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PHILOSOPHY - The Stoics | The School of Life
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This is a film about Stoicism, and why you need more of it in your life, because as people seldom tell you, but we will, quietly, | |
(Life is very difficult). | |
Stoicism was a philosophy that flourished for 480 years in ancient Greece and Rome, as was popular with everyone from slaves to | |
the aristocracy, because unlike so much philosophy, it was helpful, helpful when we panic, want to give up, despair, and rage | |
at existence. We still honor this philosophy whenever I think of someone as brave, and without perhaps quite knowing why call | |
them "stoic". | |
There were two great philosophers of stoicism. The first is the Roman writer and tutored Niero Seneca. He lived between AD 4 and | |
AD 65. That's right, tutor to Nero, the infamous dicator who slept with his own mother, raped young boys, and just because he | |
felt like it asked his old tutor -- Seneca -- to commit suicide in front of his own family. | |
And our other guide to Stoicism is the kind and magnanimous Roman Empire Marcus Aurelius AD 121 to 180, who was forced to spent | |
most of his reign on the edges of the Empire, fighting off invincible Germanic hordes, but found time to write one of the great- | |
-est work of philosophy The Meditations in his tent at night. | |
There are two problems Stoicism can help us with in particular. The first is anxiety. When you're feeling anxious about something, | |
most people are maddening. They believe it's their duty to cheer you up. However intelligent they might otherwise be, say things | |
like, "It'll be Okay", "Don't worry", even "Cheer up!" -- The stoics were appalled. They hated any kind of consolation that aims | |
to give the listener hope -- hope is the opium of the emotions, and must be stamped out conclusively for a person to stand any | |
chance of inner peace, because hope only lifts you up higher for the eventual fall. | |
The stoics advises to take a different path. To be calm, one has to tell oneself something very dark -- "It will be terrible"; | |
"I might have to go to prison"; "The lump really could be malign"; "I probably will be fired and humiliated"; "My friends almost | |
certainly will succeed"; -- but, a huge consoling stoic but, one must keep in mind, that one will nevertheless be Okay. Okay, | |
because in the end, as Marcus Aurelius said, we are each of us "stronger" than we think. | |
Prison won't be fun, nor will losing one's job, or being made a laughing stock, but one will get through it. Stoicism emboldens | |
us against the worst fate can throw at us. And if you really, really, can't take it, suicide is always an option. The stoics | |
mention this repeatedly. Here is Seneca: "Can you no longer see a road to freedom? It's right in front of you. You need only | |
turn over your wrists." | |
To build up an impression of one's own resilience, the sotics suggested on regularly rehearsed worst case scenarios. For example, | |
twice a year, one should take off one's smart clothes, get into some dirty rags, sleep on a rug in a kitchen floor, and eat only | |
stale bread and rain water from an animal's bowl, and thereby, you'll make it an amazing discovery, as Marcus Aurelius put it, | |
"almost nothing material is needed for a happy life, for he who has understood existence." | |
Another subject of interest to the stoics was anger. Romans were a bad-tempered lot. The stoics wanted to calm them down, but | |
they did so by an unusual route: by intellectual argument. They proposed that getting angry isn't something you do by nature, | |
because you have a Latin temper or somehow inherently hot-blooded. It's the result of being stupid of having the wrong ideas | |
about life. Anger stems when misplaced hope smashes into unforeseen reality. We don't shout everytime something bad happens to | |
us -- only when it's bad, and unexpected. | |
For example, you never shout just because it started raining, even though rain can be horrible -- because you've learned to | |
expect rain. The same should apply to everything. Don't only expect rain -- expect betrayal, infamy, sadism, theft, humiliation, | |
lust, greed, spite -- one will stop being so angry when one learns the true facts of the misery of life. | |
The wise person should aim to reach a state, where simply nothing could suddenly disturb their peace of mind. Every tragedy | |
should already be priced in. We're gonna leave you with the most beautiful remark that Seneca made just as Nero's guards were | |
grabbing him and shoving him into a bathroom where he was meant to take a sharp knife and kill himself. His wife Paulina and | |
two children were panicking, weeping, clinging to his cloaks, but Seneca turned to them, pulled a weary smile at them, and | |
simply said: | |
"What need is there to weep over parts of life? The whole of it calls for tears." | |
We have much to learn from the stoics. | |
Paulina
Pompeia Paulina (/pɒmˈpiːə, -ˈpeɪə, pɔːˈlaɪnə/) (fl. 1st century) was the wife of the statesman, philosopher, and orator Lucius Annaeus Seneca, and she was part of a circle of educated Romans who sought to lead a principled life under the emperor Nero. She was likely the daughter of Pompeius Paulinus, an eques from Arelate in Gaul. Seneca was the emperor's tutor and later became his political adviser and minister. In 65 AD Nero demanded that Seneca commit suicide, having accused Seneca of taking part in the Pisonian conspiracy against him.[1][2][3] Paulina attempted to die with her husband, but survived the suicide attempt.
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Nero
英['niərəu]美[ˈnɪro, ˈniro]
释义
n.
尼禄(古罗马暴君,37-68)
尼禄·克劳狄乌斯·凯撒·奥古斯都·日耳曼尼库斯(Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus,37年12月15日-68年6月9日),又名尼禄·克劳狄乌斯·凯撒·德
鲁苏斯·日耳曼尼库斯(Nero Claudius Caesar Drusus Germanicus),罗马帝国皇帝,54年-68年在位。他是罗马帝国朱里亚·克劳狄王朝的最后一代皇帝。尼禄被
他的叔公克劳狄乌斯收养并成为他的继承人。54年,在克劳狄死后,尼禄继承为古罗马帝国的皇帝。
尼禄在位期间,他的注意力大部分集中在外交及贸易上,以及提高帝国的文化素质。他下令建造剧院和促进竞技运动。在他统治期间,日耳曼军团长官科尔布洛在帕提亚的战役
上取得胜利以及和帕提亚帝国达成和谈。不列颠军团长官保利努斯粉碎了发生在不列颠的暴乱。此外,罗马帝国还吞并博斯普鲁斯王国,以及首次与犹太爆发战争。
Marcus Aurelius
马可·奥勒留(拉丁语:Marcus Aurelius,121年4月26日-180年3月17日),全名为马可·奥勒留·安敦宁·奥古斯都(拉丁语:Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Augustus[注 1])。是罗马帝国五贤帝时代最后一个皇帝,拥有凯撒称号(拉丁语:Imperator Caesar)。于161年至180年在位。有“哲学家皇帝”的美誉。
马可·奥勒留是罗马帝国最伟大的皇帝之一,同时也是著名的斯多葛派哲学家,其统治时期被认为是罗马黄金时代的标志。他不但是一个很有智慧的君主,同时也是一个很有成
就的思想家,有以希腊文写成的关于斯多葛哲学的著作《沉思录》(Τὰ εἰς ἑαυτόν)传世。
Germanic
英[dʒɜːˈmænɪk]美[dʒɜːrˈmænɪk]
释义
adj.
德国的; 日耳曼人(或民族)的; 德国人的; 德国作风的
n.
日耳曼语
malign
英[məˈlaɪn]美[məˈlaɪn]
释义
vt.
污蔑,诽谤; 中伤,说坏话
adj.
恶性的,恶意的; 有害的
infamy
英[ˈɪnfəmi]美[ˈɪnfəmi]
释义
n.
声名狼藉; 臭名; 丑恶; 恶行