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Practical Stoicism

The Commitment To A Moral Life (Meditations 3.7)

Practical Stoicism

Evergreen Podcasts

Philosophy, Society & Culture

4.8662 Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2025

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, I explore Meditations 3.7, where Marcus Aurelius reminds us that nothing should take priority over Virtue. Many misunderstand Stoicism as a philosophy of detachment, resilience, and isolation, but in truth, it is profoundly prosocial. Being a Stoic means fulfilling our roles within the broader human community, not retreating from it. I challenge the popular but misguided idea of Stoicism as a philosophy for lone survivalists, demonstrating how its core teachings—from Zeno to Epictetus to Seneca—emphasize duty, justice, and engagement with the world. True Stoicism isn’t about turning inward; it’s about striving for moral excellence in every interaction. “Never value as an advantage to yourself what will force you one day to break your word, to abandon self-respect, to hate, suspect, execrate another, to act a part, to covet anything that calls for walls or coverings to conceal it. A man who puts first his own mind and divinity, and the holy rites of its excellence, makes no scene, utters no groans, will need neither the refuge of solitude nor the crowded streets. What is most worthwhile, he will pass his days neither in pursuit nor in avoidance, and it is no concern at all of his whether the time be longer or shorter for which he shall have the use of the soul in its bodily envelope; for even if he must be released at once, he will depart as easily as he would perform any other act that can be done with reverence and sobriety, being careful all his life of this one thing alone: that his understanding be not found in any state which is foreign to a reasonable social being.” --(Meditations 3.7) TAKEAWAYS — The highest priority in Stoicism is the pursuit of Virtue—nothing should stand in its way. — Stoicism is not a philosophy of detachment or isolation but of prosocial engagement and duty. — A Stoic does not seek solitude or approval; they act justly regardless of external validation. LINKS — Get on the list: https://stoicismpod.com/list — Go ad-free: https://stoicismpod.com/members — Order my book: https://stoicismpod.com/book — Source Text: https://stoicismpod.com/far — Follow me on BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/tannerocampbell.bsky.social — Follow me on YouTube: https://stoicismpod.com/youtube Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Whoa, go, whoo, are you?

0:02.2

Whoa, there. Victoria's had a Friday night to remember.

0:06.0

But now she's outside in the pouring rain and...

0:08.6

Oh, what? You are joking. I've got no data. How are we going to get home?

0:13.2

But then she remembers she's with EEE.

0:15.8

Yes, Uber still works.

0:17.5

So then she...

0:19.3

Uber's on me, guys. Should we get a kebab?

0:21.6

Use essential apps like Uber and WhatsApp

0:23.7

even when you run out of data.

0:25.7

Search EE Mobile.

0:27.2

Stay connected at 0.5 megabits per second.

0:29.5

Terms apply. Welcome back for Capton. Happy to be with you this week. No housekeeping today, other than to let you know that my son is now crawling, biting, and face planting into his spaghetti sauce with all the zeal of a toddler, except he's only 10 months old, so please send help.

1:01.3

This week's meditation is 3.7, and we're going to get right into it.

1:05.6

It reads as follows.

1:07.9

Never value as an advantage to yourself, that which will force you one day to break your word,

1:15.1

to abandon self-respect, to hate, suspect, execrate another, to act apart, to covet anything

1:23.0

that calls for walls or coverings to conceal it. A man who puts first his own mind and divinity

1:30.2

and the holy rites of its excellence makes no scene, utters no groans, will need neither the

1:36.9

refuge of solitude nor the crowded streets. What is most worthwhile, he will pass his days neither

1:44.1

in pursuit nor in avoidance,

1:46.0

and it is no concern at all of his, whether the time be longer or shorter, for which he shall have

...

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