Is Sex Work Un-Stoic?
Practical Stoicism
Tanner Campbell
4.7 • 723 Ratings
🗓️ 1 February 2026
⏱️ 19 minutes
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Summary
I am a public philosopher, it is my only job. I am enabled to do this job, in large part, thanks to support from my listeners and readers. You can support my work, keep it independent and online, at https://stoicismpod.com/members
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Musonius Rufus Discourse 12: https://archive.org/details/MUSONIUSRUFUSSTOICFRAGMENTS
In this episode, I respond to a candid listener email asking about the Stoic position on sex work. The question is not framed with hostility or judgment, and for that reason I take it seriously. This is not an episode condemning women, sex workers, or anyone’s personal choices. It is an attempt to think clearly and Stoically about consent, justice, harm, and choice.
I begin by clarifying what the listener is actually asking. He is not asking whether men are wrong to engage sex workers, but whether women selling sex is unjust from a Stoic perspective. That distinction matters. Stoicism is not interested in purity rules or guilt. It is interested in whether actions are chosen rationally, freely, and without injustice.
I then address my own bias. I do not like sex work as a practice, largely because I am skeptical that it is ever entirely free from coercion, manipulation, or long-term harm. I make that bias explicit so it can be accounted for rather than hidden. A Stoic answer requires setting personal discomfort aside and asking whether something is unjust, not whether it feels distasteful.
To explore the classical position, I turn to Musonius Rufus and his extremely restrictive views on sex. Musonius argues that sex is only justified within marriage and only for procreation. I explain why I find this position impractical, overly rigid, and inconsistent with the rest of Stoic ethics. Stoicism is about rational choice, not outcome fixation, and reducing sex to reproduction ignores human health, intimacy, and context.
From there, I outline what Stoicism actually cares about. Sex is unjust only when it involves harm, coercion, deception, addiction, or unfair leverage. If a sex worker is freely choosing her work, has the power to refuse clients, is not being forced by circumstance or threat, and if the client is acting honestly and without deception, then no injustice is clearly present. In that case, there is no Stoic violation simply because money is exchanged.
I also stress that moral clarity does not end with permissibility. Just because something is not unjust does not mean it is automatically wise, healthy, or worth repeating. Stoicism asks us to remain attentive to who we are becoming through our choices. Avoiding injustice does not excuse us from remaining pro-social, reflective, and responsible for our future character.
I conclude by emphasizing that Stoicism offers very little in the way of sexual rules, but a great deal in the way of ethical reasoning. The question is not whether sex work is “unstoic” in the abstract. The question is always whether a choice is rational, just, non-harmful, and aligned with the kind of person we are trying to become.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome back, Prokaptan. Now listen, the episode title for this episode might be a little bit triggering at first glance, but please rest assured this isn't going to be an episode that judges any individual women or a group of women, for that matter, for their choices relating to their bodies and sexual activities. |
| 0:19.5 | I have received a very candid email from a male listener, |
| 0:23.7 | and he was so strikingly plain speaking, direct, and open that I am certain that his question |
| 0:30.8 | came from an honest place. I don't think that he's just trying to stir the old shit pot, |
| 0:37.0 | okay? I think this is a real question. I think it's a legitimate question that comes that he's just trying to stir the old shit pot. Okay? |
| 0:39.2 | I think this is a real question. |
| 0:43.7 | I think it's a legitimate question that comes from a real place and that he's being honest. |
| 0:44.6 | And so, for that reason, for those reasons, rather, I'm going to answer him here on the show. |
| 0:49.5 | I think that what you're about to hear is important to hear. |
| 0:51.8 | So please don't skip it just because you've got some hangups about the topic or think I'm about to rip into sex workers by criticizing them |
| 0:58.9 | or something like that. You know me well enough by now, I think, to trust me. With those things |
| 1:03.7 | said, there will be some adult themes in this episode. There will be a little bit of language |
| 1:09.1 | in the episode. Things maybe you wouldn't |
| 1:11.0 | want little ears to hear or too little. So if you're listening to this in the car or something |
| 1:15.9 | like that where you've got mixed company, maybe don't do that. All right? Here we go. So I'm going to start with the email and question and, of course, the questions within it up front. |
| 1:41.5 | I am anonymizing this a little bit so that I don't give too much |
| 1:46.0 | personally identifiable information out about this guy, but nothing about the substance, the subject |
| 1:51.1 | matter of the email, has been altered at all. Again, I'm just trying not to give away any |
| 1:55.7 | personally identifiable information about this individual. So here we go. Here's the email. |
| 2:00.6 | Hi, Tanner. I enjoy |
| 2:02.2 | listening to your podcast. I'm an older white man. This weekend, I engaged the services of a sex |
| 2:10.0 | worker, which is something I've always been curious about. I did enjoy it very much and I don't |
... |
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