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The Stoic View of Life

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Title: The Stoic View of Life


1
The Stoic View of Life
2
Introduction
3
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire

4
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens

5
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens

6
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens

7
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens
  • Sources

8
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens
  • Sources
  • Cicero de Finibus (On Ends)

9
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens
  • Sources
  • Cicero de Finibus (On Ends)
  • Seneca Moral Essays

10
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens
  • Sources
  • Cicero de Finibus (On Ends)
  • Seneca Moral Essays
  • Epictetus Enchiridion (Handbook)

11
Introduction
  • A school of the Hellenistic period and the Roman
    Empire
  • Began with Zenos discourses in the painted
    porch in Athens
  • Sources
  • Cicero de Finibus (On Ends)
  • Seneca Moral Essays
  • Epictetus Enchiridion (Handbook)
  • Marcus Aurelius Meditations

12
Background
13
Background
  • An age of Empires

14
Background
  • An age of Empires

15
Background
  • An age of Empires

16
Background
  • An age of Empires

17
Background
  • An age of Empires

18
Background
  • An age of Empires
  • Irrelevance of cities for values

19
Background
  • An age of Empires
  • Irrelevance of cities for values
  • Insignificance

20
Background
  • An age of Empires
  • Irrelevance of cities for values
  • Insignificance
  • Fatalism?

21
Background
  • New Schools of Thought

22
Background
  • New Schools of Thought
  • Sceptics - We cant know anything

23
Background
  • New Schools of Thought
  • Sceptics
  • Epicureans - Avoid pain

24
Background
  • New Schools of Thought
  • Sceptics
  • Epicureans
  • Cyrenaics - Seek pleasure

25
Background
  • New Schools of Thought
  • Sceptics
  • Epicureans
  • Cyrenaics
  • Cynics - Act like a dog be natural

26
Background
  • New Schools of Thought
  • Sceptics
  • Epicureans
  • Cyrenaics
  • Cynics
  • Stoics

27
Norms, Nature, and Law
28
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • To be a good thing is to be able to perform your
    proper function (ergon) well.

29
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • To be a good thing is to be able to perform your
    proper function (ergon) well.
  • To have a proper function is a normative claim
    there is a way a thing ought to be.

30
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • To be a good thing is to be able to perform your
    proper function (ergon) well.
  • To have a proper function is a normative claim
    there is a way a thing ought to be.
  • It is in the nature of a thing.

31
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • To be a good thing is to be able to perform your
    proper function (ergon) well.
  • To have a proper function is a normative claim
    there is a way a thing ought to be.
  • It is in the nature of a thing.
  • There is a law that applies to the thing.

32
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • To be a good thing is to be able to perform your
    proper function (ergon) well.
  • To have a proper function is a normative claim
    there is a way a thing ought to be.
  • It is in the nature of a thing.
  • There is a law that applies to the thing.
  • There is a Law of Nature that applies to the
    entire universe.

33
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • Everything that happens in the world is according
    to Nature

34
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • Everything that happens in the world is according
    to Nature
  • Welcome everything which happens, even if it
    seems harsh, because it contributes to the health
    of the universe and the well-faring and
    well-being of Zeus. For he would not have brought
    this on a man unless it had been advantageous to
    the whole

35
Norms, Nature, and Law
  • Everything that happens in the world is according
    to Nature
  • Welcome everything which happens, even if it
    seems harsh, because it contributes to the health
    of the universe and the well-faring and
    well-being of Zeus. For he would not have brought
    this on a man unless it had been advantageous to
    the whole
  • NB Zeus Lawgiver Law Nature

36
Virtues and Values
37
Virtues and Values
  • Man is different from all other things in the
    world because Man is a rational animal. Man is
    able to act in accord with or contrary to Nature.

38
Virtues and Values
  • Man is different from all other things in the
    world because Man is a rational animal. Man is
    able to act in accord with or contrary to Nature.
  • Proper aim of Man is to perfect rationality and
    come into agreement with Nature.

39
Virtues and Values
  • Man is different from all other things in the
    world because Man is a rational animal. Man is
    able to act in accord with or contrary to Nature.
  • Proper aim of Man is to perfect rationality and
    come into agreement with Nature.
  • There is a path to perfection

40
Virtues and Values
  • Man is different from all other things in the
    world because Man is a rational animal. Man is
    able to act in accord with or contrary to Nature.
  • Proper aim of Man is to perfect rationality and
    come into agreement with Nature.
  • There is a path to perfection
  • oikeiôsis (affinity) evolves in step with
    perfection

41
Virtues and Values
  • Cicero
  • We begin with a classification the Stoics call
    valuable (this, I think, is the term we should
    use) whatever is either itself in accordance with
    nature, or brings about something that is. Worthy
    of selection, therefore, is whatever has
    sufficient importance to be worthy of value
    (value the Stoics call axia). On the other hand,
    they call non-valuable what is contrary to the
    above. The starting-point, therefore, is that
    things in accordance with nature are to be
    adopted for their own sake, and their contraries
    are likewise to be rejected.

42
Virtues and Values
  • Cicero
  • With this established, the initial appropriate
    action (this is what I call the Greek kathêkon)
    is to preserve oneself in ones natural
    constitution. The next is to take what is in
    accordance with nature and reject its opposite.
    Once this method of selection (and likewise
    rejection) has been discovered, selection then
    goes hand in hand with appropriate action. Then
    such selection becomes continuous, and, finally,
    stable and in agreement with nature. At this
    point that which can truly be said to be good
    first appears and is recognized for what it is.

43
Virtues and Values
  • Cicero
  • A human beings earliest concern is for what is
    in accordance with nature. But as soon as one has
    gained some understanding, or rather conception
    (what the Stoics call ennoia), and sees an order
    and as it were concordance in the things which
    one ought to do, one then values that concordance
    much more highly than those first objects of
    affection. Hence through learning and reason one
    concludes that this is the place to find the
    supreme human good, that good which is to be
    praised and sought on its own account. This good
    lies in what the Stoics call homologia. Let us
    use the term consistency, if you approve.
    Herein lies that good, namely moral action and
    morality itself, at which everything else ought
    to be directed. Though it is a later development,
    it is none the less the only thing to be sought
    in virtue of its own power and worth, whereas
    none of the primary objects of nature is to be
    sought on its own account.

44
Virtues and Values
  • 5 Stages to perfection

45
Virtues and Values
  • 5 Stages to perfection
  • Affinity to primary goods food, etc.

46
Virtues and Values
  • 5 Stages to perfection
  • Affinity to primary goods food, etc.
  • Affinity to non-primary things like wealth.

47
Virtues and Values
  • 5 Stages to perfection
  • Affinity to primary goods food, etc.
  • Affinity to non-primary things like wealth.
  • appropriate actions that are justifiable.

48
Virtues and Values
  • 5 Stages to perfection
  • Affinity to primary goods food, etc.
  • Affinity to non-primary things like wealth.
  • appropriate actions that are justifiable.
  • A continuous use of reason.

49
Virtues and Values
  • 5 Stages to perfection
  • Affinity to primary goods food, etc.
  • Affinity to non-primary things like wealth.
  • appropriate actions that are justifiable.
  • A continuous use of reason.
  • A complete and consistent understanding.

50
Virtues and Values
  • Virtue is just what the person who has achieved
    the perfection of wisdom would do.

51
Virtues and Values
  • Virtue is just what the person who has achieved
    the perfection of wisdom would do.
  • Only Virtue is good.

52
Virtues and Values
  • Virtue is just what the person who has achieved
    the perfection of wisdom would do.
  • Only Virtue is good.
  • Other things health, etc. are indifferent
    only good or bad in relative terms.
  • Call them preferable or to-be-avoided.

53
Virtues and Values
  • Virtue is just what the person who has achieved
    the perfection of wisdom would do.
  • Only Virtue is good.
  • Other things health, etc. are only good or
    bad in relative terms.
  • Call them preferable or to-be-avoided.
  • Traditional virtues are required by Virtue.

54
Virtues and Values
  • Brotherhood of Man

55
Virtues and Values
  • Brotherhood of Man
  • oikeiôsis (affinity) expands to all

56
Virtues and Values
  • Brotherhood of Man
  • oikeiôsis (affinity) expands to all
  • Universal Law covers all equally

57
Virtues and Values
  • Brotherhood of Man
  • oikeiôsis (affinity) expands to all
  • Universal Law covers all equally
  • The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the
    few

58
Criticisms
59
Criticisms
  • Why not settle for the merely preferable since we
    cant know what the Virtuous is?

60
Criticisms
  • Why not settle for the merely preferable since we
    cant know what the Virtuous is?
  • Is this the eudaimonia we really want?
    Independent of the world? The virtuous man can be
    happy even while hes on the rack.

61
Passions
62
Passions
  • Since the world is irrelevant to happiness
    passions should not be engaged by worldly
    happenings.

63
Passions
  • Since the world is irrelevant to happiness
    passions should not be engaged by worldly
    happenings.
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