4.6 • 4.7K Ratings
🗓️ 18 September 2018
⏱️ 3 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today. |
0:13.6 | Welcome to the Daily Stoke. For each day, we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate the strength, insight, wisdom necessary for living the good life. |
0:23.3 | Each one of these passages is based on the 2000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of history's greatest men and women. For more, you can visit us at DailyStoic.com. |
0:38.3 | Approach your troubles like a doctor. It's famously said that you should learn from the mistakes of others because you can't live long enough to make them all yourself. |
0:48.3 | In that way, the books we read and the information we digest gives us an advantage to those who choose to go through and make all the mistakes themselves. |
0:58.3 | In studying the Stokes, we are able to adopt a mentality battle tested by some of history's most successful warriors, artists, businessmen, and politicians. |
1:08.3 | We can use the same operating system that helps centuries of people solve the complex problems of daily life. |
1:14.3 | Ward Farnsworth is the Dean of the University of Texas Law School. He's also a lifetime student of the Stoics, an author of the Practicing Stoic, a philosophical user's manual, an amazing new book on Stoicism that you should check out. |
1:29.3 | He expanded on the idea we were just mentioning in a recent interview with the Daily Stoic. |
1:35.3 | Stoicism tries to get its students to approach the troubles of other people like a good doctor would. |
1:41.3 | Veteran doctors are very compassionate and they give their all to their patients, but they don't get emotional about it. |
1:48.3 | They might have done so when they were first getting started, but experience tends to turn them into natural Stokes and their professional lives. |
1:56.3 | That's one way to think about Stoicism. It's an effort to gain by the study of philosophy, some of the traits and immunities that would have been in the past. |
2:04.3 | But otherwise be the natural result of long experience. The study of Stoicism is a kind of surrogate for the passage of time. |
2:12.3 | That's why you put in this work, listening to this podcast or reading these emails. |
2:17.3 | Because that's what your goal is, to bring yourself to the state that others would take a lifetime to achieve. |
2:23.3 | When you read these emails, try not to just read them, but adopt their lessons into your everyday life. |
2:29.3 | Try to speed up the passage of time that way. Try to get experience. |
2:35.3 | In that way, you're inheriting the wisdom of generations past and you're stronger and wiser for it. |
2:41.3 | For more, read our full interview with Ward on dailystoic.com and check out his newest book, The Practicing Stoic, A Philosophical Users Manual. |
2:50.3 | There's a link on our website or you can just pull it up on Amazon or your independent bookstore. |
2:55.3 | This book distills the main ideas of the Stoics in 12 easy to reference headings and I think you like it. |
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