The Daily Stoic - It’s About What You Make Happen
Episode Date: August 21, 2024We don’t live in Ancient Rome. We are not emperors or senators. We are not professional philosophers. We are regular people. This doesn’t mean we are far from the world of virtue.📚 Pic...k up a copy of Lincoln's Virtues: An Ethical Biography by William Lee Miller at The Painted Porch | https://www.thepaintedporch.com📕 Grab a signed copy of Right Thing, Right Now by Ryan Holiday | https://store.dailystoic.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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Just join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcast. and wisdom, everyday life. Each one of these passages is based on the 2000 year old philosophy
that has guided some of history's greatest men and women. For more, you can visit us
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It's about what you make happen. We don't live in ancient Rome. We're not emperors or
senators. We are not professional philosophers. We are regular people. We don't live in ancient Rome. We're not emperors or senators.
We are not professional philosophers.
We are regular people.
This doesn't mean we are far from the world of virtue,
however, from the questions and dilemmas
of Marcus Aurelius or Cato.
We tend to think of moral choices,
William Lee Miller writes in his incredible biography
of Abraham Lincoln, as those that life forces upon us, quandaries, perplexities,
choices among goods and evils that we cannot evade.
And we also tend to think of such choices as concentrated
in a moment or a short period of time.
The lifeboat is sinking and someone must be thrown out
into the sea, so shall I throw out Albert Einstein
or my own grandmother.
That is the stuff he says of ethical cases and academies.
He's talking about the same preconceptions
that many of us have when we hear about the word justice.
Justice, I'm not a judge, I don't pass laws.
I didn't come up with this standard practice in my industry.
But that's not what justice was to the Stoics,
not to the high and mighty like Marcus
or the lowly like Epictetus.
No, to them justice was what a person did,
it was how they lived.
It was not big dilemmas or paradoxes,
it was everyday decisions.
It was what they chose to make happen in their own sphere.
That's what the new book, Right Thing Right Now,
tried to focus on.
You can grab that by the way.
Hope you check it out.
You can get the audio also.
But the idea, and I talk about Lincoln in the book,
is that although Lincoln was a brilliant philosopher
and thinker, he was for most of his life
just an ordinary lawyer and rural politician.
But then he decided to get involved,
not on the global stage, but in the issues around him.
There are also those latent possibilities
lying all around us all the time if we
bestir ourselves, Miller writes.
Lincoln, in 1854, bestirred himself.
Abstractly, slavery was a moral abomination.
In reality, it was a political and economic problem.
Lincoln chose to speak up about it.
He chose to get involved. It just so happened that from this small besturing,
the whole world was changed."
And by the way, you should grab William Lee Miller's book.
It's amazing.
And then if you haven't read Right Thing right now,
I think you would like it.
You can grab it right now.
We still got some signed copies at store.dailystowag.com
and at The Painted Porch.
I'll link to both those in the show notes.
And thank you to everyone who helped make that book
a number one bestseller.
That was a very unexpected surprise
and I appreciate it so much.
["The Painted Porch"]
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