The Daily Stoic - This Is How You Become Well-Read | Plato's View
Episode Date: June 2, 2025As Marcus would say, we can't be satisfied with merely "getting the gist" of what we read. "Read attentively," he advised. Read deeply. Aim for quality, not quantity.The Daily Stoic is $1.99 ...as an ebook for a limited time only. Grab it here now!📘 Grab the hardcover edition of The Daily Stoic here: https://store.dailystoic.com/📔 Pick up your own leather bound signed edition of The Daily Stoic! Check it out at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast🎥 Watch top moments from The Daily Stoic Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.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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Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we bring you a stoic-inspired meditation designed to help you find strength and insight and wisdom into everyday life.
Each one of these episodes is based on the 2,000-year-old philosophy that has guided some of history's greatest men and women,
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This is how you become well-read. In Meditations, Mark Ceruleus quotes dozens and dozens
of other writers and philosophers. Sometimes he attributes
these quotes, sometimes he doesn't. Since he wrote most of Meditations in a battlefield tent,
he likely didn't have the reference books beside him while quoting Socrates and Epictetus or Homer.
No, what he was doing is drawing purely from memory because he'd read those authors so many times they'd become a part of him. This bit of remarkable
recall, it demonstrates the ancient approach to being well-read, a phrase that has lost its
original meaning according to the philosopher Mortimer Adler. Today we consider someone
well-read if they've consumed a lot of books, but the ancients valued those who truly knew their material,
readers who dove deeply into the classic texts
until they genuinely understood and had absorbed them.
A person who has read widely, Mortimer says
of the modern reader, but not well,
deserves to be pitied rather than praised.
And the 17th century philosopher Thomas Hobbes
made a similar observation.
If I read as many books as other men do, he said, I would be as dull-witted as they are.
And this is why reading and rereading a carefully chosen set of authors is so powerful.
Their insights become embedded in your mind. As we've said before, the stoics aren't something
you have read. They have to be something you are reading again and again and again. As Mark
Sebrilis would say, we can't be satisfied with merely getting the gist of them. We have to read
attentively, he advised, read deeply, read repeatedly, aim for quality, not quantity.
And that's also how we designed the Daily Stoic 10 years ago. It was the idea of one page a day of
the best stoic wisdom from the Stoics, which has now sold millions of copies
in dozens of languages.
And really exciting news, the ebook is 199,
right now anywhere you get your ebooks.
The Daily Stoic is 366 pages of the best insights
and practices delivered one per day from the Stoics.
Five minutes in the morning, you connect
with the wisest minds who ever lived. And maybe you get a little meditation from me on top of that. And you can apply it to
your life right now. Some people read it as an ebook, obviously. Some people have hardcovers that
have made it through since it came out in 2016. And then a lot of people have upgraded to the
premium edition, the leather one we made, which is really awesome. It's a leather bound edition. We collaborated with this awesome bindery
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It's got a genuine leather cover.
It's got illustrations, comes in a box, makes a great gift.
It's on premium Munkin Cream paper.
It's got vinyl end sheets, got a ribbon.
There's a little letter from the authors.
Bunch of other stuff.
The idea though is, look,
anyone can read a lot. The wise read well.
If you want to live better,
if you want to go beyond the gist of things,
I hope you go past just skimming the surface
and maybe you give the Daily Stoic a look,
maybe give it to someone who might need it,
or you just return to the original Stoics, I don't care.
I did want to tell you that the Daily Stoic ebook is $199
for just a few more days.
And if you want a signed hardcover
or a signed leather bound,
I will link to that in the show notes as well.
The Daily Stoic
Plato's View.
This is the June 2nd entry in the Daily Stoic. How beautifully Plato put it, Marx really writes in Meditation 748.
Whenever you want to talk about people, it's best to take a bird's eye view and see everything
all at once of gatherings, armies, farms, weddings and divorces, births and deaths,
noisy courtrooms or silent spaces.
Every foreign people, holidays, memorials, markets, all
blended together and arranged in a pairing of opposites. And actually, let me give you
the Hayes one today too. If I recall correctly, he renders this quite beautifully. Plato has it
right. If you want to talk about people, you need to look down on earth from above. Herds and armies,
farms and weddings, divorces, births, deaths,
noisy courtrooms, desert places, all the foreign peoples, holidays, days of mourning, market days,
all mixed together. A harmony of opposites." And there's actually a beautiful dialogue by the
poet Lucian, who is Seneca's nephew, I believe, in which the narrator is given the ability to fly and
see the world from above.
Turning his eyes earthward, he sees how comically small even the richest people, the biggest
estates, the entire empires look from above.
All their battles and concerns are made petty in perspective.
In ancient times, this exercise was only theoretical.
The highest that anyone could get was the top of a mountain or a building a few stories
tall.
But as technology has progressed, humans have been able to actually take that bird's-eye
view and greater.
Edgar Mitchell, an astronaut, was one of the first people to see the Earth from outer space.
And as he later recounted, in outer space, you develop an instant global consciousness,
a people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world and a compulsion As he later recounted, in outer space you develop an instant global consciousness, a
people orientation, an intense dissatisfaction with the state of the world and a compulsion
to do something about it.
From out there on the moon, international politics looks so petty.
You want to grab a politician by the scruff of the neck and drag him a quarter of a million
miles away and say, look at that, you son of a bitch.
And then I add, many a problem can be solved with the perspective of Plato's view.
Use it.
You know, I just got off a plane.
I'm getting on a plane again shortly.
And you know, you look out the window and you see it.
Sometimes when I fly in Austin, I can actually see where I live.
And you know, 40 acres suddenly very small, a thousand acres, very small.
The Tesla factory, one of the biggest buildings I've ever seen in my life, very small.
Skyscrapers, very small.
People, minuscule.
I think what Edgar Mitchell is talking about
is a sort of paradox of it.
Everything seems very small,
but everything also seems very connected, right?
And so wars and international boundaries,
these all seem, you all seem so insignificant,
such artificial and petty distinctions.
I was recently down in Big Bend National Park
and you look over this vast expanse
and it humbles you in that sense.
And then also you're like, here is the United States,
here is Mexico, here is the United States, here is Mexico.
You're walking on the one side of the river.
And then it's just a, and we don't have to get
into some complicated discussion about immigration,
but it's just a reminder.
It's like how arbitrary, someone born over here
gets this kind of life.
Someone born on this side gets this kind of life.
And they'll shoot you if you come across the border
with this intention, but me splashing around in the water with my kids,
that's totally fine, right?
You realize that all these things we take very seriously
are not that serious.
And what matters, I think Marcus is saying,
when you take Plato's view is like our connection
to other people, our obligations as human beings,
being good, being decent.
Alexander the Great's empire looks very enormous
and significant and powerful and important up close,
but zoom out, it doesn't seem that different
than anything else.
And the immensity of the damage that he did
in creating it suddenly comes into view as well.
So Plato's view is about getting perspective.
And it's a reminder that our technology helps give us
that view and that we should appreciate.
I know if you ever watch the Daily Stoked videos,
sometimes we use drone shots
and it's been fun to learn how to fly this drone,
but this drone has also expanded my perspective.
It's allowed me to see things, even myself, right?
From different angles.
I never saw what I looked like running from 30 meters above me, right?
I haven't seen what the angle of the road that I like to run on looks like that way.
And it helps you appreciate things differently.
It gives you that bird's eye view.
And I think it's really important.
I think time lapses can do this too.
Of course, just sitting there and looking at it,
climbing up to a high spot,
looking at the stars can give you this too.
But the Stokes were trying to humble themselves.
They were trying to get perspective.
They were trying to remember our obligations
and connections to other people.
They were trying, as Annie Duke says,
to get to the outside of their problems,
outside of the insular outside of their problems,
outside of the insularness of their viewpoint and their urges and their desires and their emotional
reactions. And I just think it's so important. And please do avail yourself of that knowledge.
It's very powerful and important, as Marcus says, as Plato does, as Lucian does.
as Marcus says, as Plato does, as Lucian does. And I'll leave that with you now to chew on
for the rest of the day.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Thank you for listening to the Daily Stoic podcast.
I just wanted to say we so appreciate it.
We love serving you.
It's amazing to us that over 30 million people
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