The Daily Stoic - Ryan and Stephen Hanselman Talk About Their Newest Book, Lives of the Stoics
Episode Date: September 30, 2020On today’s podcast, Ryan talks with co-author Stephen Hanselman about their latest book, Lives of the Stoics, and what their experience has been writing it for the past year. This is the fi...rst part of the interview that Ryan recorded as a bonus gift for pre-ordering Lives of the Stoics; to hear the rest, just visit DailyStoic.com/Lives.Stephen Hanselman is a longtime collaborator of Ryan’s, having worked with him on their previous books, The Daily Stoic and The Daily Stoic Journal. Stephen has worked in the publishing business in various roles for over three decades. He is also a graduate of Harvard Divinity School.Get Lives of the Stoics now: http://DailyStoic.com/lives***If you enjoyed this week’s podcast, we’d love for you to leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps with our visibility, and the more people listen to the podcast, the more we can invest into it and make it even better.Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: http://DailyStoic.com/signupFollow @DailyStoic:Twitter: https://twitter.com/dailystoicInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoic/Facebook: http://facebook.com/dailystoicYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/dailystoicFollow Stephen Hanselman:  Homepage: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SteveHanselmanInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/stevehanselman/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stephenhanselmanSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke Podcast early and add free on Amazon Music.
Download the app today.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wondery's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target, the new discounter that's both savvy and fashion forward.
Listen to business wars on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
music or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to the Daily Stoic. For each day we read a short passage designed to help you cultivate the strength, insight, wisdom necessary for living good 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 at dailystowach.com.
Hey, it's Ryan Holiday.
Welcome to another episode of The Daily Stoke Podcast.
It's crazy for me to wrap my head around the fact that four years ago, exactly, we were
just launching The Daily Stoke website
and we were slipping the Daily Stoke,
the book out into the universe.
I had just put out ego as the enemy in the summer
and the book was sort of an experiment.
We weren't sure how it was gonna work.
If people would like it,
stoicism as a trend was not nearly what it is now.
And of course, we were just
coming up on the election and no one knew what was going to happen. My wife was very, very
pregnant. And so of all the books I put out that one sort of had the least fanfare, we
just put it out into the world and wanted to see what happened. And it's been this incredible
journey in the four years that that have happened have happened since I now have two kids.
I've written other books, I've seen and experienced all sorts
of things that just as you have it,
four years seems like an eternity.
And here we are in 2020.
And by the time you are listening to this,
although when I'm recording it, it's not yet happened.
Lies of the Stoics will be out in the world,
sort of a sequel to Daily Stoic,
but another collaboration with Steve Hanselman and myself,
as we've talked about before, the premise of the book is,
okay, the Daily Stoic is one thought
from the Stoics every day.
Well, let's actually look at who these people were, how do they live up to the philosophy?
How did stosis actually help them day to day?
What can we learn from their lives?
It's not just biography, but what can we learn from the moments, the critical moments
of their lives where they made good decisions or bad decisions, whether they lived up to the
philosophy or didn't live up to the philosophy?
How can that inspire and teach us?
But what I thought I'd kick around a little bit this morning is
Maybe document it because it's a weird moment like you know the book is done
There's nothing else I can do and this is how all creative projects are at a certain point like the ship has sailed
They've already been printed they've gone out to to stores. The marketing campaign is done. The release data is set. And then it's just sort of like out of
your hands. And it's a really weird feeling. It's an exercise in that sort of powerlessness that
the Stokes talk about where you have to sort of let go and let God as the expression goes.
You realize you control the effort. I've controlled everything I've put in up to this point. Then whether people like it, whether it sells well, whether it gets
the media attention, you know, it's not up to you. And this is a really, this is a thing you have
to remind yourself of constantly. If the fact that Daily Stoke came out and has sold, you know,
a million plus copies, it's translated in all these languages that we're having this conversation right now.
The fact that that's happened doesn't change the part of that process that was really meaningful, which is the time that I spent
At my desk on the page doing the work. So the still try to practice what that idea of indifference like Mark
It's really says, you know, you gain nothing by coming up and you lose nothing by coming down. It's who you are. It's what you've done that counts. The extra
rewards or the validation, it has to be secondary. I'm not saying it doesn't mean anything
because it does mean something. And certainly when you care about something as much as I care
about this philosophy, you want it to reach people, but you have to detach a little bit from those results, or it'll just break your heart. I mean,
two years ago or so, I put out conspiracy, which is, you know, a book I'm proud of one of the
as far as writing goes, probably the book I'm proudest of. It was the most interesting challenge.
It was the most interesting story. It's just a different book. And it sold well, but not nearly
on the scale of Daily Stoke, let's say, or the obstacles.
The way it does that mean that it was a failure.
I don't think that it was, and I don't think you define,
I don't think you can define yourself
as a successor of failure based on external results.
And you can talk about this in, you go as an enemy,
you have an internal scorecard.
You want to judge your success based on what you did,
what's firmly up to us as epictetus would say,
and then you have to tune out the other things.
Now, this is easy to say, of course,
and then it's always hard to do.
As I'm recording this, we're less than a week out from pub,
and there's news trickling in so far.
The pre-order numbers have been really great.
Thank you to everyone who pre-ordered.
Maybe it's in bestseller territory.
Maybe it's not.
A lot of the media has happened, but then also media
that we hope for expected hasn't happened,
because the election is just sort of consumed the world.
And hey, there's a pandemic going on.
And you can't bring I think at earlier parts
of my career, that would have been very nervous, would have been, you have taken it very personally.
I would have, you know, been desperate trying to do anything, trying to salvage it. I think
the more you do this, the more you do anything, whether it's, you know, play professional
baseball or put out books or work in a store
on Black Friday, you've seen it before, so you can get a little bit more zen about it. So I'd like
to think I'm in a much more zen place about this book. I hope it does well, but my identity is not
riding on it doing well. And I think if it does do well, and right now the numbers are looking
like it will do quite well,
you know, numbers that authors myself included would be, would kill to have had at earlier
points in our career, that's not going to puff, be it, it's not going to make me feel
extra special just because I did do it.
If it makes it on this bestseller list or that bestseller list, if it wins some award,
if it sells out the first printing, I'm already back to work on the next thing. I know the luck and the randomness that goes into it at this point. And I've also
been flattered and slighted enough times that you toughen up to it. So that's just sort
of the thought process that goes through my mind when I'm putting out something. And I know
Steve, my agent, Steve Hanselman, my agent and collaborator on this book as well
as on the Daily Stoic.
He feels the same way.
This is only the second book he's done as a writer, but as a publisher and as an editor
and as an agent for many, many years, he's been through this cycle many, many times.
So I think he's at this same Zen place. And so for today's episode
I wanted to interview Steve one of the smartest guys about stoicism on the planet
It's very fortuitous that we happen to I have been to find him as my agent. I can imagine having you know
Signed with someone different ten or so years ago and and we wouldn't be talking right now because
maybe they would have nurtured a different side of my right and career, a different vein of my
interest. But Steve and I have been longtime partners and collaborators. He was the Genesis
behind the idea for the Daily Stalk and then for this book, he did the yeoman's work of the research and digging
into the more obscure lives and then also is the translator, because I don't speak Latin
or Greek and I can't read either, but Steve can.
So Steve is someone who doesn't get enough credit around here, he's a great guy, one
of my favorite people.
And so we talk through stoicism, we talk through the creation of lives of the stoics, but
really what we're digging in on is the central lesson of the book, which I don't think can
be stressed enough, just how do you turn the words into works?
How do you apply stoicism to whatever it is that you're doing? And in my case, today, as I'm talking to you,
I'm trying to apply stosism to those nerves,
to the uncertainty, to the stress of a launch.
And I hope that some of the insights from today's episode
can help you do the same thing to whatever you're going through.
So please check out the book and enjoy this episode.
Well, Steve, we did it.
I just finished the audiobook.
The book is done and to the printers,
we just saw the final, final, final pass of the audio file.
It's crazy to think that when we started this book,
I guess it was almost two years ago now,
the idea that we would be finishing the book in a global pandemic,
our publisher remote, you and I remote, I mean, there's just no way we could have predicted that this is where the world would be.
And yet, it sort of strikes me as a kind of an oddly stoic turn of events.
Absolutely.
It's, um, the times we're living in have so many parallels to many of the moments we write
about in the book.
And of course, the last chapter on Marcus, and he was dealing with a pandemic for 15 of the 19 years
of his reign.
Yeah, a pandemic that originates in the East, that slowly spreads, nobody thinks it's going to be
what it's going to be. It overwhelms the institutions. It creates a financial crisis of leadership
crisis. I mean, I guess that is kind of the stoic idea too, that history is like the same thing happening over and over and over again.
Absolutely. Marcus often reflected that way in his meditations.
He would think back on the times of Trajan and Vespasian and how, you know,
really everything they dealt with, famines, wars, disease was the same in his era and in every era.
Yeah, and I think the other part of it too is like,
you know, you think, hey, I'm gonna do this thing.
I'm important.
I'm excited.
Obviously, you know, like there's that Emerson quoted,
if you build a better mouse trap,
the world will beat a path to your door or something.
You think like because something's important to you, obviously, it's going to be
clear sailing. And, you know, I think the other sort of stoic idea is like,
hey, actually Murphy's law, the reality of the universe, the logos is in control,
you know, just because you're working on something and
you're planning on putting out a book does not mean that the universe is going to cooperate. In
fact, you have to figure out how to cooperate and adapt and be flexible to whatever happens.
It's very true. I think one of the things that I appreciated most about this book,
I think the writing, as you said,
has been going on for about 18 months.
We kicked it off formally about two years.
But really, it's about three and a half years of research and writing before that,
and just being immersed that whole time.
In this very moment now when everything we
planned and worked for for so long is on the line, I think it's less the pub
window and the marketing plans and all the other things that, you know, are
usually part of a launch, what really strikes me now is the benefit that's in what we've
been able to pull together here for people, real help for people who struggled and suffered
just as we're struggling and suffering right now.
No, I think that's right.
And there's this quote from Marcus that I have been thinking a lot about lately.
He says,
and who knows, he might have, he almost certainly wrote this during the Antonine play,
but he says, you know, no, it's, he says, it's unfortunate that this happened and they kind of
corrects himself and he goes, no, it is fortunate that this happened. It's fortunate that it happened
to me and that I've remained unharmed by it.
And he says, you know, not everyone would be so lucky.
And I think it's the same quote I might be mashing to together in my mind, but he says, you know, flexibility is being able to look at adversity or difficulty
or, as you said, events being canceled, media being consumed with an
election cycle with a pandemic, whatever.
And going, as Marcus said, this is just what I was looking for. canceled media being consumed with an election cycle with a pandemic, whatever.
And going, as Marcus said, this is just what I was looking for.
To me, that sums up stoicism completely.
It's not, you know, people think it's this kind of resignation, like a, okay, whatever,
you know, like a EOR kind of a thing.
It's, no, it's, it's actually this sort of optimism that can't be broken.
It's like, all right, bring it on.
Like, we're going to make the most of this.
Absolutely.
I mean, I, you know, people think of the Stoics as, you know,
trying to rid all emotion to, you know, uproot it
and to deny all emotion.
But, you know, the Stoics held, there
were a number of good emotions that we actually ought
to seek out and not to cultivate.
And sometimes people talk about Stoic joy.
Kara was their word for it.
I mean, you cannot appreciate or understand Stoicism unless you realize that this is a
bedrock of the philosophy from the time of Clienthe's on, who was the second leader of the school, he believed that we were
all born with everything we needed to live a good life, to have happiness.
And being a poet, the way he put it is, we're in bad environments, there's a lot of bad
things that happen.
But if we focus on the work at hand,
our lives are a poem that we can we're born like half-formed versus. And if we work with the
resources that we have, our lives can become a beautiful poem. And I think that that sort of view
of no matter the circumstances, there's a deeper work that we can be doing
that can bring us joy.
That's what stoicism is about.
And was it Client these?
I know we talk about this in the book.
Was it Client these who was also talking about might have been precipice, but to further
this poem metaphor, that also it's the constraints of the medium of poetry, you know, that it has
to rhyme or, you know, have something to or whatever.
That's what creates the beauty.
That's Clientes all the way.
And, you know, being a trumpet player, I love his metaphor because he said the constraints
of poetry are like a trumpet focusing the breath into a brilliant sound.
And this idea of sort of working with whatever the constraints are,
whether it's your language, your situation, and a lockdown,
you can work with those constraints and produce a beautiful sound.
And look, I've actually found this writing the Daily Stoke and now doing the Daily Email.
Like as a writer, you know, you're used to having unlimited space.
What was so tricky about the Daily Stoke, for instance, is that it's actually really hard
to write a book of 366 300 word meditations because sometimes writing in longer form is
actually easier than writing in shorter form because you don't have those constraints
But the constraints actually become something quite powerful and it for by by being forced to follow these rules
It it forces you to go to a place creatively that ordinarily you just never would have gotten
Absolutely, and I think you know this is
This is another facet of stoicism, the view of the
care of the self as a practice, as a spiritual formation, as this, you know, work that we're
doing. And we all have limitations. We all have these resources, but the time that we put in and the way that
we use the circumstances to focus and redirect. That's what progress comes. Perfection, not
something any of us are ever going to achieve, but progress, something we can every day in
everything we do. To go back to the Daily Stoic for a second,
I thought one of the things I wanted to do in this talk is I wanted to give
some credit where credit is due for people who don't know.
Steve is also my literary agent.
So all my other books, Steve, has represented and you've been a wonderful literary agent over the years.
Not many writers write books with
their literary agent, but I remember when you were the one who came up with the idea of doing
the Daily Stoic and I you know when you first said it to me I wasn't like oh that's exactly what
I want to do that's where I thought my next book would be and I remember you saying something this
wasn't the reason I did it,
but when you said it, you said something like,
this will be your best-selling book.
And I thought, that seems crazy.
How could that possibly be?
And it's not quite there, but it has sold extremely well.
I mean, I was looking at the numbers the other day
where over a million copies were in 20 languages,
weeks and weeks on the various bestseller
list in the four years that it's come out. Why did you think that the format would work and
talks me a little bit about your background with that format because I think it'd be interesting
for people. Yeah, well, you know, I've spent most of my life in publishing and has a bookseller
early on through college and graduate school. And then had a chain of bookstores and a
direct mail catalog. And after that, I went to work for Harper Collins for 13 years. And,
you know, over the course of that experience there, I actually witnessed one of the, you know, stoicism is one of these topics
that sort of comes in waves.
It never goes out of vogue, but within American culture,
it definitely seems to have these waves.
And of course, Tom Wolf, a man in full,
Stockdale was getting a lot of attention
about the same time.
And we decided to publish at Harper San Francisco,
Sharon LaBelle's The Art of Living.
And great book.
Yeah, which is basically her free form reinterpretation,
very sensitive and beautiful reading of Epic Teedis.
And she did such a wonderful job with that book,
and it changed so many lives.
I remember, she always talks about the letters
that she gets from people.
And just people who've been saved from suicide
or who were able to turn their lives around
and tattooed lines from her book on their body.
And the book sold, it's been a while since I've been there,
but I think hundreds of thousands of copies
and Sharon's still quite active.
So when I first met you, I think it was that Tim Ferris event
in 2011, the insight I had about you,
especially after reading Trust Me Online,
was that you had this gift for understanding the usefulness, the practical application of philosophy.
And I think when I took the book on, we of course were very enthusiastic about it, but I told you,
you know, I want to see you publishing popular philosophy
because I think that's your gift. And, you know, certainly in both the daily stoic and now
on this book, that insight is just proven to be very true and I'm very humbled and have very much enjoyed working with you.
They published another daily book though, right? That would sort of inspired you a little bit?
The format issue in particular, we at Harper Samford Cisco for years, we did a lot of
We at Harper San Francisco for years, we did a lot of books with Hazelton and the recovery movement.
They sort of perfected that sort of page-a-day format.
We did a number of books at Harper San Francisco.
They used it, many that sold tremendously well, like Ann Wilson, Shafes, Meditations for
Women Who Do Too Much, which was done in that format.
So millions and millions of copies helped countless women turn their lives around.
Very important book.
And when I went on after Harper San Francisco to run a Harper business, I saw that Peter
Drucker's writings really weren't reaching the audience that they should.
And I thought, you know, he is really deep, kind of philosophical wisdom for, you know,
the business crowd, he should be put into this format.
And so I commissioned the daily Drucker
and we put that book out there
and it was a tremendous success
and brought a whole new generation of Drucker fans,
you know, into the readership and
you know, we've republished all of his books following that. And you know, there was an insight that that that the business community in particular was bereft of this kind of wisdom, this kind of
This kind of anchoring ethical guidance,
the last decades of business life in America has not been something to be proud of.
And I think there are a lot of things going on
in the culture right now,
but I think people are waking up.
They're waking up to the need for pursuing excellence, not in the profits and balance
sheets since alone, but in terms of the values and the ethics that we govern our lives by.
Yeah, no, it's funny. I had bought that daily drucker book long before you and I had met.
For precisely, I think the reason that the Daily Stoic worked, which is, I'd heard things
about Peter Drucker, and then it inevitably brings up this question of, where do you start?
And no very rarely, unless someone is recommending an author to solve a specific problem, like if
someone is like, oh, you're dealing with an obstacle
and they recommend my book, The Opsicle is the Way,
or if someone's dealing with, you know,
a power dynamic at work,
and someone says,
you should read Robert Green's The 48 Laws of Power.
You know, if you just, hey, if you just hear,
oh, someone is a fan of soons,
or you know, someone's a fan of so-and-so
and you wanna check that out,
it's really hard to know where to start.
And to me, that's always been the tricky part with stoicism.
Like, I feel, not only do I feel like it was faded
that I bought the Daily Drucker,
and that's why when you had the idea,
it did resonate with me.
But when I was introduced to stoicism
for the first time as people listening might have heard,
if they hadn't, I was at this conference
when I was like 19 or 20 years old,
and Robert, sorry, I met Dr. Drew Pinsky and I just asked him for a book recommendation.
He actually recommended Epic Titus to me, but I ended up buying because I didn't see the
art of living on Amazon. And I'm buying Marcus Aurelius, who had seen the movie gladiator.
I lucked into the Gregory Hayes translation, which is such a beautiful,
lyrical translation of Marcus Aurelius.
If I had gotten one of the free translations or one of the antiquated translations
or even one of the newer ones that just wasn't meant for me,
you know, my whole life might have turned out differently.
And I think it's been really hard for people to find out where to start with the stillyx.
And I think what we did well
with the daily stuff, what I try to do, even with the emails is go, how could this serve as
an entry point into philosophy for someone? Because I think that's the hardest thing. If you
started with one of Epic Titus' particularly challenging books in Crittian,
I think you're not gonna connect with it
the way that if you start with
Seneca's on the shortness of life or something, right?
I think what the hardest thing to do about Stoicism
and philosophy in general,
tip your toe in and I think that's why the format works.
Yeah, and I think the format basically, not only do we have some of the most pithy and
powerful passages from all of Stoic literature, but what you've done to sort of on packet
and put it into a situation or a context or tell a story or relate it to
a historical figure.
And this just brings it to life for people.
And it's that whole sense of philosophy being about, you know, what you do, and not
what you think or believe.
No, and I want to talk about sort of that way of teaching philosophy in a second.
But I think the other
thing that I again, giving credit where credit is due and I think an interesting part,
you know, the idea not many writers write books with their agents unless the writer is dead
and the agent is carrying on as has happened a few times for some literary estates. I think
this is most of Kafka's books, for instance, but the others
are Stoke parallel that I look at fondly and I hope people don't think this is an
egotistical comparison, but like, I think the most remarkable action in Stoke philosophy
is Marcus Aurelius becomes King and the first thing he does with absolute power is share it. And to me,
that's a lesson about, you know, absolute power doesn't crap to crop absolutely. But to me,
it's also a statement about collaboration that like, hey, actually the way to do this really hard
thing is to share. And that, you know, the sum is greater than its parts. Now, there were,
I'm not comparing either one of us to Lucius Varis because he wasn't the greatest,
but the point being, it wasn't easy to collaborate on the Daily Stoke, although that one was
a little bit simpler because we could sort of so clearly delineate the roles you did the
translations.
I wrote the sections.
We chose the passages together.
This one was trickier because it's a full book of prose, but I thought
maybe we could kick around how we managed to collaborate and not kill each other.
Yeah, well, you know, when you're covering 500 years of history, it's no small task.
So, you know, just to, it's not just about, I mean, first we started with a list,
right? I think we had what, 20 figures originally. And, you know, we're pretty sure they were the
right ones, but, you know, then we started reading and working and we discovered, well, a couple of
these, you really, there's not much that can be known about them from the historical record. You really can't bring them to life in the flesh and blood and what they did and who they
interact with and what happened.
So you toss a few and then we gained a bunch more.
We have 26 total in the book.
But like if you look at the index of the book, there are more than 50 stoics that we treat
in the book.
And obviously the book's not exhaustive because there are many, many more that we treat in the book. And obviously, the book's not exhaustive
because there are many, many more
that we could have talked about, but didn't.
So I think the first challenge for me
in terms of the research was,
do I understand the social, political climate
that each of these figures were working in?
What was going on?
What were the politics?
What was the geopolitical situation?
If they were in a school, how much interaction were they having outside the school?
And just to get your arms around that,
first thing I had to do was to kind of create a timeline
just so we could know where everything was going to hang.
And of course, that's become quite refined now
by the end of the process and is a neat little
addendum to the back of the book.
You know, I think the main thing Ryan,
through the drafts that I produced was,
just to cover all the sources,
if there was something that could be known,
to make sure that we were reflecting it in the book
and where it came from. And of course, that meant a lot of names and dates and, you know, a thicket
of material, you know, on my own, that would not have been prose that more than a small handful
of people would have read. So, I mean, I think, I think, as a note, just for people on how this collaboration actually
happened, it's basically Steve would, would gather reading dozens and dozens of books,
would essentially present kind of a dossier on each one of the stoics with like every
mention that has ever happened, like every obscure ancient text, every confl-
and a lot of the times that things even conflicted,
it would be, you know, Diogeny's layer to said this,
but Seneca said this and then Cicero said this.
And I think, you had to go so far off in the weeds
that I think if you then had to write the book,
it would have broken your heart to have to leave
so much material on the cutting room floor. And on the other hand, if I had to go research that stuff,
I never would have been able to have the forward momentum or the time, quite frankly,
to write the book. So I feel like it wasn't as clean of a delineation as the lives, as
daily stoic, because that was like much more formulaic, but in a weird way, the splitting
of the rules worked out quite nicely.
Yeah, I really think so. And you know, it's, there were, there were a number of sort of
insights in aha moments, you know, that we each had as we interacted with the material
But I think the main thing that you did is you just
you weeded out so much of the background
You took what was important about the context in the situation and you spotlighted it
but you really zeroed in on the characters and on the lives and on each characteristic,
each kind of unique moral situation that the figures were in and you really brought it to life.
And I must say, I know when you said it to me, you were nervous. But when I read it, I was just delighted.
And yeah, you know, the ego aside, I did see enough of, you know, the things I had
turned up in my own moments to be happy about that.
No, it's funny.
I found this quote from Plutarch.
I actually found it, I think two weeks ago.
So after the book was done, who knows?
You may have presented it to me
and it may have gotten caught.
There was so much material,
but I think this quote sort of captures
what I was trying to do perfectly
and I think it captures the medium,
which I think we should talk about a little bit too.
This is Plutarchy writes,
for neither is it histories we are writing,
but lives, nor is there by any means
display of merit or vice
in the most outstanding actions,
but often a trivial matter as well as a remark
and some joke have offered a better illustration
of character than clashes with countless casualties
and the biggest battalions and sieges of cities.
I love that.
I love it. And you know, one of the other things that
rejointed to a rejoinder to that is that, you know, the Stoics were the same way, you know,
like Epic Titus telling his stories, you know, about other Stoics, like Agrippinas, you know.
And just seeing how they paid tribute to those little off-color stories and insights, in their own writing and teaching, how they delighted in it.
To me, it's such a departure from the sort of modern sort of biographical impulse,
which is to, like for instance,
I love Ron Chernau's biography of Grant.
And I love it because of the little anecdotes in it.
What I don't love is the sort of postmodern understanding
of alcoholism projected backwards onto Grant.
What I love, I love why was Grant doing what he was doing and what
does it tell us about him as a human being? And how can we learn a moral lesson from that? And
to me, that's the essence of what a biography is supposed to be. And I think that's what Plutarch
is saying. He's saying, it's not history, but lies. And it's often in a joke or a quip.
You know, it's like what what Seneca wrote in a highly polished letter is beautiful, but
you have to be somewhat suspicious of it because there is obviously the intention of performing
for the audience to me what's more powerful is what he said as Nero's goons
were demanding his life or, you know, less powerful, more cautionary, what he did when
tempted by Nero's millions, right?
And so I think this idea that philosophy is not what someone says.
It's what someone does to me as the essence of what obviously stoicism is about, but it's also
What I think this book is about and frankly what kind of biography people should read and that's why I think Plutarch
Is one of the greatest to ever do it. He's not trying to give you the facts and figures of Kato's life
He's trying to give you the essence of who Kato was as a totally unique, magnificent
figure.
Yeah, I think that's very well put.
And you know, Plutarch of course isn't just the model for the kind of chapters we've
tried to put together here, but you know, he was a, he was a critic and an admirer of
the Stoics and, you know, chronicles quite a bit about them.
Well, and how nuts is it? And I didn't really, this didn't quite hit me till the end of the book,
which is, I guess, a knock against me. But anyways, the idea that Plutarch's grandson or nephew were not sure, ends up being a philosopher that Marcus really calls out specifically
as one of the guiding influences of his life in the opening of meditations. It's like,
just blows your mind how small a world this was.
Yeah, he really is. That's true. And he tells a great story. I was reading about it.
I wrote a daily stoke meditation about it,
but it wasn't time for the book.
But apparently the story is,
Marcus had been gone from Rome for many years.
He comes back, someone goes to his house
and he finds Marcus leaving.
And the guy says, where are you going?
And Marcus says, I am going to visit Sex this house
to learn what I do not yet know.
And he was saying that as an old man,
as the most powerful man in the world,
Marcus was going, he wasn't, I mean,
rare enough that a powerful person would seek out
the advice of an expert, call them to the White House
or call them to 10 Downing Street.
No, Marcus was was walking over to visit to pay his respects to the philosopher and to learn what
he does not yet know to me is just incredible. And again, a great example of a philosopher in life,
you know, Marcus could talk in meditations all he wanted about the importance
of learning and not getting conceited and focusing on what you don't know or the example
of Socrates, but what matters is what did he do, and there he was caught doing it.
To me, that's the best.
Yeah, really amazing.
And I was right about that time.
He was reestablishing the
four chairs of philosophy in Athens. So not only ever the student, but also trying to make sure
that the schools would endure. So I'm curious too. So let's talk a little bit about the book. So,
you know, we set out with about 20 names. We ended up, I think, with
about 26, although we mentioned some others here there, as you said, as we did this, like,
I think some of the ones I added, like I added a diotimus, and I wanted to do rutilius
rufus. I was sending to focus more on the ones who were less influential in the thought of stoicism, but happens to live
through particularly controversial or, you know, illustrative moments in the history. Was there anyone
that we didn't include that you wanted to include or anyone you thought we were going to include
and then didn't? Yeah, I think, you know, there were a number that we could have included. Like,
Yeah, I think there were a number that we could have included. Like the original list had archidemus and hierocles.
Archidemus is quite fascinating because he about the same time
that you have panitias running around with Scipio.
He took off and founded a school with the Parthians out in Babylon.
So it's like this interesting time when the Stoics had two ambassadors, one out, you know,
gallivanting with the Romans and one out with the Parthians.
You know, they were hedging their bets on the future.
So there were a lot of little interesting side bits like that.
They didn't make it in just because, you know,
other than some doctrinal stuff about Archidemus,
what he taught, what he believed,
we really don't know anything about him at all.
In the case of Hierocles, he's a quite famous figure
in stoicism because of his circles.
And to my mind, hieroglyues circles, he was writing about the time Marcus Aurelis was born,
and his circles are his picture of what stoic ethics look like.
And it's a series of concentric circles.
And in the beginning, the middle is you. The next
circle out is your family. The next circle out your friends. The next circle out your community,
et cetera. And his teaching was that every day and everything we do, we should be trying to reach
out further into these circles. Treat your family as you would treat yourself.
Treat a friend as you would your family.
Treat a neighbor as you would a friend, etc.
All the way out to the edge of the circle where you're dealing with foreigners, people completely
alien to you. And his view was that even those people, their concerns,
their interests are no different than mine. And I should try to bring them closer to myself.
He was really sort of teaching the golden rule, the Stoic golden rule.
Awesome. Well, we'll talk soon. And for people who are listening, if this is your first
book, obviously go check out the daily stoic, the obstacle is way, you go to the enemy still,
this is the key, the daily stoke journal, those are the other stoic books in the sort of
the catalog. And then if you want to keep this journey going obviously we do a
Meditation for daily stoke every single day you can sign up for that at daily stoke.com slash email or
You can get the podcast version of it if you like audio
Anywhere you listen to any where you listen to podcasts daily stoke podcast
Thanks for listening. Thanks for checking out this book. Steve, we'll talk soon.
Thanks Ryan.
Hey, it's Ryan. I just wanted to say, lies of the Stoics is now out. You can check it out.
It's awesome to bring in this book. I'm so proud of it. It's 26 biographies of the most interesting,
most intriguing, most inspirational of the Stoic figures from ancient history. It begins with Zeno, it ends with
Marcus Aurelius, and it's a deep dive not into what the philosopher said, although it's important,
but what do they do? How do they live up to what they said? As Epictetus said, we can't just talk
about our philosophy, we have to embody it, and that's what this book is all about. Lies of the Stoics,
the art of living from Zeno to Marcus A Realius, is available everywhere, books are sold.
Hey, Prime Members.
You can listen to the Daily Stoic early and ad-free on Amazon Music, download the Amazon
Music app today, or you can listen early and ad free with Wondery Plus in Apple podcasts.
Hey there listeners, while we take a little break here, I want to tell you about another
podcast that I think you'll like.
It's called How I Built This, where host Guy Razz talks to founders behind some of the
world's biggest and most innovative companies, to learn how they built them from the ground
up.
Guy has sat down with hundreds of founders behind well-known companies like Headspace,
Manduke Yoga Mats, Soul Cycle, and Kodopaxi,
as well as entrepreneurs working to solve
some of the biggest problems of our time,
like developing technology that pulls energy
from the ground to heat in cool homes,
or even figuring out how to make drinking water
from air and sunlight.
Together, they discussed their entire journey from day one, and all the skills they had to
learn along the way, like confronting big challenges, and how to lead through uncertainty.
So if you want to get inspired and learn how to think like an entrepreneur, check out how
I built this, wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and add free on the Amazon or Wonder yet.
wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and add free on the Amazon or Wonder yet.