger who reaches out and pulls a pedestrian out of the car’s path.  For Stoics, it’s not a just a mere description, but a mandate for individual action and judgments.

oikeiosis

Oikeiosis and the domains of affinity.

The process of this affinity is to “make things like family.”  We start by treating our fellow townsfolk as family, our fellow citizens in the state as neighbors, and foreigners as our countrymen.  We can even extend this in the future to other rational creature and treat them like siblings in the Logos.

Effectively, we’re extending each circle by one.  So family is treated as self, citizens, like family, etc., per the image to the right.

Oikeiôsis is a key Stoic ethical doctrine, and it is founded on the study of nature, on their physics.  How so?  Only by watching animals become aware as they are of themselves, and taking care of this possession of their lives as a natural function.  Then we see the social animals, even going so far as to sacrifice their lives for their societies, and to us, as rational and social animals as shown.  This Ethical maxim, this injunction to make others “like family”  is based on their observation of the universe and the things and creatures in it.

One might argue “Yes, but this principle doesn’t have to be founded on physics.”  This is an unconvincing argument, because they were.  While it’s true, that such a ‘good behavior’ might be a mere social construct, when we are doing historical analysis, it behooves us to take into consideration what the folks themselves said they believed.  We might disagree with the conclusions, but it still needs to feature into the discussion; which (some-but-not-all) folks who want to discard Stoic physics seem reluctant to do.  Additionally, to digress slightly on the question of social constructs, just because a thing is a social construct doesn’t necessarily devalue it, or make it unimportant.  I’m not sure why this has become a catch argument these days, it’s not a reasonable objection.  Not wantonly killing innocents might just be a social construct, but it’s a good one.

So, do we need to believe in a two-thousand year old understanding of nature to be good people?  Nope, not in the slightest.  But if we want to understand a school of thought, even if we set it aside in favor of something else, we do need to understand appreciate what brought it about.  And when we’re talking about Stoic Ethics, that means an investigation into Stoic Physics.  Just as the axioms previously discussed, the foundation of Stoic Ethics in particular should be accepted as founded on their Physics.

Can you divorce Stoic Ethics from Stoic Physics?  Yes of course.  But should you?  Ah… that’s the question.  I would offer, no, you should not.


For more on the applicability of Stoic Physics to the modern understanding of the universe, please see this entry:  In defense of the conscious and providential universe.

On the unity of philosophy

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“The first difference between a common person and a philosopher is this: the common person says, “Woe to me for my little child, for my brother, for my father.” The philosopher, if he shall ever be compelled to say, “Woe to me,” stops and says, “but for myself.” For nothing which is independent of the will can hinder or damage the will, and the will can only hinder or damage itself.”

— Epictetus, Discourses III.19


Classically, the various schools of philosophy, specifically those who traced their lineage back to Socrates, saw themselves as being closer or farther from that progenitor.  However, they recognized in the others a certain validity in aim.  Not looking back to Socrates, but Democritus, the Epicurean sought virtue through pleasure (albeit a strange, pseudo-ascetic sort), his being a philosopher would not inherently be questioned.

“Even Epicurus perceives that we are by nature social, but having once placed our good in the husk he is no longer able to say anything else. For on the other hand he strongly maintains this, that we ought not to admire nor to accept anything which is detached from the nature of good; and he is right in maintaining this.”

— Epictetus, Discourses I.23

Clearly, the main problem between the Epicureans and the Stoics is the nature of the good, of virtue, and the telos of human life.  Just some little, piddly stuff, right?  However, Epictetus (outside this quote), argues against Epicurus on the merits of his argument.  He doesn’t discard him as a sophist, but treats his argument on a level footing, as an equal.

“Then, if he is thus prepared, the true Cynic cannot be satisfied with this; but he must know that he is sent a messenger from Zeus to men about good and bad things, to show them that they have wandered and are seeking the substance of good and evil where it is not, but where it is, they never think; and that he is a spy, as Diogenes was carried off to Philip after the battle of Chaeroneia as a spy.”

— Epictetus, Discourses III.22

The Cynics, as the forbears of the Stoics, get a softer handling.  Indeed, Epictetus references Diogenes of Sinope, the Cynic par excellence,  more often than he does Zeno of Citium, the very founder of the Stoic school.  What we can learn from these excepts is that the ‘rival’ philosophers still saw a certain fraternity in the process (excepting maybe the Cynics, as they’d say we’re all focused on the fluffery of life rather than virtue).  They might disagree with the conclusions reached, but the process of philosophical examination is the unifying factor.

So what does that mean for us?  Well, it seems to point in this direction:  that reason is a process not a product.  What I mean by this is that we can imagine it as a ‘black box.’  We feed it certain inputs, it does its thing (when functioning correctly), and it gives us outputs.  Does it not stand to reason, that we should pay the very closest attention to what the inputs are?  Herein lies the rub.

If we feed the ‘box’ shoddy material, we’re going to get shoddy out.  It should be clear that the outputs are how we can determine the quality of the inputs, then, correct?  And, it is these outputs over which we argue.

No one of the ancient schools questioned the basic axiom that eudaimonia was the goal of human life.  Today, no average citizen will question that we should ‘do what’s good’ in our lives.  These types of large categorical statements are not in debate, generally.  Think on that.  How many people have every said to you that the goal of human life should be destruction of pleasantness?  None, it runs contrary to the basic axioms of western civilization.  Now, what does it mean to ‘do what’s good?’  On these specifics is where the disagreement arises.

(For American readers), the liberal says that the welfare state helps the poor, and the conservative says that the welfare state bleeds dry the middle class.  Regardless of the validity of the arguments, both are arguing from a moral question: namely, how do we help people?  Partisans of either stripe will argue the other side is in fact not trying to help people, but a discussion with the average individual of either side will show that to be false.  Politicians at the top-tier might be so minded, but the average voters are not.

“Observe yourselves thus in your actions, and you will find to what sect you belong. You will find that most of you are Epicureans, a few Peripatetics, … But show me a Stoic, if you can. Where or how? But you can show me an endless number who utter small arguments of the Stoics. For do the same persons repeat the Epicurean opinions any worse? And the Peripatetic, do they not handle them also with equal accuracy? who then is a Stoic?”

— Epictetus, Discourses II.19

So, are philosophers (Stoics) born or made?  A philosophically inclined “nature v. nurture” question, then.  Will someone prone to hedonism more so than the average tend to see value in Epicureanism or Stoicism?  My suspicion is that it’s a combination of both, we’ll leave it unanswered for now.  Which leads us to the next point:

Stoicism in the twenty-first century as we are currently seeing it has two main camps.  The Orthodox traditionalists and the Modern atheists are each arguing they represent the ‘truer’ form of Stoicism.  What lesson, if any, can we take from the classical schools of philosophy in this issue?

Will we see the atheist Stoics as fellow travellers on the path, or as godless deviants, derailing our anciently established traditions?  Will we look at the Orthodox Stoics as magically-oriented “believers” who need a supernatural story rather than their own reason, or will we see folks who also are interested in goodness, truth, and wisdom but see a different way?

Are atheist and deists born or made?  Does it matter?  Or, instead, should we see brothers and sisters on the Path of the Sage, understanding that reason is a process and not a product?

There’s plenty of room in “big tent” Stoicism, are you trying to share in the experience, or trying keep folks out?

“That then which makes a dog beautiful, makes a horse ugly; and
that which makes a horse beautiful, makes a dog ugly, if it is true that their natures are different.”

— Epictetus, Discourses III.1

In defense of the conscious and providential universe.

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There is a split in the Stoic community. On one side we have the anti-theist/atheist camp, and on the other is the theist/deist camp. This is not a particularly new debate in philosophy, and it is unlikely to be resolved anytime soon. That being said, for current practitioners there are those who are being called Orthodox or Traditional Stoics and the Modern Stoics. The Moderns aren’t calling themselves that, they’re not taking an adjective as I think they’d rather just be called  ‘The Stoics,’ but I think it’s fair to hand one to each. I’d prefer to say “atheist Stoic” but whichever works.

The key divisor between the two camps tends to revolve around Stoic Physics. The Moderns see it as utter rubbish, and the Orthodox are unwilling to toss out a key part of the traditionally tripartite study of philosophy. I’m not at all sure how everyone reads the Physics, but I see it as mere romantic or allegorical description of modern science. I see them in agreement.  It’s important to note that the classical Stoics were speaking as they could, with the terminology they had.  They were speculating.  Speculation is the realm of philosophy, and when it becomes accepted as fact, we call it science.  What the Stoics had on the nose for modern understanding is quite astounding.

The Stoics classically believed that the universe expands and then contracts in a great fire, called Ekpyrosis. Sounds a lot like the Big Bang and Big Crunch (Heat Death fans will take umbrage here). The ancient Stoics discussed pneuma, the active function of matter, the Logos, or God permeating and infusing all things, connecting and enlivening them. Sounds to me like quantum entanglement and zero-point fields. I personally see no big issue with the manner that our ancient forbears used to describe speculatively the things we test today. If we borrow atoms from the Epicureans, then we’ve got an empirically tested system with flowery language. I’m fine with this.

Additionally, the universe is providential in that causes yield effects. This is regular and is the unconscious basis on which all living critters navigate the cosmos.  We see an unmitigated trend towards increasing complexity and energy consumption.  We can posit from this the cosmos is working towards some end, and the classical Stoics would say that such an end will be ‘good’ on the level of the universal scale.  The universe seems perfectly constituted to bring about living creatures, and (I will argue) consciousness.  Additionally, the laws of physics are so finely tuned as to allow for our existence.  The tiniest change (as I’m told by specialists) in the speed of light, the functions of gravity, the forces required for the universe to support us, and it wouldn’t.

I got into a friendly debate with a fellow Stoic on the Great Book of Faces, and we were hashing out the particulars of the claim made by the Orthodox Stoics that the universe is both conscious and providential. I will summarize my argument there, below.

Although I cannot prove it, most folks will accept that four billion years ago there was nothing we would call ‘consciousness’ on Earth. Today, that is not the case. Is this point debated? I think not. From this, we can interpret that consciousness is a developmental state of matter; if we remove the possibility of a Personality-God injecting it into creation a la the Abrahamic faiths. Take for instance that at some point during the life cycle of a human, the fetal cells are not-conscious. It is alive, but nothing we’d recognize as ‘consciousness’ is happening there. Then, at some later developmental point this is no longer true, and the human is conscious. Where this occurs is not a material factor in this discussion (is for others), but let us say that it in fact does occur. In this case, we see a thing go from non-consciousness to consciousness.

I do not claim to understand the mechanism here, and I’m not sure there is anyone alive who does. However, I will posit a possibility. Consciousness is a point on a continuum of matter. As matter organizes itself on the rational principles of the universe (meaning we can divine them by reason), in certain configurations it goes from mere chemicals to organic compounds. Those organic compounds like amino acids begin to form into larger, more complicated things like DNA. From there, we get living things, made up of the very same base-stuff as the non-living parts of the universe. At some point, specialized cells begin forming electro-chemical networks. Given enough time and appropriate energy availability, these networks might form something we would call “consciousness.” We see this in evolution and in ourselves. It occurs on the scale of the geologic and the individual lifetime. We see that things in the universe go from one state to another regularly, might not this trend continue?

This position is without superstition, religion, or magic. I suspect there is something special about consciousness, something in our ruling faculty that merits being called a soul. Something religious, but we will set that aside for now; although I would like to come back to that at some point.

The universe has produced reason and consciousness, since it contains such a thing, it’s fair to say it is such a thing. We are part and parcel of the universe. Now, one might call out the Fallacy of Composition. If the universe is constituted in such a way to produce consciousness within it, I argue it’s fair to call it conscious. Just as the cells of my finger are not themselves conscious (to my knowledge), I am. A rock or a pencil are not conscious, indeed not even living like hair, but the larger body is, (as hair:humans). It could have been phrased “since humans are conscious, consciousness is a feature of the universe.” Maybe this would be more palatable to some?

If that’s true (granted: large ‘if’), then I’m comfortable with saying the universe is conscious and providential. I don’t understand the mechanisms; however, the universe has never shown itself to be overly bothered with my understanding it or not.

I see no contradiction between the Physics of the classical Stoics (and the Orthodox today) and modern science. One does not necessarily preclude the other, as the atheist Moderns would contend. What I would like the reader to take away from this, is not my position wholesale (on faith), but the element of doubt enough to ask “what if?” Take that ‘what if’ and see where it leads you. You might just find, Fate permitting, that it’s an interesting and meaningful place.