The Daily Stoic - Sit Down With Walter Isaacson and Ryan Holiday
Episode Date: December 21, 2025In today's episode, Ryan Holiday sits down with legendary biographer Walter Isaacson for a wide-ranging, deeply thoughtful conversation recorded live at the Texas Tribune Festival. They talk ...about Walker Percy and The Moviegoer, how Stoicism shows up in fiction, and why the ancient virtues still matter in the modern world. They talk through Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, Epictetus, Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Viktor Frankl, and why history tends to outlast the noise of the present moment.📚 Grab signed copies of Walter Isaacson's books at The Painted Porch: https://www.thepaintedporch.com/Elon Musk by Walter IsaacsonSteve Jobs by Walter IsaacsonLeonardo Da Vinci by Walter IsaacsonBenjamin Franklin: An American Life by Walter IsaacsonEinstein: His Life and Universe by Walter IsaacsonThe Greatest Sentence Ever Written by Walter IsaacsonWalter Isaacson: The Genius Biographies: Benjamin Franklin, Einstein, Steve Jobs, and Leonardo Da Vinci (Boxed Set)🎁 This holiday season, give the gift of Daily Stoic Premium | https://dailystoic.supercast.com/gifts/new 👉 The Daily Stoic New Year New You challenge begins January 1, 2026. Learn more and sign up today at dailystoic.com/challenge🎥 Watch the video episodes on The Daily Stoic YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@DailyStoic/videos🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast✉️ 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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Hey, it's Ryan. I try not to make too many puns on my last name because I've been hearing it my whole life.
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Happy holidays.
Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoic Podcast.
On Sundays, we take a deeper dive into these ancient topics with excerpts,
from the Stoic texts, audiobooks that we like here or recommend here at Daily Stoic,
and other long-form wisdom that you can chew on on this relaxing weekend.
We hope this helps shape your understanding of this philosophy,
and most importantly, that you're able to apply it to your actual life.
Thank you for listening.
Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoac podcast. It has been a bit nuts over here. I've been traveling a lot, trying to wrap things up for the end of the year. This is kind of the crazy time. There's last minute stuff. Like I'm doing a talk in a couple days that they asked me to do like seven days before it was supposed to be. I just did the talk in Seattle. You know, it's Christmas time. The kids are about to get out of school, shopping. There's just like, you know, there's just a ton going on. And this is kind of the crazy time for Daily Stoic because signing lots of.
people ordering stuff from the bookstore. There's just a lot going on. Then I was taking some
clothes out of the washer last night, and I pulled a full chocolate croissant in the bag from
Starbucks out of a just-run load of laundry. So, you know, that was a wonderful surprise. Thankfully,
didn't ruin all the clothes and how or why this ended up in my kids' pockets and then into
the wash. There's a mystery of life.
Amidst the craziness, I do try to go, hey, like, you're very lucky to get to do what you do.
You're blessed.
You're living in your dream.
And actually, something that was kind of a dream that just happened to me three weeks ago, two weeks ago.
As I said, all the time sort of blurs to get there at this point.
But Texas Trib Fest is here in Austin.
There's Texas Book Festival, then Texas Trip Fest.
They asked me if I would do a panel about bookstores.
This was a couple months ago.
They asked me if I would do it.
It was going to come up in November.
and I was like, I don't know.
It's going to be a crazy day that day.
We already had like three birthday parties scheduled.
As I said, this is the crazy time of year.
They asked me if I do it and they said, look, how about if you do that, we'll do an interview with you and we'll pick someone cool to interview you on stage.
And I said, oh, who were you thinking?
And they said, what about Walter Isaacson?
And I said, are you kidding?
I mean, Walter Isaacson is one of the greatest writers of our time.
I actually went and looked, because I had him sign all my books when I met him, I added up all the pages here.
I have read 3,736 pages of Walter Isaacson's writing.
And I guess that's just the first time.
I've also gone back and re-read a bunch of the books because his books have shaped so many of my books.
The Franklin's story in ego is the enemy is from his biography of Benjamin Franklin.
There's a bunch of wisdom stories in Wisdom Takes Work that are from the Da Vinci book.
same with the discipline book. There's even a chapter in Stillness is the key that's got a
Da Vinci story from one of his books. There's a bunch of Elon Musk anecdotes that led into that
big part of Part 2 of Wisdom Takes Work that I first learned about in Walter's books. I've read
so many of his books, actually going even back because I guess I use Steve Jobs in Obstacle is
the way. We carry a bunch of his books in the store. I've been profoundly influenced by them
And, oh, you know what?
This is right.
This is what brings it all full circle.
Okay.
Walter Isaacson is himself mentioned in a chapter in Right Thing right now, where I talk
about coaching trees because he is part of the coaching tree of the great Walker Percy,
who is himself part of the William Alexander Percy coaching tree.
So being interviewed by Walter Isison, amazing.
Well, Walter's people reached out and said, okay, but what would you want to talk about?
And I said, well, we could talk about Stoism.
We could talk about Elon Musk.
but what I really like to talk about is Walker Percy. And I'm looking here. I have a picture of
Walker Percy on my wall. He's one of my favorite novelist. He wrote this book, Movie Goer, one of my
favorite novels, but then was very influenced by Stoic philosophy. And as I said, I knew they were
vaguely knew each other. I didn't know the full extent of the relationship, but that's what I
wanted to talk about. So at the Texas Tribune Festival, downtown in Austin, I think it was at the
Omni. We sat down. He was interviewing me, but really, I had more questions for him. We talked
Walker Percy, we talked stoicism. We talked Elon Musk and we talked everything that's happening
in the world today. It's a great interview. I was very honored that he was even interested
in chatting with me. And then I have a full note card here for the book that I'm working on now
where Walter gave me some advice on how to write a great biography. So this was honestly,
like even if you hate this episode, which you won't because it's awesome, I got so much out of it.
Like it was the reason I do this podcast, right, is like to learn and to be exposed to
things, and that very much happened here. Like, I'm grateful to the folks at the Texas Tribune Festival
for having me. It's a nonprofit politics and policy public news website headquartered in Austin,
but they're investigative reporting and stuff. It ripples through not just this state,
which has millions and millions of residents, but, you know, California and Texas, what happens here
shapes in many ways the rest of the nation. So the Texas Tribune is a great news outlet. It's a great
conference. I might bring you a chunk of that bookstore chat as well. But in the meantime, here is me
talking with the great Walter Isaacson, who has a new book out called The Greatest Sentence
Ever Written, which I bought on my way home from the Newark Airport two days ago at the Hudson
bookstore. And it's great. It's about the first sentence of the Declaration of Independence.
And just an absolute lovely book from a lovely writer. All of his stuff is amazing. We have some
signed copies left. They'd make great gifts for the holidays. I'll link to that in.
Today's show notes, but in the meantime, here's me and Walter Isaacson, Chattenway.
I guess they feel you're a man who needs no introduction.
Likewise.
We didn't even have a voice of God, but this is Ryan Holiday.
And this is the great Walter Isaacson.
Big fan.
We were talking backstage, and I know we're going to get to stoicism.
He said, but let's start with Walker Persism.
Who in here, by the way, knows who Walker Percy is?
All right, good.
We both share a deep affection for Walker Percy.
Yes.
And in particular, the moviegoer, and Anne Emily and the moviegoer,
who in some ways is part of your path to the Stoicism idea, right?
Yeah, I bought it.
I bought the moviegoer at a used bookstore on Oak Street in New Orleans.
I know that store.
And it was one of the first, I'd obviously known the Stoics and I'd read them,
but it was the first time I saw them in fiction.
And I think it's obviously the fictional take on the Stoics
and Walker Percy is fascinating.
It's one of my favorite novels.
Then how Stoicism makes its way through that family,
which is a multi-generational sort of path.
He gets introduced to it by his uncle,
William Alexander Percy.
Has another amazing book, Lanterns of the Levy,
one of the great Southern memoir.
I thought you were such a Southern.
I thought you were a Texan.
Adopted Southerner.
I'm a Californian like everyone that lives here now.
All right, well, let's drill down on that.
Because I think you and I may have slightly different.
We're trying to navigate that novel.
William Alexander Percy, the uncle who raised Walker Percy,
very much historic and believes in the classical virtues of courage and, you know,
honesty and whatever.
And Anne Emily in the book is the character there.
Binks, the very beginning of the book, I think Binks's brother dies.
And Aunt Emily says, you have to have courage.
That's what you need.
And Binks says, okay, that's easy.
Is that really all I have to do?
And then he goes on the search.
And in some ways, tell me what you think.
I've always thought he said, I've got to go for you.
further. I have to have the spiritual values, that leap of faith. How does that fit into stoicism
and then the question of something more spiritual? Well, I do think it's interesting in the novel,
and we're really nerding out for people. This was one of the... All of you haven't read or know
of Walker Percy, you can wait. We will spend in about five minutes. At one point, it was considered,
I mean, it won the National Book Award when it came out. It was one of the great American novels. I think it's an
incredible novel. But what I think is interesting from what I know about Walker Percy having read
about him in the novel is that the character finds both stoicism and organized religion to be
insufficient in the novel, but as the author, the person, he sort of relies on both of them.
So I think it's interesting that the novel is sort of philosophically, not critical, but
exploring the inadequacies of those systems in the modern world. And then the actual author
himself finds them perhaps more satisfying. So I think that's kind of an interesting thing.
But yeah, you basically get the sense that you have this young guy who's been through this horrible
thing in Korea and he's tempted by all the modern pleasures and ambitions. And then you have
this old-fashioned aunt talking to him about courage and justice and temperance and wisdom.
And it's not working. And I do think there's an analog a little bit to where we are now where
we sort of know this isn't working. And then when people try to talk to us about the old-fashioned
virtues, they just sound old-fashioned. Right. And at least for Percy, I don't know what his
outcome is, but he calls it the search. Yes. And you have to keep searching. So tell me how that
fits in with your path to stoicism. So I was in college and I got past a copy of Marcus Aurelius's
Meditations. And that was the beginning of the search for me because I didn't know, I don't know
what I thought philosophy was, but I didn't think it was the emperor of Rome talking to himself
about getting up early in the morning and not getting upset by things and, you know, trying to
put up with how obnoxious people are. I thought philosophy was theoretical and abstract.
And no, here it is sort of urgently dealing with the questions of both practical modern
life, but then also as I think the moviegoers about the sort of quest and search for meaning,
What is it for?
What do you do with this brief amount of time?
There's a, my favorite passage in the book is on to Emily where she says basically like,
I don't know what we're doing here.
We're insignificant cinders spinning around in the universe, but all I know is you've got to do your best and try to be a good person.
And how does that tie in, Marcus Aurelia starts at Epicetus?
Is that how you said?
Epictetus.
Epictetus, sorry.
Yeah. Tell me how they adopt the Stoic virtues and how you sort of discovered that was a good path for your search.
Yeah. So the Stoic virtues, as I said, the Cardinal Virtues, Courage, discipline, justice, wisdom, you basically have for 500 or so years these series of Stoic philosophers, some powerful, some powerless.
You have Epictetus who's a slave, Mark Serios, who's an emperor, Seneca, a power broker, and Nero's courts.
So he might have had a sense of what's happening right now.
But the idea that the Stoics are sort of wrestling with, you know,
how do you stay good in a world gone bad?
How do you stay focused in a world of endless distractions and temptations?
And how do you deal with the fact that life is unpredictable and capricious and often cruel?
I've been looking through your books and your path started.
It's sort of an advertising agency trying to trick people in a way.
So tell me about your first book.
Well, as all marketers are, we're trying to get people to buy things.
But, yeah, I was a marketer, and my first book is this sort of expose of the media system.
Actually, I was living in New Orleans.
I was living in L.A.
On Patania Street between first and second.
I'd say that for my wife, if we live a block from there.
I was living in L.A.
and I said, I don't want to do this anymore.
This isn't what I want my life to be.
And I found an apartment on Craigslist in New Orleans.
I moved there.
My future wife came with me.
I will say she burst into tears when she saw it.
I did not make a good pick.
It's on the house.
The room in said house.
But I wanted to write a book about what I'd seen and experienced.
And I remember this is 2011.
I was working on this book.
I was basically working on a book about fake news in 2011.
And I remember thinking, if I don't get this out right away,
It's going to be irrelevant.
I was probably a little bit ahead of the curve about sort of the flaws in the media system
and how sort of bad actors or bad information can be sort of traded up that chain
and sort of take hold in public consciousness.
That's what that book is about.
But in some ways, it seems your next, well, not your next book,
but the two books, three books after that, are a reaction to what you saw.
Yeah, I think that's right.
There was a disgust and disillusionment, and there was a difference between what I sort of personally believed
and what I was philosophically interested in, and then what I was doing in my day job, which is a little bit, you know, Binks's position in the moviegoer.
I think Walker Percy's most reactionary book, actually, my favorite is Lance a lot, which is much darker and it's a sort of more disturbing book.
but I was like, that's just not what I want to do.
And so when you get exposed to stoicism,
yeah, how do you turn that into a book first,
and then we'll get into the empire that comes from the book?
Well, as you can imagine,
when I went to my publisher with the idea for an obscure school,
a book about an obscure school of ancient philosophy,
they too saw an empire in the making.
They had the option on my next book.
They're a business imprint of penguin, random,
then penguin, now penguin random house.
And I said, this is what I want to do.
And they said, are you sure?
Could you maybe do something else, please?
And they told me later they were just hoping to get it out of my system and write more marketing books.
But that's really what I wanted to write about is I wanted to write about ancient philosophy.
I was a research assistant for Robert Green.
I don't know if you know who Robert Green is.
He wrote the 48 Laws of Power and mastery writes these sort of amazing nonfiction books.
So they sort of picks a theme and then illustrated with stories from antiquity.
So that's how I got my start.
That's what I wanted to do.
I just had this sort of detour in the marketing world.
And when did you figure out it was more than just a book?
You could do their podcasts, there's meditations.
Yeah, my, so I did The Obstacles the Way, and then my agent said, you should do a page
a day book of Stoic philosophy.
He had been an editor at Harper's, and he'd had the idea.
for this book called The Daily Drucker,
which is one page a day from Peter Drucker
that had been a monster hit.
And I said, who reads these?
You know, it wasn't a medium
that I was familiar with at all.
As it turns out, actually now one of my favorite books,
Tolstoy has a page of day book
called The Calendar of Wisdom,
which has a lot of the Stoics.
And so I didn't know that it was this sort of genre.
But he suggested it,
and he said, you know, you do a translation at the top
and then you riff on it each day.
And I said, that sounds like an interesting idea,
but, you know, I don't,
who's going to do the translation?
translations, and he said, oh, I'll do them. And apparently, I was, you speak Greek and Latin?
You've been holding out on me. So I'm maybe one of the only people to ever write a book with
their book agent. And it worked out. And you then turn it into, go ahead. So the Daily Stoic
is a page a day. And then the idea is, what do you do on page 366? Well, actually, 3067, because you have
to do it for the leap you're in there. But the point is, what do you do up to the last page? And so I
bought the Daily Stoic.com, and I just kept going.
So I've done every day since mid-2015, I have done an entry first for the book and now
the email that it goes out to almost a million people every day.
And it's...
And what is motivating you to do this?
Well, that a million people are waiting on the other end of it is a decent motivation to write
the Daily Stoke.
But like Stoicism is isn't.
this philosophy that you read. It's a philosophy I think you have to be reading. You're supposed to go over it
over and over and over again. Not unlike a recovery program or a prayer. It's this thing that you're
kind of meditating on and reflecting on. And so for me, the writing is my philosophical practice.
And then the reading is other people's philosophical practice. But I added it up at one point.
It's millions of words that I've done. But it's kind of my penance.
You know, it's my vocation.
I sit down and I take a thing from the Stoics every day
and I try to arrange it in a format that would make sense to me
or someone that reminds me of something that either I need to know
or I think people need to know.
And that's what the practice of it has been.
And it's consistent.
It doesn't matter what's happening in the world,
I got to get this thing out every day.
And how has it changed you?
You know, I think when I came to Stoicism,
as I think a lot of young men,
it's particularly popular with young men. I was interested in the discipline of the virtue of the
discipline or the courage, right? The how to be stronger, faster, more resilient, tougher, that element,
the muscular part of Stoicism. But what's fascinating about it, and I think this is the Trojan horse
of it, is it's also fundamentally, and I think you could argue primarily an ethical philosophy.
Like justice is the central virtue of the philosophy. And over and over again, the Stoics
talking about the common good, our interrelationality between people, the opening passage of
meditations is an interesting one. Marks Rios opens and he goes, today the people you'll meet
will be annoying and obnoxious and stupid and jealous. He lists all the things. And I think, for instance,
when I first read it, I'm nodding my head. I'm attracted to the cynical side of it, right,
that prepare for how people are going to be and don't let them get to you. But actually, as,
you know, as I think you spend more time with it, you realize the second part is actually the most
important part where he goes, look, and you can't let them suck you down. But then he says,
because we're made to work together. And they're like this because they don't know better or
they're struggling with things. And your job is to work with them and to do your job. And that
the idea ultimately in Stoic philosophy that I think separated it from, say, the Epicureans
was that it was a philosophy for public life and public participation. And so it's centered around
this idea of collaboration, connection, doing things for the common good.
Marks really specifically talks about the idea of the common good 80 times in meditations,
which is probably not a concern of Nero or Caligula.
So the idea for the Stoics was this sort of public-mindedness.
And so I think it's changed.
The ethical side of it took longer for me to catch on to, but ultimately that's where
it's probably impacted me the most.
We've gone this far in the conversation, and there's probably half the people who don't exactly know what stoicism is.
Or they were like me before I started reading you, and they think, well, it just means not being emotional and containing your emotions.
And then when I read yourself, it's definitely being emotional.
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Give us a definition and also the sort of the whole surrounding ecosystem of stoicism.
So stoicism is founded in the 4th century BC by this guy, Zeno.
Zeno suffers a shipwreck, washes up in Athens penniless.
He's introduced to philosophy, builds it.
I think it's fitting that it comes out of a disaster.
It's got a disaster at the origin story, and then the philosophy is built around the idea that disasters are inevitable, but how you respond to those disasters is what it's about.
It's a philosophy about the response.
I sort of summarized stoicism often to people as we don't control what happens, we control how we respond to what happens.
And the idea is that you have to respond with these virtues or with virtue.
And so whether we're talking about a shipwreck or a jerk in traffic,
or an economic downturn, the idea for the Stoics is what virtue is this presenting you an opportunity
to practice? That's the philosophy. So when we think about it as being emotionlessness,
what the Stoics are really saying is, you know, have the emotion. Just probably don't let the
emotion color your response. So you can get angry and then you go, okay, but why is this person
acting this way? Is me responding angrily, who I want to be? Is it the right thing to do? So it's
kind of framework for stopping, pausing, reflecting, and then being as rational and self-governed
as possible in how you respond. And we think of it as a classical philosophy, Greeks, the Romans.
How does it get carried forward after that? Yes. So starts in Greece, goes to Rome,
sort of disappears during the dark ages. It is absorbed. So does everything. Yeah.
They're called art. Yes. I mean, it's, but one of the reasons is it's, it's, it's, it's,
it's absorbed into Christianity, right?
They share the cardinal virtues.
Well, let me pause there.
The teachings of Jesus and the teachings of Marcus Aurelius do not seem the same to me, but am I wrong?
I would say, an interesting aside is Seneca, the other famous stoke, is born the same year as Jesus.
They both exist in the same Roman Empire at the same time as these wildly popular philosophy.
Seneca's brother is in the Bible.
Really?
Yeah, he lets St. Paul.
go.
So, interesting little aside, Marx-Relis' philosophy teacher Rousticus kills Justin Martyr.
So not all, they cancel each other out.
And Marcus Aurelius' kid doesn't turn out to be.
Cominus, not so good.
Not so good.
That's the question I get the most.
Like, what happened with Comedus?
I am.
And I go, well, you know, Marcus was 40 when he became emperor.
Cominus was 16.
How would you have done at 16?
Probably not great.
But I wouldn't say exactly that Stoic philosophy is the Stoicism, Marxist, is what we see in the Bible.
But I would say that the virtues of Stoicism get absorbed into Christianity and this sort of Western thought.
And then ultimately we see right around the time of Montaigne, it starts to bubble back up, stoicism.
The Victorians really rediscover it, bring it back.
This is where it enters the Percy family to bring this full circle.
But it's interesting because the Victorians rediscover it, but most of classical thinking gets rediscovered at the beginning of the Renaissance and Lucretius and others.
Yes.
Why don't the Renaissance people rediscover the Stoics?
They do to a degree, but not to the same degree as like Lucretius.
I think you tend to see the Stoics come up a bit later.
You know, Montaigne, for instance, has a line from Epictetus carved in the
beam of his ceilings.
I don't know exactly.
That is kind of an interesting question.
It just comes a little bit later.
Comes a little bit later.
The Enlightenment thinkers, though, love the Stoics.
Jefferson dies with Seneca on his nightstand.
John Adams is a big fan of the Stoics.
George Washington is probably the only one of the founders who doesn't read the Stoics
in Greek or Latin, only in English.
Right.
Although he epitomizes the virtues, the bet.
He is probably the ultimate model of them as far as the American tradition goes, two other little quick things.
Cato, there's a play by Joseph Addison called Cato, which I like to joke was the Hamilton of its day.
But that's all stoicism right there and is like so familiar to the founders that they're quoting it all the time.
Like in the way we might go immigrants, we get the job done, lines like I have, I regret I have but one life to, you know,
know, these are all lines from that play. And then, interestingly enough, Thomas Wentworth Higginson is the first American translator of Epictetus, and he leads a black regiment of troops in the Civil War. He's a friend of F. Emerson and stuff. So it just, it happens a little bit later. And now they bring it up on.
The reason I was asking is it happens when the Enlightenment, the age of reason, and the scientific revolutions are happening. I was wondering if you thought those were connected.
Yeah, you're right. It's a reason based philosophy, and that's probably why it's so appealing there. And I mean, as a, I grew up Catholic, I'd probably classify myself as agnostic now. What I liked about stoicism is I felt like it was making arguments that I was familiar with, having grown up in the church. But instead of saying, God wants you to do this, or if you don't do this, you're going to go to hell. It's more saying, like, you'll live an unhappy, shit.
life if you don't do that. Like, it's, it's an argument about your purpose and your meaning,
but it's, it's less metaphysical than the religious argument. So I wonder if it has to do
with the idea of the reason and logic is, that's the resurgent. Is stoicism supposed to be
just a path to virtue, or is it a path to fulfillment? I think both. It is not designed for a life
of ease. It is, I think, the Epicurean, yes, it's rival philosophy. Yeah. Uh,
The distinction in the ancient world between the Epicureans and the Stoics, as Seneca says, is that an Epicurean will get involved in politics only if they have to, and a Stoic will get involved in politics, and by this they mean public life, unless something prevents them.
So they're involved in the world. Instead of philosophy being the sole pursuit, I think the Stoics saw philosophy as a pursuit in whatever calling or domain you happen to be operating in.
And so there's the stoicism of the soldier.
There's the stoicism of the statesmen, the stoicism of the blacksmith, the stoicism of the slave, the stoicism of the senator.
It's how is this philosophy helping you in whatever your unique circumstances are?
Well, let me get back to Banks's dilemma at the end of the movie goer where he talks about, is that all there is, is there a leap of faith.
Is stoicism in some ways divided from religion and spirituality?
Well, the Stoics certainly believed in the gods, and so there was this, certainly this recognition of the higher powers or that you are not in charge.
I think fundamentally the Stoics are saying, you're not God, or if there is a God, it is fundamentally indifferent to you.
And so we have to figure out how to adapt ourselves and respond to whatever God's nature, fate, fortune, sends our way.
It's going to ties into deism then.
Yes.
And again, this is, I think, why it makes so much sense to the founders.
There's not the vengeful, omnipotent, all-controlling God, but there is, you know, when Washington says the event is in the hand of God, he just means, we don't know how it's going to go.
Circumstances are going to happen.
But let's do our best.
Actually, there's a great line in that Cato play that I think encapsulates stoicism where they say,
we can't guarantee success, but we can do something better.
We can deserve it.
That's stoicism.
You do everything you can, and then you understand the outcome is ultimately not up to you.
Let's get into some of the sayings, which you have at least 365 in any year.
But the obstacle is the way you started.
Explain those type.
They're not Zen-like.
They are, but they make you work.
That is what is so unique about Marxist's meditations.
I think it's unprecedented in the philosophical canon
in that it was not intended for publication.
It is not a philosophical argument.
It is not an encapsulation of a school.
It is a singular person riffing,
reminding themselves of what they believe and what's important.
And the reason there's so much repetition in it,
is that he needed that repetition.
And actually, it's not in the Steve Jobs book.
I think it's in the beginning of your Da Vinci book.
You talk about Da Vinci's journals.
And you mention that Steve Jobs, when you were working on the Jobs book,
he was trying to show you some journals he'd written on a computer.
And even Steve Jobs couldn't get access to it because it was on a computer.
It was on the next.
You remember when he was in the wilderness, he had next computer.
Yes.
And he's dying at this point, and he still has an old next computer, and he can't boot it up.
And it did make me think there's really something beautiful about paper, which Leonardo is.
It has an infinite battery life.
Its operating system never goes out.
And Steve could never get those memos and letters from the 90s.
Yeah.
And I think Marks Rios' meditations alongside Da Vinci's journals are the ultimate testament of that, because they're not for us.
And yet in spending time with them, we're able, from the incredible pacificness of them, there's a universality.
And so here you have this guy writing to himself.
And when he says you, he doesn't mean me, but he means him.
And yet somehow centuries collapse and power dynamics collapse and cultures collapse.
And you're like, oh, he's also talking to me, he's talking to all of us.
But in this famous passage, and he's almost certainly talking.
about somebody who was causing trouble for him.
You know, he says, when people get in our way and obstruct us, and then the passage
continues, you know, there's nothing, he says, that can't actually happen.
He says, nothing can impede our intention or our disposition because we can always change
it.
And he says, the impediment to action advances action stands in the way becomes the way.
The Buddhists do have a saying, the obstacles of the path.
So both East and West saying some version of the same idea that whatever this problem is,
is actually not an obstacle, but an opportunity for you.
So the impediment to the action is actually where it's at, yes, where to go, what to
struggle with.
And that's not to say you hurl yourself at it endlessly.
It might be the action isn't going around.
The action is in the patience for waiting for it to go away, learning humility.
It's basically what are you learning and what are you doing differently because of this thing
that happened?
Give us a couple more that are your favorites.
of the stoic or either Marcus Aurelius' meditations or your own.
I can give you an unlimited amount.
There's the one thing I'm good at.
I'll give you one from Epictetus.
He says it's not things that upset us.
It's our opinion about things.
Interesting.
So, you know, the event is objective.
What the person said to you is not rude.
It is random sounds coming out of their mouth.
And then you have told yourself that it's rude or you've told yourself that you've been
harmed by it or humiliated by it.
insulted by it so that the things are and then we make opinions about them and realizing that
oh yeah like when i'm offended that's because i have chosen to take that offense that doesn't mean
you should go around and say whatever you want to people and not care but it's saying that
that we are our sense of what these things mean and the interpretation we give of them determines
how they affect us so and understanding that leads you to a more stoic approach yes yes another
other one from Seneca, which I love, which I think is a life-changing one for me.
He says, it's wrong to think of death as something that's happening in the future once,
that we're moving towards it.
He says, death is now.
Death is happening.
He says, the time that passes now belongs to death.
And so to think of your life not as, you know, how many years do you have left, but how many
years have you died, the Stoics are trying to get you to understand that, as Seneca says,
you know, we're protective of property and we're protective of money and then frivolous
with time. And the Stoics want you to understand that your life is what's happening now,
not this thing that might end in the future. It's ending now. All right, one more.
One more. Okay. What's a good one? Mark's realist says this is one I think about these days.
Maybe this ties to your Elon Musk book. Here we have the most powerful man in the world,
in some ways, an exception to the rule that absolute power corrupts absolutely. And there's a
passage in meditations where he talks about, he says, be careful not to be imperialized or stained
purple. And so he's wrestling with how success, fame, and audience, all these things can change us.
And so I think he says, you have to fight to remain the person that philosophy tried to make you.
Wow. And so again, if we think of the philosophy as this aspirational thing, this standard that
we'll probably never meet, not unlike the opening of the Declaration of Independence that we're
trying to live up to, that's probably closer to what the philosophy is supposed to be.
Well, you raised your very wealthy neighbor from Bastrop, Texas, on the outskirts of
Austin, and you've written about Musk in ways that allow you to reflect on stoicism.
Tell us that.
Well, I was very influenced by your book, and obviously,
I've read quite a bit about him.
I just finished this series on the Cardinal Virtues.
So the courage, discipline, justice, the last one was wisdom.
And I presented him as a character because I think he's someone sort of straight out of the pages of Plutarch, both incredibly gifted and incredibly flawed at the same time.
And I tried to make the first, the positive case for him being one of the smartest people on, I think I say in the beginning, to say that Elon Musk isn't smart as some kind of.
critics now try to do, is like saying he's not rich. It's hard to argue. He's done incredible
things, and that's what makes the turn or some of the other things that have been said or believed
so I think both alarming but also fascinating. How does someone become stained purple or
Caesarified, changed by power, wealth, isolation, the algorithm? I think to me,
one of the things I, it's like, if it can happen to him, what chance do the rest of us have to
resist? And he sometimes fancies himself an adherent of stoicism. Yeah, I think he follows the
Daily Stoic on Twitter. He's a fan of yours, even if it's not fully mutual. Well, I'll say I like to
write about dead people. It's easier. I know. Trust me. I learned that. Yeah. Also, you know,
I wrote a book a few years ago about Peter Thiel. And actually, the epigraph is a, uh,
a line from Mark or Percy, but I will say that was hovering in the back of my mind.
You don't want to write about an angry, vindictive billionaire.
It's a scary thing.
But I'm a fan in many ways.
I just, I find, I find it emblematic of our times that here you have this person who, in many
cases should know better, not able to pull himself out of the either doom loop that he's in
or, you know, I think the demon loop.
The demon loop, yeah.
Yeah. Well, I found that so fascinating in your book. I'd be curious to hear about it. But it's like so much of the mythology of the working endlessly in the factory and pulling it back from the brink, how often that was the same, it's like that famous meme of the guy in the hot dog suit where he's like, we're trying to find out who did this. Like you put yourself in the situation and then you're heroically going into demon mode to save it. The point is to not have to go into demon mode.
But that's what he thinks, which is, I can save it.
I'm going to be the gladiator.
Yeah.
I've got to put on the cape and do it.
And he kind of pulls that up from classical philosophy, he thinks.
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So tell me about the Cardinal Virtues.
It was a great book.
I read it on the way down,
which is how that would apply to, you know,
somebody trying to make their way in the world,
all the tech bros here in Austin.
Yeah.
How can you say, all right,
here's the virtues you've got to live by?
Yeah.
I mean, I think courage, discipline, justice, wisdom,
And these are timeless virtues for a reason.
And they sort of pop up in almost all the different spiritual and religious traditions.
Maybe sometimes they're rendered as five or seven or ten or whatever.
But they're all, we're all kind of dancing around the same human traits that we hold up.
But I think, you know, wisdom is, I think, in many ways, the more relevant one in this moment right now in this world of AI, where, like, people are convinced that all of a sudden you can have a computer do your thinking for you.
And in fact, what AI presents to me.
is a if you want to get, if you want to get a lot out of it, or you want to be prevented from being
eaten alive by it, what you need is a strong liberal arts education. So you know how to ask it
the right things, how to parse the information, and how to spot when it's obviously, and as they say,
sort of hallucinatingly incorrect as it, as it often is. And so wisdom is the virtue I waited to the
end of the series about, because I think it's sort of the one that unlocks all the others.
And it is so much more important now, the wisdom, because as you say, there are many other things
you can outsource, but that seems to be a fundamental human trait, right?
It does. And, you know, I think Elon Musk is a fascinating example of, like, what happens when
your information diet is corrupted. Correct. When bad info gets in and then how it compounds.
When you're training on a bad data set. Yeah.
Garbage in, garbage out.
Yeah, that's what's fascinating to me about his AI company.
That seems like a flawed premise.
Twitter, I can't imagine a worse data set for if you're trying to deduce human wisdom out of something than scraping lots of tweets.
Yeah, that's a scary thought.
But I think, obviously, we're both biased as writers and authors, but I think people consume way too much real-time information, way too much news.
And actually, you'd be better off studying the life of.
of Leonardo da Vinci or Benjamin Franklin,
and that would tell you a lot about what's happening now
and help you understand the world as it is now.
And part of that is because not only have we had time
to actually think and reflect on what this stuff means,
but you're less likely to project your biases
or your partisanship on it,
you want to go back and read about Truman
or in the middle of COVID,
read about the Spanish flu or,
You know, you want to study historical figures, I think it was Truman, said the only thing new in the world is the history you don't know.
Right.
And so how do you root yourself in information with a long half-life?
That to me is one of the main arguments of the wisdom book.
The thing, and Cardinal Virtues being something that's had a pretty good half-life, ideas that are still going to be here and still going to be true a long time from now, as opposed to the latest speculation about X, Y, or Z.
Yeah, it's an anecdote to our information overload, but often when you go back to the founders, as you've been talking about, they each exhibit the cardinal virtues, but in different proportions.
I mean, Washington of great rectitude, the passion of a John Adams or Samuel Adams.
But it did seem to me, and I'm biased, that it took the Franklin, who was the wisdom person, the older person, twice as old as the rest of them.
That was what held them all together.
I think so.
And I talk about this a little bit in the wisdom book.
What I think is fascinating about Franklin is here you have the smartest and one of the most successful people on.
the planet and he didn't have any enemies people liked him even even the british liked him
uh and he added on top of all of the virtues a a friendliness and a savvy and an understanding
of human interaction that that i think we don't celebrate enough like that's oftentimes people use
being smart and uh successful as as a way to disconnect from people or it makes them like people less
And that's Elon's case, which is that empathy is not your friend.
Yes.
You don't want people to like you because that's a vanity.
Whereas Franklin, to the extent he had a flawed,
what you consider to be his virtue, is he was so eager to make everybody like him.
Yeah.
He did not exhibit the courage virtue in your book.
I think he did in some ways, but sure.
Starting the declaration was an act of courage.
Yes.
But, yeah, he was, he had the...
Well, I guess what I'm asking is, can you go to...
too far to wanting people to like you.
Well, Aristotle said, you know, all the virtues sit as a midpoint between two vices.
Right.
And I think some of us are more of one than the other.
I think we're all kind of, and what is so interesting about the cardinal virtues
and why it's such a, I think, a genius formation is that they all moderate each other.
So courage, not just is moderated by, at a certain point,
point it becomes recklessness, but courage, if not in pursuit of justice, becomes an empty and
a valueless virtue. Wisdom tells us not just what causes are sort of good or bad, but also
how one might bring them into the world, right? Like what the competence needed to bring about
a political revolution or outflank a bureaucracy. I mean, I think Elon deserves a lot of credit,
for, not just that he had these brilliant scientific ideas, Steve Jobs as well,
but their ability to organizationally and logistically bring them into the world.
That's also, I guess, probably discipline, the sort of the work ethic.
But so all the virtues balance each other at Zeno, 2,500 years ago, is basically saying
they are separate but inseparable from each other.
And that's something we've lost today is the notion that balance is,
the key to things, that going way out with any particular virtue can be a flaw.
Yes, yes, that you can have too much of a good thing or not enough of a good thing.
And that's, I think, discipline is sometimes rendered as temperance.
Yeah.
And that's not a very sexy word in, you know, especially in America.
Although in the virtues of Ben Franklin, he has 12 and then adds humility.
Temperance is number five.
Yes.
Now, I did not listen.
We were in the green room talking.
and we're having such a good time
and I think you came in and told us
all the logistics, like exactly
how long we're supposed to go.
Ryan Holiday, it's amazing dude.
Thank you so much.
Thanks so much for listening.
If you could rate this podcast
and leave a review on iTunes,
that would mean so much to us
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We appreciate it, and I'll see you next episode.
Thank you.
