Figs in Winter: a Community of Reason

Figs in Winter: a Community of Reason

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Figs in Winter: a Community of Reason
Figs in Winter: a Community of Reason
Practice like a Stoic: 32, Practice Stoic sympathy stealthily

Practice like a Stoic: 32, Practice Stoic sympathy stealthily

Stoicism doesn’t require you to mount on a soapbox

Massimo Pigliucci's avatar
Massimo Pigliucci
Oct 21, 2024
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Figs in Winter: a Community of Reason
Figs in Winter: a Community of Reason
Practice like a Stoic: 32, Practice Stoic sympathy stealthily
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Soapbox, Wikipedia, CC license.

[This series of posts is based on A Handbook for New Stoics—How to Thrive in a World out of Your Control, co-authored by yours truly and Greg Lopez. It is a collection of 52 exercises, which we propose reader try out one per week during a whole year, to actually live like a Stoic. In Europe/UK the book is published by Rider under the title Live Like A Stoic. Below is this week’s prompt and a brief explanation of the pertinent philosophical background. Check the book for details on how to practice the exercise, download the exercise forms from The Experiment’s website, and comment below on how things are going. Greg and/or I will try our best to help out! This week’s exercise is found at pp. 189-191 of the paperback edition.]

“Try, in your dealings with others, to harm not, in order that you be not harmed. You should rejoice with all in their joys and sympathize with them in their troubles, remembering what you should offer and what you should withhold. And what may you attain by living such a life? Not necessarily freedom from harm at their hands, but at least freedom from deceit. In so far, however, as you are able, take refuge with philosophy: She will cherish you in her bosom, and in her sanctuary you shall be safe, or, at any rate, safer than before. People collide only when they are traveling the same path. But this very philosophy must never be vaunted by you, for philosophy when employed with insolence and arrogance has been perilous to many. Let her strip off your faults, rather than assist you to decry the faults of others. Let her not hold aloof from the customs of mankind, nor make it her business to condemn whatever she herself does not do. A man may be wise without parade and without arousing enmity.”(Seneca, Letters to Lucilius, 103.3–5)

Whenever we discover something exciting that makes a positive difference in our lives, it is natural for us to want to share it with others. Sometimes we share it because we genuinely want to be helpful, and other times because it feels good to brag (the latter is not a Stoic value, incidentally). So if you are finding Stoicism to be helpful, you may feel the urge to “witness,” as people say in some religious traditions. And why not? Stoicism is a great tool, and you wish someone would have told you about it years ago!

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