The Daily Stoic - Plutarch on How To Be A Leader
Episode Date: September 4, 2022Today’s episode features an excerpt from Jeffrey Beneker’s How To Be A Leader: An Ancient Guide to Wise Leadership. How To Be A Leader is a modern translation and collection of essays abo...ut successful leadership from the ancient biographer.✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, 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 weekend edition of the Daily Stoic. Each weekday we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stoic, something that can help you live up to those four Stoic virtues of courage, justice, wisdom, and temperance.
And here on the weekend, we take a deeper dive into those same topics.
We interview stoic philosophers. We reflect. We prepare.
We think deeply about the challenging issues of our time.
And we work through this philosophy in a way that's more possible here when we're not
rushing to work or to get the kids to school.
When we have the time to think, to go for a walk, to sit with our journals, and to prepare
for what the future will bring.
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Hey everyone, it's Ryan Holiday,
and I'm a very special episode of the podcast today.
Everyone's what I read a book, and I'm just like, wow.
That is a book and I've really loved
the Princeton University Presses series of classical texts.
They sort of take these great classical texts,
the short excerpts, they put them together,
they've got some of Epicetus,
they've got some of Mark Serrelius and Seneca.
I've just really loved them.
And this episode is from their book How to Be a Leader,
which was written by Plutarch.
It's from his essay series Moralia.
It's translated and introduced by Jeffrey Bennecker.
Today's episode, the title of it even is just fantastic.
It's a leader should do anything but not everything.
And it's about how a leader has to share power,
has to delegate, has to prioritize the tasks
that they do.
Plutarch is the best that's ever done it.
And I'm so grateful to Princeton University Press
in this ancient wisdom series that they have
for putting together this new edition. I highly recommend you read How to Be a Leader.
And if you like this audiobook sample, thank you to the folks at Tantor Media,
Highbridge Audio, a division of recorded books. They're the ones who were generous and kind
enough to give us the audiobook
sample. So if you love audiobooks, you can listen to an audiobook version of this full edition,
which we have here, Plutarch's How to Be a Leader. A leader should do anything, but not everything.
To an uneducated leader, in this brief essay, Plutarch refutes
the notion that the benefit of holding office is merely the opportunity to exercise power.
This is the myopic stance of uneducated leaders whom he portrays as insecure and afraid of
the people they govern.
Educated leaders, conversely, are primarily concerned with the welfare of their constituents,
even at the expense of their own power or safety.
A leader becomes educated in Plutarch's view by exposure to philosophy, and in particular to moral philosophy.
The greatest benefit to be derived from this sort of education is the development of the logos or reason, which is essential to controlling one's emotions and impulses. Leaders who allow
themselves to be governed by reason will in turn govern their cities benevolently. The
uneducated leader, on the other hand, is plagued by greed, paranoia, and a false sense of grandeur.
Plutarch holds out God in this essay, as the ideal to which leaders should compare and assimilate
themselves. This God, however, is not one
of the deities of the polytheistic Greek religion, but rather a philosophical concept that Plutarch
is borrowed from Plato. It represents a pure reason and the perfection of moral virtue.
Plutarch conceives of this deity as existing in the heavens where the sun becomes its physical
manifestation, and just as the sun in the heavens where the sun becomes its physical manifestation.
And just as the sun in the sky represents the perfection of the deity, so the leader
who is governed by reason exhibits an example of virtue to the citizens of a city.
And even more, this virtuous leader may in turn make the citizens virtuous.
Thus, good political leadership depends not on formulating and executing particular policies,
but on the moral development of the leaders themselves.
1.
The people of Cyrene were in treating Plato to write laws for them and to reorganize their
constitution, but he declined, claiming that it would be difficult to establish laws
for the Cyenians because
they were so well off. For nothing is so naturally haughty and harsh and hard to govern as a
man who has acquired a reputation for success. For the same reason, it is difficult to act
as an advisor about governing to those who hold office because they are afraid to accept
reason as their own governor, for fear that it will make them subservient to the obligations of their office and so reduce the benefit of their power. These people
do not know the example of the Apompos, King of the Spartans, who was the first in spatter
to involve the Ephors in the affairs of the kings. When his wife reproached him with the
complaint that he would leave to his children an office that was weaker than the one he had received he replied, actually it will be stronger to the same degree that it is more stable.
For by letting go of the excessive and absolute character of his office he escaped envy and
so avoided danger.
And yet, when the apomper's diverted royal power to the ephors which was like diverting
the current of a great stream,
he deprived himself of whatever power he granted to them. Reason, that has been conditioned
by philosophy, however, once it has been established as a counsellor and protector of the one
who governs, removes the unstable element of power and leaves behind what is sound,
just as happens when we apply reason to the maintenance of our health.
2. Most kings and leaders, however, lack sense, and so they imitate the unskilled sculptors
who believe that their colossal statues appear great and strong when they fashion their
figures with a mighty stride, a straining body and a gaping mouth. These kings and leaders, because they speak with a low-pitched
voice, cast a harsh gaze, a factor can tankerous matter, and hold themselves a luth in their
daily lives, suppose that they are imitating the dignity and solemnity of leadership. In
fact, they are not at all different from those colossal statues, which on the exterior possess
a heroic and divine facade,
but inside are filled with earth and stone and lead. In the case of the statues however,
this weight keeps their upright posture stable and steady, while uneducated generals and
leaders are oftentimes tripped up and toppled over by their innate foolishness. For they
establish their lofty power upon a pedestal that is not been leveled, and so
it cannot stand upright.
Moreover just as a builder's rule is first established straight and unbending, and then
is used to correct the alignment of everything else through adjustments and juxtapositions
with respect to it, in the very same way, those who govern must first achieve governance
of themselves, straighten out their souls, and set their character a right, and then they should assimilate their subjects to themselves.
For the one who is tipping over cannot straighten up someone else, nor can the ignorant person
teach the disorderly established order, the disorganized organize, the ungoverned govern.
But most leaders misunderstand this, thinking instead that the greatest benefit
in governing is the freedom from being governed themselves. Take the King of the Persians, for instance.
He believed that everyone was his slave except for his wife over whom he ought especially to have
been the master. Three. Who then will govern the governor? The law which is King of everyone, both mortals
and immortals, as Pindar says. But I'm not referring to a law that has been written
in books or on any wooden tablets to be read. But I mean reason, which exists within those
who govern, always accompanying and guarding their souls, and never allowing them to lack
guidance.
Now, the Persian king assigned to one of his attendants this task, to come to him at dawn,
and to say, arise O King, and attend to the matters that the great Ahura Mazda wants you
to attend to.
But this voice is always present with an educated and self-controlled leaders, speaking out and exhorting them.
Polamon used to say that erotic love was a service of the gods intended for the care and well-being of young people.
One might more truly say that those who govern serve God for the care and well-being of their fellow humans,
with the aim of dispersing some of the noble and good gifts that God grants and protecting the rest.
Do you see this boundless sky up on high and infielding the earth in its soft embrace?
The sky sends down the beginnings of the necessary seeds, while the earth yields them up.
Some will grow from rain, others from wind, and others when warmed on their surface by the
stars and moon, and the sun arranges everything and mixes its own charm into all that grows.
But of the good gifts which the gods give, gifts that are so great and so many, there is
no enjoyment or proper use of them that is separate from law and justice and a leader.
Justice in fact is the aim of the law, and law is the work of law and justice and a leader. Justice, in fact, is the aim of
the law, and law is the work of the leader, and the leader is the image of God who gives
order to everything. True leaders require no fideos to fashion them, no polycletus and
no meron, because they, on their own, transform themselves into the likeness of God through
virtue, creating
a real-life statue that is the most pleasant to look upon and the most fitting image of
a God.
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And so just as God has established the sun in the sky as a beautiful image of Himself and
the moon as well, so in cities there is a facsimile of God and a source of light, the
leader who is God fearing and upholds righteousness.
That is to say, the leader who possesses the reason and the intellect of God, but not
one who holds a scepter or lightning bolt or trident has some fashion themselves in images
and ascribe themselves in writing, thus making their foolishness odious by adding to it
what in fact is unantainable. For God resents those who imitate thunder and lightning and
shooting rays of light, but he is pleased with those who eagerly pursue his virtue and
assimilate themselves to true beauty and benevolence.
These, he strengthens, and to these he gives a share of his order, justice, truth and
mildness.
Fire is not more divine than they are, nor is light, nor the course of the sun, nor the
rising and settings of stars, nor eternity and immortality.
For God is fortunate, not in His longevity, but in the governing
ability of His virtue. For this is a divine thing, and Noble 2 is the ability of His virtue
to be governed.
4. When Anacchus was consoling Alexander, who was despondent over his murder of Clitus,
he said that justice and right were attendance to Zeus,
so that everything done by a king was by definition righteous and just.
But in his attempt to assuage Alexander's remorse for his crime,
he encouraged similar actions in the future.
This was wrong and harmful.
For if we must find a model for this situation,
it would not be to say that Zeus has
justice as an attendant, but that Zeus himself is justice and right, and that he is the eldest and
most perfect of laws. The ancient authors and teachers tell us, however, that not even Zeus
is able to govern nobly apart from justice. She is a maiden, writes Hesseod, uncorrupted, and the companion of reverence,
self-control, and profit. For this reason they call kings reverend. For it is appropriate
that those who are least fearful should be most revered. Leaders, in fact, must be more
afraid of inflicting harm than of suffering harm themselves. This is what causes them to be revered. This
is the benevolent and noble sort of fear that leaders possess, to be afraid on behalf of those
they govern, and so to remain vigilant and keep their constituents from harm. Just as dogs keep
careful watch over flocks in the pen when they've heard a stout-hearted wild beast. They act
not in their own interests,
but on behalf of those they are protecting.
Take, Epiminondus, for example.
When his fellow Thibans had abandoned themselves
to a drunken festival, he alone kept watch
over the city's weapons and walls,
saying that by remaining sober and awake,
he was freeing the others to get drunk and sleep.
Or, consider Keter the the younger at Utica.
Following their defeat in battle, he ordered that everyone be sent to the coast, and after
embarking them on ships and praying for good sailing, he returned to his quarters and committed
suicide.
Thus, he has taught us, on whose behalf a leader ought to be afraid, and what things a leader
ought to scorn.
But Cliarchus, the tyrant of Heraclia Pontica, used to curl himself into a box like a snake
when he went to sleep.
And Aristodemus of Argos used to go up into a room on the second floor through a trap
door, and after moving his bed on top of the door he would sleep there with his mistress,
while the woman's mother would take away the ladder from below, and then put it back again in the morning.
How much do you suppose the theatre and the town hall and the council chamber and the
drinking party frightened this man, who had converted his own bedroom into a personal
prison?
In truth, kings are afraid for their subjects, while tyrants are afraid of their subjects.
And so tyrants increase their fear in proportion to their power, the more people they rule,
the more people they fear.
5.
It is indeed, neither likely nor fitting, as some philosophers claim, that God should exist
intermingled with matter that is entirely passive
or with substances that are liable to countless acts of compulsion and changes of fortune and
fluctuations. Rather up on high, somewhere near that nature which ever and always remains
the same, God is established upon a holy pedestal, as Plato says, and, making his way along a
straight path in accordance with nature, he completes
his course. Just as the sun in the sky appears plainly as a beautiful facsimile and mirror
image of God to those who are able to perceive him in it, so God has established in cities
the light of righteousness and of his own reason. This light acts as an image, which those
who are blessed and self-controlled seek to replicate in themselves through philosophy, reshaping themselves closer to the absolute standard of goodness.
Nothing other than reason developed through philosophy creates this character within a person.
If we understand this, we may avoid making the same mistake as Alexander. For when he saw Diogeny's at Corinth, he admired him for his natural abilities and marveled
at his intellect and stature.
Then he declared, if I were not Alexander, I would be Diogeny's.
In saying this, he essentially affirmed that he was weighed down by his own good fortune,
fame and power which acted as impediments to virtue, and
left him no time for anything else. He was further declaring that he envied the philosophers
Ragged, Cloak and Leather Bag because Diogeny's was neither conquered nor held captive by them,
while he himself was restrained by armor and horses and spears. But it was, in fact, possible
for him to practice philosophy, and so to become
Diogenies in his character while remaining Alexander in his success. Indeed, because he
was Alexander, he had all the more reason to become Diogenies, because with respect to
his great success, which, like a ship is subject to strong winds and rough seas, he was in
need of heavy ballast and astount pilot.
6. For private citizens who are weak and obscure, however, lack of intelligence combines with
a lack of power to result in no harm being done, just as in bad dreams when a sense of
grief disturbs the soul, but the soul, though it has the will, is unable to respond. But political power,
once it is latched onto depravity, gives physical strength to one's emotions. Thus, the
saying of Dionysius proves to be true. For he declared that whenever he achieved his desires
quickly, that was when he most enjoyed being tyrant. There is a great danger, then, when
people who are able to accomplish what
they wish, in fact wish for things that are improper. Then, as soon as the word was spoken,
the deed was accomplished. The praveti, once combined with political power,
races to give expression to every emotion. It converts anger into murder, love into adultery,
and greed into the confiscation of property.
Then, as soon as the word was spoken, the offender was put to death.
As soon as the suspicion was raised, the one who was slandered was killed.
Scientists declare that lightning follows thunder, as blood flows after a wound is inflicted,
even though we see the lightning first, because our sense
of hearing passively awaits sound, where our sense of sight actively encounters light.
Likewise, in the sphere of government, punishments may come before formal accusations, and indictments
may proceed the presentation of proof. For the spirit is already yielding and no longer
holds out, as the hook of an anchor lodged in sand yields
when seas are rough. Unless a weighty reason presses down on and applies pressure to political
power. For then, a leader imitates the sun, which moves least when it achieves its greatest
height, once it has ascended high into the northerly sky, and by taking its time, it makes
its path more certain. 7. It is, of course, impossible for vices to go unnoticed when people hold positions
of power. Epileptics begin to spin and rock back and forth when they go to high places
and move around, and so height and motion expose their disease.
Fortun, likewise, after elevating uneducated and unlearned people to even slight prominence
through some wealth or glory or political office, immediately makes a show of their downfall.
Or to put it another way, when Jaza empty, you cannot distinguish between those that are
intact and those that are damaged, but once you fill them, then their leaks appear. Just so, cracked souls cannot contain political power,
but they leak with desire, anger, boasting and vulgarity. But why must I go on about this?
When we know that people criticize even the smallest of defects in prominent and famous leaders,
wine, for example, became a slander against Kaiman and sleep against Scipio.
While Luculus was criticized for his overly luxurious dinners.
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