The Daily Stoic - Seneca on Being
Episode Date: April 9, 2023In today’s episode, Ryan presents an excerpt from audiobook The Tao Of Seneca, which is essentially a compilation of the best of Seneca’s Moral Letters, a seminal text of Stoicism. In thi...s letter, Seneca examines the meaning of life itself. 📖 Check out the PDF of The Tao of Seneca for free and the Penguin Edition of Seneca’s Letters at the Painted Porch.✉️ 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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Hey, prime members, you can listen to the Daily Stoke podcast early and add free on Amazon music. Download the app today.
Welcome to the weekend edition of the Daily Stoke. Each weekday, we bring you a meditation inspired by the ancient Stokes,
something to help you live up to those four Stoke virtues of courage, justice, temperance, and wisdom.
up to those four stoic virtues of courage, justice, temperance, and wisdom. And then here on the weekend, we take a deeper dive into those same topics.
We interview stoic philosophers. We explore at length how these stoic ideas can be applied
to our actual lives and the challenging issues of our time. Here on the weekend, when you have a little bit more space
when things have slowed down,
be sure to take some time to think, to go for a walk,
to sit with your journal,
and most importantly to prepare for what the week ahead may bring.
Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target, the new discounter that's both
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Listen to business wars on Amazon music or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Ryan.
Welcome to another weekend episode of the Daily Stoke podcast.
One of the questions I get the most, obviously, from podcast listeners is like,
what are the best audiobooks of the Stokes?
Because there's not that many great options.
Obviously, Mark's realist did not record his own audiobook.
For instance, the translation I love of meditations,
it was published in like 2003, maybe earlier.
So like, audiobooks weren't even really a thing.
So there's not a great selection. And that's
why I was so excited when a few years ago my friend Tim Ferris brought out the Dow of Seneca,
an audiobook that's essentially the best of Seneca's letters. I recommend this to people all the time
who maybe are more listeners than readers. And I said, hey Tim, can I run some of my favorite letters
from your audiobook on the podcast?
He said, absolutely.
And you can get the PDF of these letters
totally for free if you go to Tim.blog slash Seneca.
Again, I think this is a great public service he's done.
And today's excerpt, Seneca is talking about
why we're here,
what the meaning of life is.
So pretty, pretty straightforward questions, if you will.
Tim talks about how this piece of writing is actually
a bit abstract for Senika who tended to
focus on practical questions.
And he says in his introduction to this letter,
as you might think of this, letter 58 as Senika on mushrooms.
As Senika says,
so much for man, a substance
that flows away and falls exposed to every influence. But the universe too, immortal and enduring
as it is, changes and never remains the same. So this is one of the letters that I think
Sennaka also sounds the most like Mark Cyrillus, and that's why I wanted to bring it to you.
I think you're going to like it. I love the Penguin Classics' physical translation
of letters from Aesthetic.
That's what I carry at the Payne de Porch.
You can check out.
The Loeb editions are more complete.
You can check those out.
I've read those as well.
And then as far as the audio eBook version,
this is one of the best out there.
The Dow of Seneca produced by Tim Ferris
and Tim Ferris audio,
which you can get totally for free as a PDF at tim.blog slash Seneca.
And of course, you can get the audio book on Audible.
I hope you enjoy.
5.
Letter 58 on Being How scant of words are languages,
nay, how poverty-stricken, I have not fully understood until today.
We happened to be speaking of Plato, and a thousand subjects came up for discussion, which
needed names and yet possessed none, and there were certain others which once possessed what have since lost their words because we were too nice about their use. But who can endure to be nice
in the midst of poverty? There is an insect called by the Greeks Oestrus, which drives cattle
wild and scatters them all over their pasturing grounds. It used to be called a sea-luse in our language, as you may
believe on the authority of Virgil. Near Silaurus groves, an ecolpernosus shades, of green-clad oak trees
flits an insect, named a sea-luse by the Romans. In the Greek, the word is rendered oestrus.
With a rough and strident sound it buzzes and drives wild, the terror stricken herds throughout
the woods. By which I infer that the word has gone out of use, and not to keep you waiting too
long there were certain uncompounded words current, like Cernere Fero Interse, as will be proved again by Virgil. Great heroes, born in various lands, had come to settle matters mutually with the sword.
This settling matters we now express by day, Célineire.
The plain word has become obsolete.
The ancients used to say you so, instead instead of you, Sarah, in conditional clauses.
You need not take my word, but you may turn again to virtue.
The other soldiers shall conduct the fight with me, where I shall bid.
It is not in my purpose to show by this array of examples how much time I have wasted
on the study of language. I merely
wish you to understand how many words that were current in the works of any use and
accuse have become moldy with age, while even in the case of Virgil, whose works are explored
daily, some of his words have been filched away from us. You will say, I suppose, what is the purpose and meaning of this preamble?
I shall not keep you in the dark. I desire, if possible, to say the word Ascentea to you,
and obtain a favorable hearing. If I cannot do this, I shall risk it even though it puts
you out of humor. I have Cicero, as authority for the use of this word, and I regard him as a powerful authority.
If you desire a testimony of a later date, I shall cite Fabianus, careful of speech, cultivated,
and so polished in style that he will suit even our nice tastes.
For what can we do, my dear Luke-Killus? How otherwise can we find a word for that which
the Greeks call Oceia, something that is indispensable, something that is the natural substratum of everything?
I beg you accordingly to allow me to use this word ascentia. I shall nevertheless take pains to
exercise the privilege which you have granted me with as sparing a hand as possible. Perhaps I shall nevertheless take pains to exercise the privilege which you have granted me with
as sparing a hand as possible.
Perhaps I shall be content with the mere right.
Yet, what good will your indulgence do me if, low and behold, I can in no way express
in Latin the meaning of the word which gave me the opportunity to rail at the poverty
of our language?
And you will condemn our narrow
Roman limits even more when you find out that there is a word of one syllable which I cannot
translate.
What is this, you ask?
It is the word O. You think me lacking in facility.
You believe that the word is ready to hand, that it might
be translated by Quad Est.
I notice however a great difference you are forcing me to render a noun by a verb, but
if I must do so I shall render it by Quad Est.
There are six ways in which Plato expresses this idea, according to a friend of ours a man
of great learning
who mentioned the fact today.
And I shall explain all of them to you if I may first point out that there is something
called genus, and something called species.
For the present, however, we are seeking the primary idea of genus, on which the others
the different species depend, which is the
source of all classification, the term under which universal ideas are embraced. And the
idea of genus will be reached if we begin to reckon back from particulars. For in this
way we shall be conducted back to the primary notion. Now, man is a species, as Aristotle says, so is horse or dog. We must therefore
discover some common bond for all these terms, one which embraces them and holds them subordinate
to itself. And what is this? It is animal. And so there begins to be a genus animal, including all these terms, man, horse,
and dog. But there are certain things which have life, animal, and yet are not animals. For
it is agreed that plants and trees possess life, and that is why we speak of them as living
and dying. Therefore the term living things will occupy a still higher place, because
both animals and plants are included in this category. Certain objects, however, lack
a life, such as rocks. There will therefore be another term to take precedence over living
things, and that is substance. I shall classify substance by saying that all substances are either animate or inanimate.
But there is still something superior to substance, for we speak of certain things as possessing
substance and certain things as lacking substance.
What then will be the term from which these things are derived?
It is that to which we lately gave an inappropriate
name, that which exists. For, by using this term, they will be divided into species so that
we can say, that which exists either possesses or lacks substance.
This therefore is what genus is, the primary original and to play upon the word general. Of course,
there are the other genera, but they are special genera, man being for example a genus, for
man comprises species, by nations Greek Roman Parthian, by colors black, yellow. The term comprises individuals also, Kato,
Cicero, Lucretius. So, man falls into the category genus, in so far as it includes many kinds,
but in so far as it is subordinate to another term, it falls into the category species.
But the genus, that which exists, is general general and has no term superior to it.
It is the first term in the classification of things, and all things are included under
it.
The stoics would set ahead of this still another genus, even more primary, concerning which
I shall immediately speak.
After proving that the genus which has been discussed above has rightly been placed
first being as it is, capable of including everything.
I therefore distribute that which exists into these two species, things with and things
without substance.
There is no third class.
And how do I distribute substance by saying that it is either animate,
or inanimate. And how do I distribute the animate? By saying certain things have mind,
while others have only life, or the idea may be expressed as follows. Certain things
have the power of movement, of progress, of change of position. While
others are rooted in the ground, they are fed and they grow only through their roots.
Again, into what species do I divide animals? They are either perishable or imperishable.
Certain of the Stoics regard the primary genus as the something. I shall add the reasons they give for their belief they say.
In the order of nature some things exist, and other things do not exist, and even the
things that do not exist, are really part of the order of nature.
What these are will readily occur to the mind, for example, centars, giants, and all other
figments of unsound reasoning,
which have begun to have a definite shape, although they have no bodily consistency.
But I now return to the subject which I promise to discuss for you, namely how it is that
Plato divides all existing things in six different ways.
The first class of that which exists cannot be grasped by the sight
or by the touch or by any of the senses, but it can be grasped by the thought. Any generic
conception such as the generic idea man does not come within the range of the eyes, but
man in particular does as for example Cicero, Cato. The term animal is not seen. It is grasped
by thought alone. A particular animal however is seen for example a horse, a dog. The second class of
things which exist, according to Plato, is that which is prominent and stands out above everything else. This, he says, exists
in a pre-eminent degree. The word poet is used indiscriminately for this term is applied
to all writers of verse, but among the Greeks it has come to be the distinguishing mark
of a single individual. You know that Homer is meant when you hear men say the poet.
What then is this preeminent being?
God, surely, one who is greater and more powerful than anyone else.
The third class is made up of those things which exist in the proper sense of the term.
They are countless in number but are situated beyond our sight.
What are these, you ask?
They are Plato's own furniture, so to speak. He calls them ideas, and from them all visible
things are created, and according to their pattern, all things are fashioned. They are mortal,
unchangeable, inviolable. And this idea, or rather Plato's conception of it, is as follows.
The idea is the everlasting pattern of those things which are created by nature.
I shall explain this definition in order to set the subject before you in a clearer
light. Suppose that I wish to make a likeness of you. I possess in your own
person the pattern of this picture, where from my mind receives a certain outline, which
it is to embody in its own handiwork. That outward appearance then, which gives me instruction
and guidance, this pattern for me to imitate, is the idea. Such patterns, therefore, nature possesses an infinite number of men,
fish, trees. According to who is model, everything that nature has to create is worked out.
In the fourth place, we shall put form. And if you would know what form means, you must pay close
attention calling Plato and not me to account for the difficulty of the subject.
However, we cannot make fine distinctions without encountering difficulties.
A moment ago, I made use of the artist as an illustration.
When the artist desired to reproduce Virgiline colors, he would gaze upon Virgil himself.
The idea was Virgil's outward appearance,
and this was the pattern of the intended work, that which the artist draws from this idea
and has embodied in his own work is the form. Do you ask me where the difference lies?
The former is the pattern, while the latter is the shape taken from the pattern and embodied in the
work. Our artist follows the one, but the other, he creates.
A statue has a certain external appearance. This external appearance of the statue is the
form, and the pattern itself has a certain external appearance by gazing upon which the
sculpture has fashioned
his statue. This is the idea. If you desire a further distinction, I will say that the
form is in the artist's work, the idea outside his work and not only outside it, but prior
to it.
The fifth class is made up of the things which exist in the usual sense of the term.
These things are the first that have to do with us. Here we have all such things as men,
cattle, and things. In the sixth class goes all that which has a fictitious existence,
like void or time. Whatever is concrete to the sight or touch, Plato does not include among the things which
he believes to be existent in the strict sense of the term. For they are in a state of flux,
constantly diminishing or increasing. None of us is the same man in old age that he was in youth,
nor the same on the morrow as on the day proceeding. Our bodies are born along like the flowing waters,
every visible object to company's time in its flight, of the things which we see, nothing is fixed.
Even I myself, as I comment on this change, am changed myself. This is just what Herocletus says.
myself. This is just what Heraclitus says. We go down twice into the same river,
and yet into a different river. For the stream still keeps the same name, but the water has already flowed past. Of course, this is much more evident in rivers than in human beings. Still,
we mortals are also carried past in no less speedy
a course. And this prompts me to marvel at our madness, in cleaving with great affection
to such a fleeting thing as the body. And in fearing less someday we may die, when every
instant means the death of our previous condition. Will you not stop fearing? Lest that may happen
once which really happens every day? So much for man, a substance that flows away and falls,
exposed to every influence. But, the universe too, immortal as enduring as it is, changes
and never remains the same. For though it has within itself all that it has had, it has it in a different way, from
that in which it has had it.
It keeps changing its arrangement.
Very well, say you.
What good shall I get from all this fine reasoning?
None.
If you wish me to answer your question.
Nevertheless, just as an engraver rests his eyes when they have long been under a strain
in our weary and calls them from their work and feasts them as the saying is, so we at
time should slacken our minds and refresh them with some sort of entertainment.
But let even your entertainment
be work, and even from these various forms of entertainment, you will select if you have
been watchful, something that may prove wholesome. That is my habit, Lukeelius. I try to extract
and render useful some element from every field of thought, no matter how far removed it may be from
philosophy.
Now what could be less likely to reform character than the subjects which we have been discussing?
And how can I be made a better man by the ideas of Plato?
What can I draw from them that will put a check on my appetites?
Perhaps the very thought that all these things
which minister to our senses, which arouse and excite us, are by Plato, deny to place
among the things that really exist. Such things are therefore imaginary, and though they
for the moment present a certain external appearance, yet they are in no case
permanent or substantial.
Nonetheless, we crave them, as if they were always to exist, or as if we were always
to possess them.
We are weak, watery beings, standing in the midst of unrealities. Therefore, let us turn our minds to the things that are everlasting.
Let us look up to the ideal outlines of all things that split about on high and to the God
who moves among them and plans how he may defend from death that which he could not make
imperishable because its substance forbade, and so by reason
may overcome the defects of the body.
For all things abide, not because they are everlasting, but because they are protected
by the care of him who governs all things, but that which was imperishable would need no
guardian.
The master builder keeps them safe, overcoming the
weakness of their fabric by his own power. Let us despise everything that is so little
in object of value, that it makes us doubt whether it exists at all. Let us at the same
time reflect, seeing that Providence rescues from its perils the world
itself, which is no less mortal than we ourselves.
That to some extent our petty bodies can be made to Terry longer upon Earth by our own
Providence.
If only we acquire the ability to control and check those pleasures whereby the greater
portion of mankind perishes.
Plato himself, by taking pains, advanced to old age.
To be sure, he was the fortunate possessor of a strong and sound body.
His very name was given him because of his broad chest.
But his strength was much impaired by sea voyages and desperate adventures. Nevertheless, by frugal living, by setting
a limit upon all that rouses the appetites, and by painstaking attention to himself, he reached
that advanced age in spite of many hindrances. You know, I am sure, that Plato had the good fortune,
thanks to his careful living, to die on his birthday, after exactly
completing his 81st year.
For this reason, wise men of the East, who happened to be in Athens at that time, sacrificed
to him after his death, believing that his length of days was too full for a mortal man,
since he had rounded out the perfect number of 9 times 9. I do not doubt that he would
have been quite willing to forego a few days from this total as well as the sacrifice.
Frugal living can bring one to old age, and to my mind old age is not to be refused
any more than it is to be craved. There is a pleasure in being in one's own
company as long as possible when a man has made himself worth enjoying. The question, therefore,
on which we have to record our judgment is, whether one should shrink from extreme old age
and should hasten the end artificially, instead of waiting for it to come. A man, who sluggishly awaits
his fate, is almost coward, just as he is a moderately given to wine, who drains the jar-dry
and sucks up even the dregs. But we shall ask this question also. Is the extremity of life
the dregs? Or is it the clearest and purest part of all, provided only that the mind is unimpaired
and the senses still sound, give their support to the Spirit, and the body is not worn out
and dead before its time?
For it makes a great deal of difference whether a man is lengthening his life or his death.
But if the body is useless for service, why should one not free the struggling soul? Perhaps
one ought to do this a little before the debt is due, lest when it falls due, he may be
unable to perform the act. And since the danger of living and wretchedness is greater
than the danger of dying soon, he is a fool who refuses to stake a little time and
when a hazard of great gain. Few have lasted through extreme old age to death without impairment,
and many have lain in earth making no use of themselves.
How much more cruel then do you suppose it really is to have lost a portion of your life,
than to have lost your right to end that life? Do not hear me with reluctance as if my
statement applied directly to you, but way what I have to say, it is this, that I shall not abandon old age
if old age preserves me intact for myself and intact as regards the better part of myself,
but if old age begins to shatter my mind and to pull its various faculties to pieces. If it leaves me not life, but only the breath
of life, I shall rush out of a house that is crumbling and tottering. I shall not avoid
illness by seeking death, as long as the illness is curable and does not impede my soul. I shall not lay violent hands upon
myself just because I am in pain, for death under such circumstances is defeat. But if I
find out that the pain must always be endured, I shall depart, not because of the pain, but because it will be a hindrance to me as regards all my reasons
for living.
He who dies just because he is in pain is a weakling, a coward, but he who lives merely
to brave out this pain is a fool.
But I am running on too long, and besides, there is matter here to fill a day.
And how can a man end his life if he cannot end a letter?
So farewell.
This last word you will read with greater pleasure than all my deadly talk about death.
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