The Daily Stoic - It’s Tempting To Tell Yourself This | All For One, One For All
Episode Date: October 4, 2024We can flatter ourselves that we’re essential, that we’re one of the good guys, that we’re preventing things from being worse. But are we? Or is that just what we want to believe?📕 P...ick up a signed copy of Right Thing, Right Now by Ryan Holiday | https://store.dailystoic.com/📓 Grab your own leather bound signed edition of The Daily Stoic! Check it out at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📚 Check out Dying Every Day: Seneca at the Court of Nero by James Romm at The Painted Porch | https://www.thepaintedporch.com/✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and 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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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast. On Friday, we do double duty, not just reading our daily
meditation, but also reading a passage from the Daily Stoic, my book, 366 Meditations
on Wisdom, Perseverance in the Art of Living, which I wrote with my wonderful collaborator,
translator and literary agent, Stephen Hanselman. So So today we'll give you a quick meditation from the stoics
with some analysis from me,
and then we'll send you out into the world
to turn these words into works.
It's tempting to tell yourself this.
For thousands of years, ambitious people have been telling themselves some version of it.
They can see their boss has lost their moral compass.
They can see that their industry is corrupted or bad for the world.
They don't like where things are going.
They can see the trend lines.
They have a pit in their stomach about it.
But what do they do?
They keep showing up for work. They keep on doing their job, even advancing in it,
getting promoted, making money. They don't see themselves as part of the problem
because they're not like the other people. They may even pat themselves on
the back for the little good they've managed to do or the bad that they've
stopped. This of course is the story of American politics right now. It's the
story of Seneca in Rome in the first century AD.
As Dana Giori writes in a fantastic introduction to one of Seneca's plays, the Roman mind was
ruthlessly pragmatic.
Even as he slipped into moral compromise, Seneca probably saw himself achieving public
good by out-talking the vino gang of pimps, charioteers, actors, gamblers,
eunuchs, and dancers who served as Nero's other confidants. Seneca's detractors rarely point out
that his moral treaties contain many confessions that his own conduct falls short of his ideals.
As Michael Grant observes, struggling with ill health and confronted with all the perils that the contemporary court and society had to offer, he did at least always try to accept the least
of possible evils. And this pragmatism is not entirely incorrect. In Meditations,
Marcus Aurelius reminds himself that he doesn't live in Plato's Republic. Cicero made the same
observation about Cato that Cato wrongly believed that he did live in Plato's
Republic and not in fact in the dregs of Romulus. But there's a fine line between making the best
of a bad situation and being complicit in that bad situation. Seneca struggled with that line just as
the manager at a company doing illegal things might, just as a soldier in an increasingly
unjustified war might. We can flatter
ourselves that we're essential, that we're one of the good guys, that we're preventing things from
being worse. But are we? Or is that just what we want to be? And look, philosophy isn't just about
ideas. It's how you live them, especially when it's hardest. James Rahm explores this in Dying
Every Day,
which is an incredible biography of Seneca.
I'll link to that.
And I talk a lot about this
and the morally vexing positions
that Cato and Marcus found themselves in.
That's what basically the new book is about.
Right thing, right now.
Good values, good character, and good deeds.
You can check that.
You can grab a signed copy.
I'll link to that in the notes as well.
I'll link to that in the notes as well. All for one and one for all.
This is today's entry, October 4th in the Daily Stoic,
366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance,
and the Art of Living by myself and my dear friend and translator Stephen Hanselman,
starts with a quote from Marcus Aurelius' Six Five, that which isn't good for the hive
isn't good for the bee. Inherent in the stoic concept of sympathia is the notion of an
interconnected cosmos in which everything in the universe is part of a larger whole. Marcus Aurelius was one of the first writers
to articulate the knowledge of cosmopolitanism,
saying that he was a citizen of the world,
not just of Rome.
The idea that you're a bee in the hive
is a reminder of this perspective.
Marcus Aurelius even states the reverse of this idea
later in meditations, just so he doesn't forget,
that which doesn't harm the community can't harm the individual.
Just because something is bad for you
doesn't mean it's bad for everyone.
Just because something is good for you
definitely doesn't mean it's good for everyone.
Think of the hedge fund managers
who bet massively against the economy.
They profited by rooting for essentially everyone
and everything else to fail.
Is that who you want to be?
A good Stoic understands that proper impulses
and the right actions that arise from them
naturally carry the good of the whole,
which is the wise person's only good.
Conversely, good and wise action by the whole
are what's good for the individual.
One of my favorite chapters in Right Thing Right Now
is titled The Great Oneness.
And it's about this idea that we are all related.
Einstein wrote this beautiful letter
to this grieving father and he says,
"'A human being is part of the whole,
called by us the universe,
apart limited in time and space.
He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings
as something separated from the rest,
a kind of optical delusion of his
consciousness. The striving to free oneself from this delusion is the main issue of true religion.
Not to nourish the delusion, but to try to overcome it is the way to reach an attainable measure of
peace of mind. But my favorite quote, which I talk about in this chapter, I think about all the time
comes to us from James Baldwin. He said, you think your pain and heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world
and then you read. It was books in history and philosophy, Baldwin said, that taught him
that the things that tormented me were the very things that connected me with all the people who
were alive or who had ever been alive. It's this idea that we're all one, and it's easy to forget, but it's very true.
No one, of course, has felt this more profoundly
than the astronauts who had the unique experiences
seeing Earth from space.
They experience what they call the overview effect,
this kind of instantaneous global consciousness,
an inescapable sense that everyone is in the same boat,
no matter where they live or what they believe.
What they experienced looking at the blue marble
is what the Stoics talked about many thousand years earlier,
a Stoic named Hierarchles talked about
these concentric circles,
that there's sort of us at the center, the selfishness,
and there are these rings,
and these rings encompass more and more people, right?
It starts with our family, our friends,
people who speak the same language as us,
people who, you know, happen to share
a same plot of land as us, and it gets bigger and bigger.
And we pull this inwards.
He said that was the beautiful madness of philosophy.
This is what Gandhi would call the great oneness,
who I talk a lot about in the book.
And it's a shame that we lose sight of this.
It's a shame that people use Stoicism
as an excuse for selfishness, right?
Pericles in 431 BC said,
I am convinced that people are much better off
when their whole city is flourishing
than when certain citizens prosper
but the community has gone off course.
When a man is doing well for himself
but his country is falling to pieces,
he goes to pieces along with it.
But a struggling individual has a much better hopes
if his country is thriving.
And in the chapter, I talk about that quote
from Marcus Aurelius, and I add another one, he says,
we have to see the world as a living being,
one nature and soul where everything feeds
into that single experience, moves with a single motion
and how everything helps produce everything else,
spun and woven together.
To be fair, and I talk about this,
did Marcus's policies and decisions always reflect this?
No, and his biggest failings,
the persecutions of the Christians by the Romans
at that time are a reflection of what happens
when we lose track of this great oneness as our ultimate North Star.
But it's something we've got to think about,
it's something we've got to work on.
And it's a key part of this stoic virtue of justice
that I'm trying to apply more and more in my own life.
And I found my happiness and my relationships
and my actions to be enriched
by filtering it through this lens.
And so I'll leave you there.
You can grab right thing right now.
Anywhere books are sold, we've got signed copies at store.dailystowage.com.
Of course, you can come grab one at the Painted Porch as well.
Although if you're listening to this, maybe you like audio books
and you can grab an audio book of it on Audible or wherever audio books are sold.
I recorded it.
Not where I'm standing right now, because I'm recording this in my closet,
but I did record it at the Painted Porch Daily Stoke Studios
here in Bastrop, Texas.
So check out right thing right now,
but most of all, let's try to think about
how it's bad for the hive, it's bad for the bee,
and how connected we all are.
Thanks so much for listening to the Daily Stoke Podcast.
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