The Daily Stoic - Skip The Shortcut. Take The Long Way Instead.
Episode Date: May 27, 2026Marcus Aurelius, despite being emperor of Rome, still made time every day to write in his journal, examining his thoughts and actions. He understood that wisdom required ongoing effort—not ...once, but continually throughout life. 📚 The Four Virtues Boxed Set: https://dailystoic.com/virtuesboxset🎟️ DAILY STOIC LIVE | Ryan Holiday is coming to a city near you! Grab tickets here | https://www.dailystoiclive.com/🎙️ AD-FREE | Support the podcast and go deeper into Stoicism by subscribing to The Daily Stoic Premium - unlock ad-free listening, early access, and bonus content: https://dailystoic.supercast.com/🎥 VIDEO EPISODES| Watch the video episodes on The Daily Stoic YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@DailyStoic/videos✉️ FREE STOIC WISDOM | Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemailSee 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, designed to help bring those four key stoic virtues, courage, discipline, justice, and wisdom into the real world.
Skip the shortcut. Take the long way instead. There's a great exchange between Epictetus and a student that encapsulates how the Stoics likely would have felt about artificial intelligence.
Tell me what to do, the student says. It would be better to say, Epictetus corrects him, make my mind.
mind adaptable to any circumstances. In our fast-paced world, we are constantly bombarded with promises
of shortcuts to success, happiness, fulfillment. We're advertised get-rich-quick schemes and
productivity hacks on social media, which is itself kind of a shortcut to human connection.
And now artificial intelligence presents itself as perhaps the ultimate shortcut, offering to
write our emails, draft our essays, create our art, even think and plan for us.
AI promises to do the intellectual heavy lifting while we reap the rewards, suggesting we can
bypass the learning process altogether.
Marcus Aurelius, despite being Emperor of Rome, still made time every day to write at his journal,
examining his thoughts and actions.
She understood that wisdom required ongoing effort, not once, but continually throughout his life.
There's no app, no hack, no shortcut that could replace the necessary inner work.
In our modern context, the Stoics would likely view AI and other shortcuts with caution.
Not because technology itself is the problem, but because the siren song that we can bypass hard work is fundamentally misleading.
The Stoics would remind us that the struggle itself, the very difficulty we try to avoid, is often where the most learning value is created.
It's often the very work we're trying to avoid where wisdom lies.
Wisdom cannot be outsourced.
It cannot be hacked.
and it can definitely not be automated.
Has to be earned.
The slow way, the hard way, the right way.
Wisdom takes work.
That's what Seneca said.
He said, no man is wise without toil.
Don't take the shortcut.
Take the long way.
That's what's going to get you what you want
and ultimately get you where you want to go.
You can check out Wisdom Takes work, by the way,
which was a lot of work.
It was the culmination of six plus years of writing,
many more years of research and thinking before that.
And in fact, the whole Virtue series is that.
Courage is calling discipline is destiny.
Right thing right now.
And wisdom takes work and grab the whole set.
Sign them for you.
I'll link to that in today's show notes.
