Classical Philosophy

Stoicism

Delve deep into the profound teachings and timeless wisdom found within stoicism.

Books in Stoicism

Cover of The Golden Sayings of Epictetus

Epictetus speaks in clear sparks, guiding you to the quiet strength you already carry. The Golden Sayings gathers brisk conversations and incisive maxims that teach the art of inner freedom. What is ours to govern are thoughts, choices, and the stories we tell ourselves. What is not ours we greet with acceptance. The book invites you to tune your will to nature as a musician tunes a lyre, to honor Providence while tending the small garden of the mind. Expect plain counsel, vivid images, and a humane severity that steadies you like a lamp in storm and a compass on open water.

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Cover of Musonius Rufus: Lectures and Fragments

Musonius Rufus speaks like a clear spring in a crowded market, offering practical Stoicism you can drink today. These brief lectures and fragments show philosophy as training for life where virtue is the only good and practice matters more than talk. He favors few strong proofs over many weak ones like a physician who heals with one medicine and counsels simple food honest work endurance and restraint. He defends educating women, treats marriage as a partnership, and sees hardship as useful medicine. The voice is plain, steady, and humane inviting you to clear your habits like a garden and live according to nature.

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Cover of The Enchiridion (Manual)

The Enchiridion is a pocket guide to inner freedom, drawn from Epictetus's teaching. In clear maxims it asks you to sort the world into what is yours and what is not yours. Your judgments, choices, desires, and refusals are yours. Body, wealth, praise, and position are not. Hold only to what is truly yours and you move like a steady ship through weather, calm within fortune's storm. The book coaches attention to first impressions, discipline of desire and action, and consent to nature's course. The prize is a resilient joy, a quiet dignity, and a courage that does not depend on circumstance.

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Cover of Letters from a Stoic

Seneca’s Letters from a Stoic reads like a series of quiet conversations by lamplight, practical and humane counsel to his friend Lucilius. He teaches how to save our most precious wealth, time, to choose friends wisely, to read with depth rather than drift, and to look at death until fear loosens its grip. Philosophy becomes a daily medicine and a compass at sea, training the mind to build an inner citadel amid fortune’s storms. Through simple exercises and clear images poverty rehearsed, anger examined, desire tamed these letters invite steady courage, cheerful restraint, and a freedom rooted in character.

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Cover of On Duties

Cicero’s On Duties is a lantern for life in public and private, written as a father’s counsel to his son while the Roman Republic dimmed. Drawing on Stoic wisdom and Roman civic sense, Cicero asks what we owe to ourselves, to others, and to the commonwealth. He weighs the honorable against the useful and insists that the truly useful is what is honorable. Justice, prudence, courage, and moderation become living measures for choice, from business deals to statecraft. Grounded in natural law as right reason in accord with nature, this book offers steadiness of soul amid ambition, fear, and the press of events.

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Cover of On the Shortness of Life

Seneca’s brief letter to Paulinus argues that life is not truly short; we simply hand it away to busyness, vanity, and borrowed obligations. Time is our only true possession, yet we scatter it like coins before a crowd, then mourn when the purse is empty. Seneca urges a radical custody of hours, turning from restless errands toward the steady practice of philosophy, which gathers the mind, reconciles with mortality, and stretches life by giving it depth. The wise person lives fully in the present, learning from the past and welcoming what comes, while the unguarded drift like passengers asleep at sea. A classic for anyone ready to reclaim their days. Stoic counsel delivered with the calm urgency of a friend.

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Cover of Discourses

Epictetus’ Discourses is a conversational training ground where a former slave teaches freedom of the mind. In lively talks and vivid examples, he shows how peace comes from tending the one thing that is ours to govern, the choosing mind, while greeting fortune, praise, illness, or loss as passing weather. Reason is the helmsman, steering through rough seas of impulse and fear toward a life in accord with nature and duty. The tone is firm yet humane, more coach than lecturer, inviting daily practice, clear seeing, and a resilient joy within a small inner citadel no storm can breach.

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Cover of On The Shortness of Life

Seneca speaks to a busy friend and to us, arguing that life is not short but squandered. He urges us to guard time as a treasure, to step back from the bustle that feels like purpose yet steals our days, and to claim leisure as a school for virtue. Philosophy becomes a compass and a hearth, teaching us to live now rather than forever preparing to begin. He shows how good actions bank the past safely and free the mind to meet the present. This lucid Stoic dialogue offers a stern kindness and a clear mirror, inviting you to simplify, to choose what is yours, and to cultivate a well tended life.

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Cover of MEDITATIONS

Meditations is a private journal of the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius, a Stoic workbook written to steady the mind amid power, illness, and war. In short notes he reminds himself to live by reason and virtue, to meet insult with patience, to do the task before him, and to accept the larger order of nature. The voice is calm as a lamp in a field tent at dawn, asking you to rule yourself rather than events, to narrow attention to what you can control, and to remember that life is brief. Read it for austere kindness and durable guidance.

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