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You've been stranded thousands
of miles from home
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with no money or possessions.
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Such a predicament would make many
people despair and curse their awful fate.
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But for Zeno of Cyprus, it became the
foundation of his life's work and legacy.
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The once wealthy merchant lost everything
when he was shipwrecked in Athens
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around 300 BCE.
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With not much else to do,
he wandered into a book shop,
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became intrigued by reading about Socrates
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and proceeded to seek out and study
with the city's noted philosophers.
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As Zeno began educating his own students,
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he originated the philosophy
known as Stoicism,
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whose teaching of virtue, tolerance,
and self-control
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have inspired generations of thinkers
and leaders.
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The name Stoicism comes
from the Stoa Poikile,
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the decorated public colonnade
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where Zeno and his disciples gathered
for discussion.
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Today, we colloquially
use the word stoic
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to mean someone who
remains calm under pressure
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and avoids emotional extremes.
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But while this captures important
aspects of Stoicism,
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the original philosophy was more
than just an attitude.
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The Stoics believed that
everything around us
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operates according
to a web of cause and effect,
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resulting in a rational structure
of the universe,
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which they called logos.
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And while we main not always
have control over the events affecting us,
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we can have control over
how we approach things.
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Rather than imagining an ideal society,
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the Stoic tries to deal
with the world as it is
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while pursuing self-improvement
through four cardinal virtues:
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practical wisdom,
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the ability to navigate complex situations
in a logical, informed, and calm manner,
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temperance,
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the exercise of self-restraint
and moderation in all aspects of life,
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justice,
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treating others with fairness even
when they have done wrong,
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and courage,
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not just in extraordinary circumstances,
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but facing daily challenges
with clarity and integrity.
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As Seneca, one of the most famous
Roman Stoics wrote,
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"Sometimes, even to live
is an act of courage."
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But while Stoicism focuses on
personal improvement,
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it's not a self-centered philosophy.
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At a time when Roman laws considered
slaves as property,
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Seneca called for their humane treatment
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and stressed that we all share
the same fundamental humanity.
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Nor does Stoicism encourage passivity.
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The idea is that only people
who have cultivated
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virtue and self-control in themselves
can bring positive change in others.
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One of the most famous Stoic writers
was also one of Rome's greatest emperors.
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Over the course of his 19-year reign,
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Stoicism gave Marcus Aurelius the resolves
to lead the Empire through two major wars,
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while dealing with the loss of many
of his children.
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Centuries later, Marcus's journals would
guide and comfort Nelson Mandela
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through his 27-year imprisonment
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during his struggle
for racial equality in South Africa.
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After his release and eventual victory,
Mandela stressed peace and reconciliation,
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believing that while the injustices
of the past couldn't be changed,
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his people could confront them
in the present
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and seek to build a better,
more just future.
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Stoicism was an active school
of philosophy for several centuries
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in Greece and Rome.
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As a formal institution, it faded away,
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but its influence has continued
to this day.
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Christian theologians,
such as Thomas Aquinas,
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have admired and adopted its focus
on the virtues,
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and there are parallels between
Stoic Ataraxia, or tranquility of mind,
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and the Buddhist concept of Nirvana.
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One particularly influential Stoic
was the philosopher Epictetus
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who wrote that suffering stems
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"not from the events in our lives,
but from our judgements about them!"
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This has resonated strongly
with modern psychology
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and the self-help movement.
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For example, rational emotive
behavioral therapy
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focuses on changing
the self-defeating attitudes
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people form about
their life circumstances.
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There's also Viktor Frankl's logotherapy.
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Informed by Frankl's own time
as a concentration camp prisoner,
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logotherapy is based on
the Stoic principle
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that we can harness our willpower
to fill our lives with meaning,
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even in the bleakest situations.
Yasushi Aoki
we main not
->
we may not