Stuff You Should Know - What exactly is stoicism?
Episode Date: July 4, 2017The word stoic has taken on its own meaning apart from the philosophical movement which gave it life. Learn all about the early stoics, what the philosophy is all about and where the movement stands t...oday. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hey everybody, it's us, Josh and Chuck,
and we want you to know we are coming somewhere near you.
We're sure if you live in North America this year.
That's right, we're going on tour,
and why don't we just rattle through these dates?
Okay.
Toronto, August 8th at the Danforth Music Hall.
Chicago, August 9th, the next day at Harris Theater.
Then we are taking some time off to recover
after that two day grind.
We're hitting Vancouver, the Vogue Theater, September 26th,
followed by Minneapolis.
We're gonna be at the Pantages Theater again
on September 27th.
That is correct.
Yep, and then Austin, Chuck on October 10th
at the Paramount Theater.
Yes, and very special show,
in Lawrence, Kansas, at Liberty Hall on October 11th.
Yep, and then we're gonna do a three night stand,
October 22nd, 23rd, and 24th at the Bell House
in Brooklyn, New York, and then Chuck, take it home.
Well, take it home, literally,
because we are finishing up November 4th,
right here in Atlanta at the Buckhead Theater,
and this is a very special benefit show.
And all the proceeds will be going to
Lifeline Animal Project of Atlanta
and the National Down Syndrome Society.
Yep, and for more information and to buy tickets,
just go to sysklive.com.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know from housestuffworks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark with Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
Guest producer, Noel.
Jerry's been out a lot lately, Chuck, have you noticed?
Uh, no.
No, I haven't really either.
Of course, Jerry's got big life things going on.
She does.
Lying in selling houses, she's like a real estate mogul.
Visiting the mall, doing all sorts of stuff.
We're just a couple of deep thinkers
hanging out on the stowa.
Yeah, specifically, what is it, the stowa?
Did you practice the word, this pronunciation at all?
I tried to pronounce a lot of this,
but, you know, ancient Greek,
you know, the phrase, it's all Greek to me.
Yeah.
And it comes from not being able to pronounce these things.
It's quite literal.
The stowa poi kiwi.
I think that's probably pretty close, man.
So, can I start this with a couple of quick thoughts?
Sure.
First of all,
I took four different philosophy quizzes
before we'd recorded.
Like, what kind of philosophy
do you subscribe to type quiz?
Yeah, you know, the ones that are super accurate.
Right.
Because they can figure that out in eight to 15 questions.
Sure, and then you can move on
and find out what Muppet you are.
So, here's my results here.
For the first one, I was Epicurean.
Okay.
The second one, existentialism.
All right.
Third one, atheist existentialist.
Oh.
Fourth, Nietzsche slash Stoic.
Nietzsche was a huge critic of Stoicism.
I'm surprised they put those two together.
Well, that is Chuck, though.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, you're a contradiction in terms.
You're yin and yang.
Well, I am.
The reason why I took these is
because when I was doing the research on Stoicism,
I found myself a lot of times going,
yep, yep, totally.
And then a lot of times going,
no, that's really not me.
Same here.
Same here.
And I think even the Stoics from back in the day
realized that there were very few, very, very few actual,
what they called sages walking around.
Stoic sages who really fulfilled every aspect of this
to a T.
Yeah.
And I think one of the reasons why Stoicism today
is making a comeback and it's so appealing
is because well, there's two reasons.
One, more than kind of a naval gazing-type philosophy
where you're trying to figure out the nature of existence
or something like that,
it's more a blueprint for existing day-to-day
in a useful, happy way.
Sure.
And then secondly,
it's, you can kind of pick and choose.
It's almost like a buffet.
You can pick and choose what aspects of it
you want to adopt or use,
and no Greek ghost is gonna come along
and spear you in the face.
With a trident.
Right.
Beside me punch.
Yeah, and I think that's, I mean,
first of all, the age of reason fascinates me to no end.
And second, I've kind of wanted to cover some of the great
philosophies of all time.
This sounds like a good start.
Well, it is, but it's just kind of daunting
because people spend, like, that's their life's work, you know?
And for us to try and summarize any of them
in 30 to 45 minutes is kind of like,
you know, I don't know what philosophy you would
liken that to, foolishism?
Yeah, dun-sism.
That's what we do, you know?
Well, how about this?
If this one goes well, maybe we'll take it as a sign
that we can tackle some other ones.
But you're absolutely right.
Like, even the, even just, like, say,
the internet encyclopedia of philosophy, which is meant,
you know, it's sharp and it's detailed and it's exhaustive,
but it's also clearly meant for lay people
interested in philosophy, right?
It's just, just this, just stoicism is so involved
that it's not possible for us to, like,
really capture all of it, even get in an overview,
you know, or giving it, just hitting the highlights.
So we can't possibly hit all the highlights.
There's just too much to it.
And that's just stoicism.
I still say it's worth talking about though,
just because it's so interesting.
So if I get up in the middle, you're gonna pull me back.
I'll just keep going.
Well, I like the urban dictionary definition.
Yeah.
Stoic is someone who does not give a beep
about the stupid things in this world
that most people care so much about.
Stoics do have emotions, but only for the things
in this world that really matter.
They're the most real people alive.
And then in their little example,
is a group of kids sitting by the porch.
Stoic walks by.
One kid says something very mean.
Hey, you're a blankety blank and you blank blank.
And the stoic says, good for you and keeps going.
Right.
It's a part of me really, like, I hear that
and I'm like, man, I am so that person on so many levels,
but then sometimes I'm totally not.
And I think what the difference is or what matters is,
well, it depends on if they say something
that matters to you or if something does matter to you.
Like, I might get really riled up about some stuff.
Right.
Well, that would make you not stoic.
That doesn't rile anyone else up,
but I also, some things that really make
other people irate, I'm just like, man, can't change it.
It is what it is.
And I only can get upset about the things I can change.
Yeah, if you could apply that to everything,
you'd be pretty, pretty high up there in the stoic pantheon.
I'd be a stoic five star general.
Pretty much, five finger punch guy.
All right.
So we beat around the bush.
I mean, that was a pretty good definition actually,
even though it was from the Urban Dictionary, but...
We should say we picked that one up from an Aeon article.
Why Stoicism is one of the best mind hacks ever devised.
Yeah, it was a good one.
By Larry Wallace, yeah.
You did a good job kind of giving an overview
of the whole thing.
I think Larry Wallace is one of the great modern stoicists.
Maybe.
There's plenty of them running around these days.
Yeah, but we're, I mean, we'll go back in time
and study the beginnings of stoicism
because we're talking about, like you hear the word stoic
today and it means, it was taken from this,
but it's kind of someone like sort of a grim face,
stoic doesn't say much.
And that's not what stoicism,
then they say in our article several times
with the capital S really is all about.
Right, yeah.
To these days, people typically,
or I should say these days up to about three years ago,
people thought of stoics as somebody
who could watch their dog get hit by a car
and their reaction was to raise their chin
a little higher up in the air, like just grin and bear it.
As Larry put it, where I'm on a first name basis
with Larry Wallace that it's a philosophy of grim endurance,
tolerating rather than transcending
life's agonies and adversities.
Just kind of trudging through
just taking hit after hit from life
as it deals them to you, right?
That was the idea of stoicism.
You can kind of like, it's not like
that's just radically unlike actual stoicism,
but it's an outsider's interpretation
of what the stoics are actually doing,
what's actually going on, the purpose of the whole thing.
That outsider's view that doesn't really fully understand it
became the popular view until recently,
until it started to kind of gain some traction lately.
Yeah, and throughout the years,
stoicism has informed some religions.
These days there are a lot of atheists that are stoics.
But I like how our article says it is above all,
it teaches the value of emotional control
in living one's life fully.
Yeah, so here's the basis of it.
The basis of it is if you can detach yourself
from emotional responses to things,
then something that comes along,
whether good or bad, is not gonna get your goat.
Right.
Stoicism is all about protecting your goat
and not letting anything get it.
And the way that they do that is by saying
there are very few things that I can control in life
and everything that I can't control,
I'm not gonna get riled up over, you know?
Lose my job?
Oh, well, it happens.
It doesn't mean I'm any less of a person.
I just want to go out and get another job.
Dog gets hit by a car?
Well, that's really awful
because I really like that dog,
but I'll just go get another dog
or maybe I'll just learn to live without the dog.
Maybe I was becoming too attached to the dog.
It's things like that.
That's stoicism.
The whole point of it is,
it's not just to protect your goat from being gotten.
It's about living a moral life
where you're a very good human being.
And the idea is that the only way to really do that
is through things like rationalism
and investigating the universe
and being understanding of knowledge
and then pursuing ethics, specific ethics,
and they figured out the best way to do that
is dispassionately.
Yeah, I think my bumper sticker would say,
on board, Colin, part-time stoicism, full-time dreamer.
Okay.
That is a specific bumper sticker.
I used to have a lot of bumper stickers in high school
and now I loathe them so much.
Really, what did you have?
Oh, I had an old Volkswagen Beetle
that was, my family actually bought brand new
in 1968 and was passed down from kid to kid to kid.
It's an heirloom.
It was, it was very cool, I thought at the time.
Well, it is cool, I love those old Beetles,
but I just went through one of those phases
where I was like, here's a Native American saying,
and here's something about Mother Nature,
and this Bob Marley had this to say,
and just, yeah, I was one of those.
And now I see those cars with all the things,
and I'm just like, shut up, nobody cares.
That's funny.
Maybe I'm a silly rat.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, did you have a 311 sticker?
No, this was pre-311 actually.
Okay, gotcha.
So did your mom come out and be like,
what'd you do to the family heirloom?
You put stickers on it.
No, it's funny that car had a,
the rear floorboard was missing on one side.
My dad had a car like that, a Malibu.
So you could like see the street?
Uh-huh.
I didn't use the word there.
Now that I look back,
I didn't even have a piece of wood.
Now that I look back, I'm like,
that was extraordinarily irresponsible
to be driving around with kids in the back seat
with the street visible.
Yeah.
I love that you're down just like, watch your feet, kids.
Yeah, easy does it.
All right, so you wanna go back
and talk about the history a little bit?
No, I wanna keep beating around the bush.
All right, let's get in the way back machine.
And we need to really juice it up
because we're going way back.
Got some kerosene, got some banana peels
and got some airplane glue.
But that's just for us.
That's right, because it's a long ride.
Yeah.
Ancient Greece is where we're headed
to the time of the great philosophers.
And like we said earlier, sitting here on the stoa,
that was a joke, but it wasn't.
And you said, stoa, you gonna try it again?
The stoa poikili.
Yes, or painted porch is what it means.
And that was a public space in Athens, Greece.
It was like a portico.
Yeah, where people would hang out and talk
and chew the fat.
And that's what I love about this time
was people just, they were just alive with ideas,
these philosophical ideas of trying to figure it all out.
Yeah, but don't you think like everyone's only just be like,
oh, everybody shut up and just live.
I gotta do something useful.
Yeah, just stop talking.
Yeah.
No, but I agree with you overall.
It was a pretty thrilling time.
Did you take philosophy in college at all?
No, no, I didn't.
I really did not.
I don't think I took a single philosophy class
now that I think about it, not even a survey.
I took the one kind of general class.
I guess it was the one on one.
And I actually made an A,
which I didn't make a ton of As in college.
And I remember at the time,
kind of the same thing about half the class.
I was like, man, so fascinating.
And then the other half, I was just like,
oh man, what a waste of time.
Like do something useful.
Go like volunteer for a charity.
It could make something out of wood.
Anything.
All right, so back to the stoa.
We're on this painted porch, this portico as it were.
People are everywhere running their mouths
about what they think is important.
And then this dude wanders up a Zeno of Sidium.
Yeah, who'd recently been shipwrecked.
And there were other Zenos, not to be confused.
I know that it's confusing.
There should be one Zeno in all of history.
There were Zenos of other things,
but this is Zeno of Sidium.
And you're right, he was shipwrecked
and he was wandering around after a trip from Cyprus.
Did you say we're in Athens?
Oh yeah, not Georgia.
No.
Although we did our fair share
of sitting around on porches,
talking nonsense there as well.
But that's a porch porch.
Yeah.
Not a Greek porch.
And so Zeno took a little bit of insight from the cynics
and then eventually said, you know what?
I kept my kind of forming my own thoughts here.
And I think everyone else is doing it.
I have my own philosophy.
Yeah.
And it's called stoicism.
Yeah, named after later.
I don't think he'd call it that.
I'm not sure.
He'd probably call it Zenoism.
They're like, you know, that sucks.
We're going to call it stoicism after the porch.
Yeah.
But this is, I mean, like the stoicism very quickly
became one of the big philosophies at the time.
Oh yeah.
And it rivaled some of the philosophies
that it grew out of like Socratic philosophy.
And like you said, cynicism, the cynics.
Sure.
And actually, if you look at stoicism,
it's kind of a compromise between Socrates,
or so crates as Bill and Ted call them, philosophy, which
was that to lead a good life.
And this was the point of all of the philosophies
at this time during this age of reason
was achieving what was called eudaimonia.
And eudaimonia is a life worth living.
It's thriving.
It's flourishing.
It's being happy, like real happiness, right?
That was the pursuit of all of these different ideas
that were floating around at the time was how to achieve that.
Socrates had the idea that you achieve that through like 12
cardinal virtues.
And some of them were things you could cultivate in yourself,
like courage, a sense of justice, that kind of stuff.
But then there were other ones too that
had like everything to do with luck,
like being good looking was one of them, right?
Yeah.
If you weren't good looking, if you were ugly, sorry, buddy.
You could never achieve eudaimonia, right?
Yeah.
On the other end of the spectrum were the cynics.
And the cynics believed that earthly trappings like wealth,
and fame, and glory, anything like that was the path to ruin.
And that the true path to eudaimonia
was living simply and living in poverty.
And so Zeno comes along and hears all these.
And as he's formulating his own ideas,
he's like, Socrates makes some sense over here.
And so did the cynics a little bit.
But I'm going to put them together.
And that's where Stoicism came from.
It was a compromise between the two,
where you live a life of pursuing eudaimonia
through these virtues, four virtues.
I think there's justice, courage, wisdom, and then temperance,
right?
Yeah.
So you're practicing those four virtues.
So that's kind of a nod to Socrates.
And you don't have to live in poverty.
You can be wealthy.
Because if Stoicism is anything, it's
wealthy people who got into philosophy that weren't quite
sure how to feel about being wealthy.
Yeah, to say, to kind of come to the point that like,
having money is not a bad thing.
Right, right.
And so what they came up with was, sure, you can be wealthy.
And that's OK.
You can prefer to be wealthy.
But you just can't be attached to it.
You can't desire to be wealthy.
Because you can't control being wealthy.
And if you pursue being wealthy, you're
pursuing something beyond your control.
So if you just happen to be wealthy, that's great.
You can be happy with it.
But also be prepared to lose it at any given time.
And that's a big part of Stoicism.
Yeah, I think it's so funny, though,
to think about like thousands of years ago in ancient Greece,
like they spent so much time thinking about living this.
All these schools have thought of living this life.
So like, putting so much thought into living to life
to its fullest in all the different ways that they
defined it.
And eventually, like over the years,
like as recently as like the generation of our parents
and grandparents in the United States,
like the philosophy of life was like,
you just go to work and work hard until you die.
And that's the only thing that matters.
Exactly.
Like all that stuff is garbage.
Yeah, well, I think that's one of the reasons why Stoicism is
becoming appealing again is this idea
that like work seems to be kind of going
through a weird transformation, doesn't it?
Yeah.
Like it's not like that anymore.
Like that ethic is still around for sure.
But like, how many people do you know work from home?
Like almost entirely?
A lot.
A lot.
And that's fairly new.
So I wonder if like this changing work dynamic is
leading to this resurgence in Stoicism
that you can find happiness through other stuff.
I mean, part of me thinks this is all like super worthwhile.
And part of me thinks, and it's sort of indulgent to sit in
and a bit like you said, navel, gaze-y.
And like, just start practicing good things instead
of sitting around thinking about the best way to live life.
Well, we'll talk about criticisms of them later on.
But I think you hit a big one though, Chuck,
because the idea that it's self-indulgent,
because it demands introspection almost every moment
of every day.
Yeah.
You want to take a break and then get back to it?
Yeah, I got to get my head together.
Where's that airplane glue?
Here you go.
All right.
Hey, dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends,
and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it, and popping it back in as we take you back
to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice
would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yeah, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy, teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you listen to podcasts.
Nothing like airplane glue to get your head back on straight.
Just kidding, of course, everyone.
Sure.
We're smart guys.
We don't do that kind of thing.
No, it's pretty tough to be smart and huff
model airplane glue.
Yeah.
You're pretty much making a choice between that
and being smart.
That's what they teach you early on.
Yeah.
You want to go somewhere in life?
You want to huff airplane glue.
It's the one thing Nancy Reagan didn't lie about.
All right, so Zeno got things going.
Piece of mind that comes with living a life of virtue
in accordance with reason and nature.
And then other dudes got on boards.
And of course, got on boards, got on board.
And they were all dudes back then,
because everything was from the man's perspective.
Just want to point that out.
Yeah, because it's changed so dramatically since then.
But some of the other early stoasis,
Cleanthys, Kato.
Kato the younger or elder?
Younger, right?
Kato the Katelyn.
Oh, man, I forgot about him.
I'm not sure which Kato.
I think it's the younger.
Yeah, we'll find out from two people who email in to let us know.
Seneca and then a very important stoasis.
Well, I'm going to pronounce it epic.
Epitectus.
Epictetus.
Sounds like a vaccine shot.
It does, E-P-I-C-T-E-T-U-S.
It's that C going into a T that's getting you.
I think it's just Epictetus or Epictetus.
I think Epictetus is what we should go with.
I want another C in there.
want it to be Epitectus, but it's not.
No, it's not.
It's Epictetus.
All right.
So...
Oh, and don't forget Marcus Aurelius, man.
Oh, well, sure.
I mean, he comes a little bit later.
Like, he was the ruler of Aintment.
Aintment?
Man, what is my problem today?
It's okay, man.
Everyone knew what you meant.
He was the philosopher king.
And that was when Stoicism was kind of the most popular thing going.
Yeah.
Apparently, they moved from Athens to Rome, which I didn't realize this.
I always had the idea that Rome venerated Hellenistic Greece hundreds of years after
basically the Greek civilization had just kind of gone into a bit of a twilight or had gone
out of its heyday.
Right.
No, there was total cross-pollination, including some of these early Stoics who traveled from
Athens to Rome, and basically, with that move, transferred the seed of philosophy from Athens
to Rome, from Greek to Rome, from Greece to Rome.
I didn't realize that they were actually cross-pollinating one another at the time.
Yeah.
Did you know that?
I think I recalled that from deep in my college memory banks.
Nice.
So, Epictetus man, he had a big role in the Stoica movement.
He was a former slave, which kind of makes sense in terms of Stoicism.
He almost single-handedly gives credence to Stoicism because so many other Stoics were
extraordinarily wealthy, powerful men that it's like, yeah, it's pretty easy for you
to go through life saying, you know, just take what life gives you if life is giving
you nothing but gold bullion all the time, right?
This guy was born a slave, crippled in the knee for life, and became a Stoic, one of
the great Stoic thinkers, and just through his life proved that Stoicism can work.
Yeah.
And he wrote a handbook at the time, it was called An Incaridian, and he wrote the Incaridian
of Epictetus.
An Incaridium literally means handbook, it means ready at hand.
So it was a very famous handbook and he attributed, I mean, the first line of it was, some things
are in our control and others not.
And that kind of sums it all up, like he could have said the end, but he decided to dive
a little deeper.
I agree with you.
I think our brand of Stoicism has about the same contours, because that's everything
you need to know right there.
There's some things you can control, most things you can't control.
There you go.
Like don't get too high, too low, right?
Don't get too mad about something.
Well, ultimately, I think that's what it boils down to.
I don't really find much of a problem when people are overjoyed.
I don't think that's an issue.
And technically with Stoicism, that's a problem.
You should not become overjoyed, but experiencing joy is fine.
But just being overcome with happiness or joy or grief or whatever it is, you're violating
one of those four cardinal virtues, temperance, which is just being tempered and even keeled.
But I think if you're saying, don't get upset about something that's out of your control,
don't blame others, don't try to control other people, just know that whatever comes, you
can handle it.
There you go.
You need to know for me.
How many times have you heard me say, it is what it is, which is an annoying thing to
hear and say?
But it's pretty stoic.
Well, it is.
But it's also, in my case, it is what it is until it isn't.
It just matters if I'm personally riled up about something.
Yeah, but I think, again, though, there's probably some people who subscribe to at least
modern stoicism listening to this, and I would guess that they would say, that's because
stoicism is basically meant to apply to every day of your life, like no stoics are really
expected to become sages in their lifetimes, that it's something you just do every single
day is try to not get riled up.
But of course, something's going to come along and get you riled up.
That's just human nature.
Stoicism is trying to put a bridle on that human nature.
Yeah, well, and this is insider stuff.
I think you and I compliment each other because we rarely get worked up about the same thing.
Just voter suppression.
Well, no, it happens here and there.
But just in our personal lives and everything to do with work, like oftentimes I've noticed
like something that'll rile me up, you're calming me down and the other way around.
And I mean, I think that's one reason we've lasted so long.
Like if two people were so similar that they're constantly worked up about the same stuff,
no one, you know, you're just going to be working each other up and no one's going
to be there to say, Hey, man, it is what it is.
Yeah, man.
Hey, mellow out.
Here's the Bob Marley bumper stick.
Exactly.
So should we talk a little bit about the areas of study?
Yeah.
All right.
Well, there are three main ones and stoicism.
And this is all, you know, to deal with introspection, which is kind of like all philosophies.
Physics is the first thing and it's not physics like you think of that you hate studying in
high school.
Well, it falls under a larger umbrella term, I guess.
Yeah.
They're talking about the natural world, the natural universe and also what lies beyond
it.
And when they say the natural world, they're talking about everything, God, the divine,
nature, everything that we know and things that we don't know.
Yeah.
Everything we would view as science or like you said, nature, yeah, all that stuff.
That's physics and all of it that one of the things the Stoics, I think if they weren't
the first to come up with it, they definitely popularized it was the idea that all of this
was interconnected.
Yeah.
Which is pretty, I mean, you take it for granted today, like everybody thinks that everything's
interconnected these days.
But it's to be among the first to kind of point that out or suggest that's pretty significant
contribution to Western thought.
Yeah.
I imagine that was a pretty deep thing when it first started hitting people, you know.
Can you just see George Carlin being like, oh, you just blew my mind.
Oh, because he was so great?
Man.
Wait.
No, he wasn't so great.
No, he was the guide, their spirit animal.
What was his name?
I'm going to get chilled on this.
We'll just edit this part out.
I didn't know I had to brush up on my bill and dead.
I didn't either.
I surprised myself.
You should have seen my face.
You know, they kept talking about remakes, like as recently as a couple of years ago,
I think, or not remakes, but sequels.
With the originals?
Oh, yeah.
I guess it's like, man, I love those movies, I'd love to go make another one.
Did you see, what is, so was Keanu Reeves Bill or Ted?
Oh, why are we even doing this to ourselves?
Boy, I want to say he was Ted.
So the guy who played the other guy.
Yeah.
Alex Winter?
Oh, geez, Chuck.
Wow.
Nice job.
So Alex Winter was in, what was the Charles Bronson vehicle, like his most favorite
death wish?
Death wish three, death wish three was what he was in, which was when Golan Globus got
their hands on it and turned it into like a schlock, violent, like almost post apocalyptic
movie.
Yeah.
And he's great in it, but he's also in a documentary on Golan Globus.
I can't remember what the name of the, name of the documentaries, but it's just about
how bad the movies they made were and how gleefully these guys made them, but he's interviewed
in it.
That guy hasn't aged a day.
No.
He looks exactly.
He looks exactly Bill.
Okay.
So he's Bill.
Yeah.
All right.
So we got that settled.
Physics is done.
What's next?
Logic, which they wanted to include social scientists, psychology, sociology, history,
which I kind of like, I'm down with that as far as the philosophies go.
They want to include all this stuff, but collectively they kind of called this all reason, and it
was a very big deal to stoicism, perhaps the biggest deal.
Right.
And they also were engaged in epistemology, which is theories of what knowledge is, how
we gain knowledge, what's true, what's belief, what's false, how do we differentiate between
these things?
I spent a lot of time investigating this and putting it all under logic because it was
through logic that you could investigate physics, which included investigating God and the nature
of the universe and stuff like that.
And then through all that investigation, that introspection, that naval gazing, you were
ultimately figuring out how to best pursue and best live out the third part, which was
the ethics of the whole thing.
Yeah.
And you mentioned the four great virtues earlier, courage, justice, wisdom, and temperance.
And the whole idea here is, it's not like you want to block out the bad and only embrace
the good.
You want to consider both the good and the bad, but just don't let any of it get in
the way of anything that you're trying to pursue in your life.
Right.
Pretty simple.
Yeah.
And the whole good, bad thing, where did you find this thing on ethics?
Was that the...
That was the Internet encyclopedia of philosophy from their entry on it.
Yeah.
It's pretty good.
The whole thing...
It was.
Dude, you should have seen how in-depth they go though, but I thought this one was a good
snippet.
Well, sure.
Yeah.
They dive pretty deep.
But I thought this was a pretty good little summation.
They're talking about, like you said, money isn't just not good or a.k.a. bad.
Things like this, they called indifference as in I-N-D-I-F-F-E-R-E-N-T-S, not indifference.
And it's not good or bad.
It could be either one.
It's really all about not letting something like that get in the way of your pursuit.
Right.
So, and again, it went back to wealth, right?
And this person in the encyclopedia of philosophy points out that, like, money definitely...
Being wealthy usually is helpful or beneficial to the individual, but it can also not be
beneficial where, say, you have a big heroin problem.
Well, the more money you get, the more money you're going to spend on heroin.
So in that case, being wealthy is detrimental to you, not beneficial.
And for something to be a good, it has to be good under all circumstances.
And to a stoic, there's only four things that are good under all circumstances, which
are those four cardinal virtues.
Everything else, like you said, is an indifferent.
And it can either be preferred or disperferred.
Like wealth typically would fall under being a preferred indifferent, whereas, say, disease,
even chronic disease, would be a disper... well, a disperferred indifferent.
Man, that's tough, though.
It is.
But the point is, is whether it's fabulous wealth or diabetes, they should affect you
about the same.
Or you might want one.
You might not want to have one.
But if you have either one, you can live with it.
And that brings up a huge, huge component of stoicism that's really been blown up and
exploded in the 21st century, which is, you should take adversity and turn it into an
opportunity for growth.
That is a huge aspect of stoicism that's really being practiced and espoused these days.
Yeah.
I'm down with that.
Like I don't think... I like being able to take from all these philosophies and different
religions to form your sort of pathway through life, you know?
Sure.
Like when I hear of sometimes, I've started to read about Buddhism and the whole thing
with Buddhism of like, every day you start anew and you have a new chance.
Like that really appeals to me, too.
What I don't like is when either religions or philosophies say like, no, this is the
only way, then everything else is BS.
Sure.
You know?
Yeah.
That's just, that's a harsh buzzkill.
It really is.
Not only is it BS, but I'm going to kill you for thinking otherwise.
Yeah.
So, Seneca, who was one of the great thinkers of stoicism, he was an advisor to Nero.
And we'll talk about him as criticism of stoicism later on.
But he had a very famous quote where he says, you are unfortunate in my judgment for you
have never been unfortunate.
You have passed through life with no antagonist to face you.
No one will know what you are capable of, not even yourself.
And that kind of shapes the basis of that idea that no matter what life throws at you,
you take it and you say, I'm going to become a better person from this, like, oh, this
happened.
Well, that's great because that means that I can learn to be better at this.
So my dog just got hit by a car.
I'm going to practice fortitude and make it through this really hard time and become
a stronger person on the other side.
Yeah.
He may as well have said, you, trust one kid, comma.
Sure.
Exactly.
And I mean, that makes a, people turn that on Seneca as well, but a lot of modern stoics
come to his defense as like, no, that guy had a harder life than you would think.
Should we take another break?
Yeah.
All right, let's do it.
Let's talk about Seneca and Cicero and all other kinds of weird names on the podcast.
Hey, dude, the nineties called David Lasher and Christine Taylor stars of the cult classic
show.
Hey, dude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey, dude, as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and
dive back into the decade of the nineties.
We lived it.
And now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends and nonstop references to the best
decade ever.
Do you remember going to blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL instant messenger and the dial up sound like poltergeist?
You'll leave a code on your best friend's beeper because you'll want to be there when
the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy, blowing
on it and popping it back in as we take you back to the nineties.
Listen to Hey, dude, the nineties called on the I heart radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I heart podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay.
I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this.
I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me.
Yep.
We know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide
you through life step by step, not another one, kids, relationships, life in general
can get messy.
You may be thinking this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen.
So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye, listen to frosted tips with Lance Bass
on the I heart radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts.
So check you're saying you're talking about religion.
Yeah.
This is an apparently informed Christianity in a lot of ways.
Yeah.
And Buddhism in some ways.
Yeah.
Yet atheists embrace it.
It's kind of weird.
Weird.
These days.
But I mean, the early Stoics were definitely, they definitely believed in a divine intervention.
It was kind of the basis of the whole thing that this is God's will.
So why, why try to control it?
Who are you to try to control it?
Just roll with the punches.
Yeah.
That's a big one.
When I was taking all those philosophy quizzes, they're all a little bit different, but you
saw a through line through a lot of these questions and the free will one was in every
single one of them.
Yeah.
Like how do you feel about free will and they had different ways of asking it.
But you know, that would be well, what do you think exactly if you want to find out
which philosophy that you jive with, you have to answer the free will question, free will
question.
Yeah.
Hey, that's easier to say than do just preferred indifferent.
Nice work.
So, so one of the big points, especially today for practicing Stoicism is looking at adversity
as a growth opportunity for growth.
Right.
That's just a good tool in my panic.
Another one.
And this one, I really, this is where I big time diverge from Stoicism as like a part
of a daily practice is something called negative visualization.
Yeah.
Like a try and try and imagine the worst case scenario.
Constantly.
Yeah.
I'm not into that at all.
No.
So say you're, say you're at like your child's birthday party, right?
And you are not you specifically, this is you just a general person and you're having
just the most intense moment of, of joy and appreciation for your child.
According to Stoics, you should follow that up with a thought about how at your child's
next doctor's appointment, your child could be diagnosed with terminal leukemia.
Yeah.
That that is what you should be doing basically all the time, negative visualization.
And the idea is it's twofold.
One, you're preventing yourself from becoming overjoyed at that moment.
Right.
Don't, don't do that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then secondly, you're, you're exploring how you will feel if your kid does get diagnosed
with something horrible or something bad happens and that when it actually happens, you'll
say that it's not so bad.
I'm already used to it.
Or you'll be able to confront it through your imagination and say, this is what I'm afraid
of.
That's not that bad.
But I mean, it's a really extreme, horrific example.
Yeah.
But, but it is ultimately, it's definitely in step with stoic, stoicism that you should
be visualizing the worst case scenario all the time.
Yeah.
I mean, and that's one of the reasons stoicism has such a downer reputation.
And such that Cicero, uh, wrote, uh, a stoic rouse enthusiasm, he is much more likely to
extinguish any enthusiasm the student may have to begin with.
Yeah.
It was a pretty good burn.
Um, and you know, I get that like who would, if you, if that was one of the first things
you learned, if you started to poke around with stoicism, uh, 99% of people would probably
be like, man, I don't want to, I don't, I don't like the sounds of that.
Yeah.
I like that you're not having to control everything aspect, but the thinking about nothing but
negative thoughts all the time.
Yeah.
You know, and I get the point of it.
I just, it doesn't, it doesn't appeal to me.
No.
I mean, you shouldn't be Pollyanna either.
Um, well, no, it's, it's in direct contradiction to the idea of the power of positive thinking.
Right.
Which is stoics.
Like you fool.
What are you doing?
You're putting yourself up for nothing, but let downs when that doesn't actually come
true.
Well, but I also agree with that to a certain degree, you know, like the whole like just
you can conjure it up just by thinking positively.
I think that's on the opposite side equally, uh, BS.
Sure.
Sure.
I think so too.
I'm kind of right down the middle, I guess when it comes to that stuff and I think most
people are, but I think that's what's fascinating about this kind of thing is it's like, well,
there are some people actually are to these, these degrees, these extremes.
It's interesting to me.
Well, yeah.
And the other interesting thing is we, you know, you're talking about Christianity and
then it's weird how stoicism on one hand, like atheists, like I can totally see how
they'd be down with stoicism, but also the whole notion that, uh, some believers in God
and some Christians like give it all up to God because only God can control anything.
So, uh, all we're going to do is, is pray about it.
And that's popular amongst Stoics as well.
Right.
So it's just interesting that it has such a wide range as far as from atheism to like
the, you know, serious, serious, give it up to God Christianity.
Right.
Yeah.
No, it definitely, yeah.
And it almost, it's kind of like, it's that buffet thing again where people can come along
and take what they want from it and it becomes part of their own philosophy or their own religion
or whatever.
Um, let's talk about some of the ways that, that it's been used over the years, stoicism.
Right.
Okay.
So there've been a lot of people who have followed stoic thought, like Adam Smith apparently
was very much informed by stoicism when he wrote The Wealth of Nations, because one of
the big, big, big aspects of it was individual liberty.
One cool thing about the early Stoics was that everybody's equal.
Yeah.
Right.
Doesn't matter whether you're a man, woman, gay, straight, black, white, whatever.
Everyone is equal.
And this was at a time when slavery was rampant.
Right.
Yeah.
Um, so that was a big, a big, that's a big aspect to, that's a big aspect of The Wealth
of Nations is anybody can come along and become a capitalist.
You just have to compete.
Right.
Um, another place that it popped up kind of famously was in cognitive behavioral therapy.
Yeah.
Which initially when I saw that I was like, huh, that kind of surprised me, but then it
all made sense.
Right.
Like exposure to something bad can help you get over it is kind of like that conjuring
up the worst possible, it's almost numbing yourself to the worst possible thing.
If you think about that, yeah, uh, worst case scenario thing all the time, it's almost
a way of preparing for that.
Yeah.
And, and it's rooted specifically, one of the founders of CBT, Albert Ellis, um, was
an adherent of, um, of stoicism as a younger man.
And the, the, what's known as the cognitive model of emotion, which is the basis of cognitive
behavioral therapy is based on epictetus is, um, maximum that people are disturbed not
by things, but by their view of things and that's part of that whole stoic philosophy,
which is nothing is good or bad.
There's only good in the four virtues.
Everything else is how you view it.
Yeah.
Whether it's losing your job or winning the lottery, those, those things aren't inherently
good or bad.
It's you, the person experiencing that who bestows good or bad on them.
Yeah.
And, and why label things?
Sure.
I'm down with that.
Yeah.
A little bit.
Did you hear about, uh, Admiral Stockdale?
Yeah.
I remember that name, uh, for sure when he came out with his, uh, with his book, uh,
Courage Under Fire, Colin testing epictetus is doctrines in a laboratory of human behavior
in 1993.
He was a famous, um, prisoner of war, uh, in Vietnam for seven years endured some of
the worst of the worst that you can imagine in war and what got him through, uh, was certainly
not Christianity because he thought that's nothing but false hope.
Well, not, not only that, he shared the POW camp with people who you, who clung to that
and, and did not make it.
Yeah.
So he saw it like right up front.
Right.
So what got him through was his stoic beliefs.
Yeah.
He was a huge big time adherent of epictetus.
Um, he'd studied him in college.
Apparently he'd read everything that epictetus had written or said that had been written
down and attributed to epictetus twice from two different, uh, translators.
So this guy knew his epictetus and he said, well, I'm a prisoner of war in Vietnam.
I've got some broken bones.
I'm starving.
I'm being mistreated.
I'll be here for seven years.
What a perfect opportunity to put epictetus as teachings to the test in a real life laboratory
experiment.
And he said epictetus passed to flying colors was, was Stockdale's final report on it.
Yeah.
He said, uh, if epictetus's lecture room was a hospital, my prison was a laboratory,
a laboratory of human behavior.
I chose to test his postulates against the demanding real life challenges of my laboratory.
So man, talk about a strong will like to be faced with that and be like, well, hey,
this is a great chance to, to work on my philosophy of life.
Exactly.
That's something I'm going to do.
But that, that follows in and of itself on the whole too of, um, turning adversity into
a room for growth as well.
Yeah.
Man.
Yeah.
Stronger than me.
Let's just say that.
So, um, you want to talk about some criticisms of stoicism?
Well, Cicero certainly thought it was a big downer.
Yeah.
Um, he said, well, you already said what he said, right?
Yeah.
It basically extinguishes enthusiasm in students.
Not a good thing.
Right.
So over the years, the fact that some of the great stoic thinkers of all time have been
super wealthy and powerful, Seneca, Marcus Aurelius was the emperor of Rome.
He basically ran the free world.
Well, I don't know if the free world, right?
The Western world for almost 20 years.
Yeah.
And, and when you sit there and yeah, again, if you say, yes, you can turn anything into
any adversity into an opportunity, if, if you're super wealthy, you don't have to worry about
where your food's going to come from, like, yes, of course you can be a stoic.
And then Epictetus came along and, and like we said, kind of erased all that to an extent
for sure.
But it is still kind of criticizes like a, a wealthy person's philosophy and it kind
of smacks of that a little bit today too, Chuck, with its huge, um, resurgence in Silicon
Valley.
Oh, is that happening?
Oh yeah.
Well, most, most of the stoic revival is taking place there.
That's where its cradle is right now.
Oh, well, our own article has a couple of good points to talk about it, um, not being
as appealing because it lacks the mystique of Eastern practice.
And then they also said this is also regarded as a philosophy of merely breaking even while
remaining determinedly impassive.
Yes.
I don't know if that's entirely fair, but it's a, it's, it kind of catches it a little
bit.
Well, yeah, because the, the very next sentence is, this attitude ignores the promise proffered
by stoicism of lasting transcendence.
And that one article that you said talked about the power of indifference, right?
Which I thought was interesting.
It's not about just like not caring about anything.
It's about caring about only the right things that you have the power to change.
Yeah, and also though, I also see that even keel aspect being indifferent, the power of
it.
I mean, think about how much time whenever you, you are like super happy about something
going right or super upset about something going wrong, you're ultimately you're being
distracted from keeping on, keeping on.
Oh yeah.
And then you go back to eventually get back to that middle again, which is the baseline
anyway.
And so I guess what stoics are doing is staying on that, that baseline and not being distracted
so they can get further along faster or at a more steady pace.
Yeah.
I mean, there's definitely something that's really frustrating in life, which is when
you look back and say, man, I've spent two days stressed and worried about something
that I have no control over.
Right.
And what a waste of time that was when I could have done X, Y and Z.
One of the big questions I have is not necessarily criticism, I guess it depends on what the
answer would be.
But my one, my big question for stoicism, since it's so, um, it places so much emphasis
on the individual and self exploration and introspection.
How would a stoic suggest enacting massive social change where something, some ill is
happening to some large group of people, but nothing's going to change unless you go out
of your own personal sphere and work to make others change.
Right.
How do you do that?
Do you just say, well, whatever, it's God's will that these people suffer and be put down
by the majority for forever?
Or is there some way that that can be addressed through the stoic, you know, philosophy?
I'm very curious.
So anybody who knows that right in, please, yeah, maybe that's why it appeals to Silicon
Valley.
Right.
Well, that's the other thing too, right?
So it also very much smacks when, when you hear of it from like wealthy people espousing
it to anybody, um, it smacks of that whole, uh, aspect of Christianity where, hey, medieval
peasant, you know how your life is terrible and you're going to live to 35 and all you
do is work all the time and you give most of the, the spoils of your effort to your
king.
Well, there's such a thing as Christianity and your treasure is in the afterlife.
So don't worry about this life.
Yeah.
It smacks of the same thing where you can keep a population placated and not searching
for larger social change by saying, Hey, just focus on these four things and everything
else is just, it just happens and you don't need to get worked up about it at all.
It seems like a, a, a bit of a pacifier too.
Yeah.
Depending on how you look at it, it's, it's fascinating.
Are we done with stoicism?
I'm finished with it.
Okay.
I think that was a good overview.
I think so too.
It's a good thought starter.
If you want to know more about stoicism, bud, there's a lot more out there than this.
Just dive in and see what it means to you and again, it's a buffet.
Take what you like.
Leave what you don't want.
Take the curdled pudding behind.
Correct.
Take the perfectly garlic green beans.
Yum.
If you, uh, what else did I already say that one part?
Oh, since I said green beans, it's time for listener mail.
Uh, I'm going to call this a Beagle Brigade slash police dogs.
People love that one.
Man, who doesn't love Beatles?
Beagles on brigade, on parade.
No one.
Uh, even people who get busted with whole pigs still are like, that Beagle's adorable.
So, uh, this dude, uh, Eric Stover is a sandwicher, meaning he follows our advice, which is to
listen to the newest episode as well as whatever from our back catalog he chooses to.
Yeah.
He's doing it right.
Yes.
Hey guys, we're working the sports and entertainment business in New York and after 9-11, these
bomb sniffing dogs, mostly, uh, German Shepherds became standard operating procedure for all
events a few hours prior to a concert one night, the canine units were sweeping all
the backstage areas and one of the bomb dogs hit on an employee locker.
You can imagine it caused an immediate and serious response.
A bomb squad was dispatched and that portion of the arena was evacuated.
Plans were even made to cancel the show.
Uh, he doesn't say what show, which I was very curious about.
I'm going to say three doors down.
Okay.
Uh, after some very tense moments, the police officers open the locker.
Those guys are super brave.
Uh, thankfully they didn't find a bomb, but did find drugs.
An employee must have thought, uh, must have brought in an extra bump for the show.
Oh man.
It was definitely three doors down.
Uh, you might be asking yourself, um, no, this wasn't the band's green room.
This was an employee.
Oh, no, I know.
Three doors down.
Three doors down's fans are among the most drug addled of all the fans.
Are they?
Sure.
I thought that was the juggalos.
No, they put the juggalos as shame.
Juggalos take time off once in a while.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
That's true.
Uh, you might be asking yourself how to say a bomb dog find drugs as it turns out the
dog had failed out of drug school and was retrained as a bomb dog, poor guy.
That's hilarious.
Isn't it?
Poor guy.
Which one?
The dog or the guy who just happened to run across the failed drug dog?
I guess everyone.
I still remembered something.
There are no winners here.
I guess he didn't completely forget his drug training, though, and he set off a chain
of events that scared the crap out of us.
The story ends with the employee getting arrested.
The show went on, and the fans, none the wiser.
My guess is the dog was reassigned to, uh, crowd control.
Just barking at people.
Get back in line.
Uh, thanks for everything you guys do.
Please let me know if you ever need anything in New York City.
Is that a hint?
We don't do drugs, Eric.
Yeah.
We're terrified of dogs.
Uh, that is Eric Stover in New York, and I guess he's still in the sports and entertainment
business.
Yeah.
He's like, you need some sports?
Come see me.
I could use some sports.
Thanks Eric.
That's a pretty great story.
Right?
That's right.
If you want to get in touch with us like Eric did, you can hang out with me on Twitter.
I'm at Josh underscore um underscore Clark.
We also have an official S Y S K podcast handle.
You can hang out with Chuck on Facebook dot com slash Charles W. Chuck Bryant or slash
stuff you should know.
You can send us an email to stuff podcast at house stuff works dot com and as always
join us at our home on the web stuff you should know dot com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics visit house stuff works dot com.
On the podcast.
Hey dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor stars of the cult classic
show.
Hey dude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey dude as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and
dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey dude, the 90s called on the I heart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hey I'm Lance Bass host of the new I heart podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help and a different
hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever
have to say bye bye bye.
Listen to frosted tips with Lance Bass on the I heart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever
you listen to podcasts.