The Daily Stoic - Don’t Be Replaced | Test Your Impressions
Episode Date: April 8, 2024✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow ...us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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I'm Afua Hirsch.
I'm Peter Frankopan.
And in our podcast, Legacy,
we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters in history. This season, we delve
into the life of Alan Turing. Why are we talking about Alan Turing, Peter? Alan Turing is the father
of computer science and some of those questions we're thinking about today around artificial
intelligence. Turing was so involved in setting and framing
what some of those questions were but he's also interesting for lots of other reasons Afro.
He had such a fascinating life he was unapologetically gay at a time when that
was completely criminalised and stigmatised and from his imagination he created ideas that have
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So join us on Legacy wherever you get your podcasts.
on Legacy, wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to the Daily Stoic podcast. Each day we bring you a meditation inspired by the
ancient Stoics, illustrated with stories from history, current events and literature to
help you be better at what you do. And at the beginning of the week, we try to do a
deeper dive, setting a kind of stoic intention for the week,
something to meditate on, something to think on,
something to leave you with, to journal about,
whatever it is you happen to be doing.
So let's get into it.
Don't be replaced. He had started out as a journalist, a poor, starving artist, a man who loved craft, who
didn't need much provided he had a few pencils and a notebook and something to write about.
But after the success of The Sun Also also rises, Ernest Hemingway,
like so many successful artists, he changed. The editor Samuel Putman had drinks with Hemingway
not long after the book came out. It did not take me long to discover that the somewhat shy
and youthful reporter whom I had met in Chicago had vanished, he observed. In his place was a
literary celebrity. In his meditations, Marcus Aurelius writes of his worry of something similar happening
to him.
He had seen what being emperor had done to his predecessors, and he wanted to escape
being Caesarified, being changed by the purple cloak of absolute power.
It was a fight, he said, to be the person that philosophy tried to make him, especially
with all the trappings of success and fame around him. Hemingway remained a talented writer but became more and more of an asshole as his career went on.
He cheated on all his wives, he bullied friends, he talked behind their backs,
he believed his own myths and legends, he became a bloated version of himself.
Nobody wants that. All of us are in danger of being imperialized, to use a phrase from one of
Marcus Aurelius' translators. That's the Gregory Hayes version. We need to stay humble.
We need to fight to maintain ourselves, even as others puff us up and flatter us. Can't
believe the marketing. We can't be stained by our success or corrupted by our power.
It's a bad look and it's also a loss. Hemingway lost the better version of himself.
Marcus Aurelius didn't.
Test Your Impressions.
This is from this week's entry in the Daily Stoke Journal.
366 days of writing and reflection on the art of living,
which I myself just worked on this morning. I do the journal every morning.
One of Epictetus's key teachings was all about testing our impressions, any experience,
perception, or circumstance that was in front of us. And he uses a key verb to emphasize this
practice 10 times in discourses and once in the opening
of the Incaridion.
And the word carries the meaning of the assayer,
one who tests fine metals and coins
to verify their authenticity.
In one of the most memorable uses,
Epictetus compares our need to test impressions
to what is done with coins and how the skilled merchant
can hear a counterfeit coin cast upon a table
just as a musician
would detect a sour note.
So this week, go through the process of assaying everything that comes before you, assuming
it all to be counterfeit or misleading until we can prove otherwise.
And you know, it's funny, I think I've really first wrapped my head around this idea of
to assay or the word assay, because at Cerro Gordo, you may have heard my interview with Brent Underwood,
who's one of my long time,
I guess he was formerly my intern
and this great guy who works at Brass Check
is one of the partners and he's helped build Daily Stoic
and someone I talked to on the phone almost every day.
And a few years ago, he bought this ghost town
in the mountains of Southern California called Cerro Gordo.
And he's been trying to sort of turn it into this like resort and he's lived there for
the whole pandemic.
But anyways, when I went out and visited, he showed me this building and it's called
the assay office.
So the miners would pull this silver out of the ground in the ore or whatever.
And sometimes they'd know, I don't know exactly how it works, but they would take it to this
office and this is where like the guy with a brain, the dispassionate observer, the money man,
would test it and let them know like just what they found,
how rich it was, how valuable it was,
what percentage it was this or that or this.
This was like the filter through which all the rocks
pulled out of this mining town were filtered through.
And just cause you thought it was valuable,
didn't matter unless the essay office came through and said boom-boom-boom and stamped it and gave
you, you know, another funny little thing is that the brothel was located
immediately next door. So you'd find out you'd just become a rich man and then of
course you go do your business. But the idea is you have to put everything to
the test and that's what Epictetus is saying. He says, when it comes to money
where we feel our clear interest, we have an entire
art where the tester uses many means to discover the worth, just as we give great attention to
judging things that might steer us badly. But when it comes to our own ruling principle,
we yawn and doze off, accepting any appearances that flash by without counting the costs.
That's from Discourses 120. And then he says in 2.18, First off, don't let the force of an impression carry you away.
Say to it, hold it up a bit and let me see who you are and where you are from.
Let me put you to the test.
And then in in Choridian, he says,
From the very beginning, make it your practice to say to every harsh impression,
You are an impression and not at all what you appear to be.
Next, examine it and test it by the rules you possess, the first and greatest
of which is this, whether it belongs to the things in our
control or not in our control. And if the latter prepared to
respond, it is nothing to me. So look, if you went and got your
rocks tested at Saragorda, and they found out to be worthless
stones, you wouldn't be like, but I want them to be what they
are, I'm going to continue to pretend, right? You wouldn't
spend money that you just found out you don't actually have. So this process of testing one's perceptions
and one's facts is a really essential part of the process. You can't just go through life
pretending things are what they are or taking them at first glance because there are so many
factors at play from cognitive biases to your upbringing,
to just misleading appearances.
You have to put everything to the test.
You have to see things as they actually are.
And this process of assaying everything
that's in front of you is a key stoic exercise,
and I hope you can build on this practice this week.
Slow down, take a minute, put it to the test,
see if it's real or counterfeit, see if it's what
everyone else wants you to see. Or as Mark Cerulean says, see
what is really there.
Hey, Prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad free on Amazon Music. Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen early and ad free with Wondery
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Your girl Kiki Palmer is out here doing all the things, winning an Emmy, acting, singing,
looking fabulous, and my favorite role yet, podcast host.
In my podcast, Baby This Is Kiki Farmer,
I'm talking to so many cool people.
Some of my favorite conversations
have been about growing up as a child star with Alliann AJ,
queer rights and trans issues with JVN,
abusive relationships with Dr. Drew,
silk presses with the VP,
and the music that shapes us with Mean Girls' Renee Rapp.
So many to choose from.
And in this new season, just wait who I'll be talking to next. Snoop Dogg, Sterling K. Brown,
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