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The Daily Stoic

Wisdom is the Most Important Virtue

The Daily Stoic

Daily Stoic | Backyard Ventures

Education, Business, Ryan Holiday, Society & Culture, Philosophy, Stoicism, 694393, Stoic Philosophy, Daily Stoic, Self-improvement, Stoic

4.5 • 5.3K Ratings

🗓️ 6 March 2020

⏱️ 4 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Courage. Temperance. Justice. These are the critical virtues of life. But what situations call for courage? What is the right amount? What is the right thing? This is where the final and essential virtue comes in: Wisdom. The knowing. The learning. The experience required to navigate the world. 

Wisdom has always been prized by the Stoics. Zeno said that we were given two ears and one mouth for a reason: to listen more than we talk. And since we have two eyes, we are obligated to read and observe more than we talk as well. 

It is key today, as it was in the ancient world, to  be able to distinguish between the vast aggregations of information that lay out there at your disposal—and the actual wisdom that you need to live a good life. It’s key that we study, that we keep our minds open always. You cannot learn that which you think you already know, Epictetus said. It’s true. 

Which is why we need to not only be humble students but also seek out great teachers. It’s why we should always be reading. It’s why we cannot stop training. It’s why we have to be diligent in filtering out the signal from the noise. 

Our goal is not just to acquire information, but the right kind of information. It’s the lessons found in Meditations, in everything from the actual Epictetus to James Stockdale entering the world of Epictetus. It’s the key facts, standing out from the background noise, that you need to absorb.

Thousands of years of blazing insight are available to the world. It is likely that you have the power to learn anything you want at your fingertips. So today, honor the Stoic virtue of wisdom by slowing down, being deliberate, and finding the wisdom you need.

Two eyes, two ears, one mouth. Remain a student. Act accordingly—and wisely. 

—

Keep the four Stoic virtues in mind—courage, temperance, justice, and wisdom. The fact is, they are all important, and you can’t neglect any one of them in trying to live virtuously. Study how best to embody each one as is called for, and you’ll be making good progress. 

When you find yourself wondering what the right course of action is, pick the options that are most in accordance with the virtuous path they mark. It’s how you live successfully and happily.

P.S. The Daily Stoic has released our Four Virtues Medallion—on the front, a seal depicting each of the Four Virtues; on the back, a reminder to always rely on them. Check it out here.

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

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 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 DailyStoke.com.

0:36.3

Wisdom is the most important virtue. Courage, temperance, justice. These are the critical virtues of life. But what situations call for courage? What is the right amount? What is the right thing? This is where the final and essential virtue comes in. Wisdom, the knowing, the learning, the learning.

0:53.3

The experience required to navigate the world. Wisdom has always been prized by the Stokes. Zeno said that we were given two years in one mouth for a reason to listen more than we talk.

1:05.3

And since we have two eyes, we are obligated to read and observe more than we talk as well. It is key today as it was in the ancient world to be able to distinguish between the vast aggregations of information that lay out there at your disposal and the actual wisdom that you need to live.

1:22.3

It is key that we study that we keep our minds open always. You cannot learn that what you think you already know, Epic Tita said. And it is true.

1:32.3

Which is why we need to not only be humble students but also seek out great teachers. It is why we should always be reading. It is why we cannot stop training. It is why we have to be diligent in filtering out the signal from the noise.

1:47.3

Our goal is not just to acquire information but the right kind of information. It is the lessons found in meditations. It is everything from actual Epic Tita to James Stockdale entering the world of Epic Tita.

2:00.3

It is the key facts standing out from the background noise that you need to observe. Thousands of years of blazing insight are available to the world. It is likely that you have the power to learn anything that you want at your fingertips.

2:15.3

Today, honor the stoic virtue of wisdom by slowing down by being deliberate and finding the wisdom you need. Two ears, two eyes, one mouth, remain a student, act accordingly and wisely.

2:31.3

And again, to keep the four stoic virtues in mind, courage, temperance, justice and wisdom, all of these are important. You can't neglect any one of them in trying to live a virtuous life.

2:42.3

You have to study how to best embody what each one is calling for. And then you'll be making good progress. And we hope this physical reminder that we have our newest coin in the challenge coin collection here at Daily Stoke, the four virtues coin.

2:57.3

Which as Marcus really says, reminds us not to exchange these virtues for others. We hope you'll check them out. We hope this will be a come part of your everyday carry. You can see that at www.dailystoic.com slash four virtues.

3:13.3

Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke early and add free on Amazon music. Download the Amazon music app today, or you can listen early and add free with Wondering Plus in Apple podcasts.

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