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Practical Stoicism

Decide Like a Stoic

Practical Stoicism

Tanner Campbell

Self-improvement, Philosophy, Society & Culture, Education

4.7723 Ratings

🗓️ 12 May 2026

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Support my work for as little as £0.87/wk: https://stoicismpod.com/members

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In this episode, I lay out a practical, step-by-step Stoic framework for making decisions well.

A lot of people interested in Stoicism know the quotes, know the terminology, and understand the broad concepts — but when an actual difficult choice appears in front of them, they still don’t know what to do. This episode is about solving that problem.

I begin by making a distinction the Stoics took very seriously: the difference between wanting something and determining whether something is right. Most difficult decisions are not difficult because we don’t know what we desire, but because we’re uncertain what action accords with virtue and reason.

From there, I walk through an orthodox Stoic decision-making method rooted in Panaetius and preserved through Cicero’s De Officiis.

The process begins with examining what the Stoics understood to be the four roles every human being occupies simultaneously:

  • Our universal human nature as rational beings bound by the virtues.
  • Our individual nature — our temperament, strengths, and weaknesses.
  • Our circumstantial roles — parent, child, citizen, employee, neighbour.
  • Our chosen roles — career, projects, commitments, ambitions.

I use a detailed example throughout the episode: a person deciding whether to take a major overseas promotion while also caring for an aging mother whose health is declining.

The key Stoic insight is this: the right action is usually found at the intersection of all four roles. Most modern ethical thinking frames difficult choices as trade-offs, but Stoicism instead asks us to search for the action that satisfies all our legitimate roles without violating virtue.

I then explain the “tragic conflict clause” — what to do when no intersection seems possible. In those cases, the Stoics held that lower-order roles must be abandoned before virtue itself is compromised.

After identifying a candidate action, I introduce three tests the Stoics would apply:

  • The rational defence test: can you clearly explain why the action is right?
  • The sage test: would a genuinely wise person choose this?
  • The role-fidelity test: does the action honour your responsibilities regardless of what others do?

Finally, I discuss the importance of post-action review — what the Stoics called prokopē, or progress. Stoic character is built not through perfect choices, but through repeated examination, correction, and refinement over time.

The core point of the episode is simple: Stoicism is not passive inspiration or emotional comfort. It is a disciplined framework for reasoning through life well and choosing in alignment with nature, virtue, and our roles.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome back for Coptons. In this episode, I'm going to walk you through how to choose well in Stoicism.

0:06.0

Now, this is something that no one else, at least that I'm aware of, is talking about or teaching in any Stoicism podcasts.

0:12.0

And I'm going to teach it here today. However, before I do that, I need to do something else.

0:18.0

And this is something that I am historically not really good at,

0:22.1

and I need to start getting better at it, and that's promoting myself and making it clear

0:26.6

how you can support my work and how that support is absolutely necessary.

0:32.4

For me, anyway.

0:33.8

Hopefully it's necessary for you, but that remains to be seen.

0:36.6

I believe that the work I'm doing is genuinely critical.

0:40.4

Now, I don't think that I'm Einstein working on the next big scientific breakthrough or anything,

0:44.1

but I certainly think that what I do for people provides more practical value than many other

0:50.2

things that people are trying to sell us every day.

0:52.4

I'm selling philosophy in a way, but I'm doing

0:55.6

it with no price tag on it, right? The podcast is free. Almost all of my content is free. And I'm doing that

1:01.9

in a world where most people are just trying to sell us stuff or AI, something or other, or expensive

1:08.7

coffee. And you can damn sure bet that most people do not care whether or not I get to teach philosophy for a living. Certainly don't care as much as I do or probably as much as you do. Most people, in fact, don't care about philosophy at all, I've found. So I'm a guy who's choosing to make a living, giving away something that most of the world doesn't think is important anyway. But I think it's important, and I think that you think it's important, too, or else you wouldn't be here. So I want

1:31.6

to make it clear the best way to support me and my work to keep me going. That is to go to Stoicismpod.com

1:38.0

forward slash members and make a weekly pledge of financial support in the amount of 87 pence, which is roughly a

1:45.8

one U.S. dollar. Now, that's going to result in three pounds, 77 pence a month of support for my work.

1:52.2

There are presently more than 50,000 of you listening to this podcast. Fifty of you elect

1:58.5

to support me in this way. Now, that's not me trying to make you feel guilty.

2:02.5

I actually think that's on me. I think I've not made it clear that this method of support exists,

...

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