"But how is it that this man
studies philosophy and nevertheless lives the life of a rich man? Why does he
say that wealth ought to be despised and yet possess it?
“That life should be despised, and yet
live?
“That health should be despised, and
yet guard it with the utmost care, and wish it to be as good as possible?
“Does he consider banishment to be an
empty name, and say, ‘What evil is there in changing one country for another?’
and yet, if permitted, does he not grow old in his native land?
“Does he declare that there is no
difference between a longer and a shorter time, and yet, if he is not
prevented, lengthen out his life and flourish in a green old age?"
His answer is, that these things ought
to be despised, not that he should not possess them, but that he should not
possess them with fear and trembling. He does not drive them away from him, but
when they leave him he says farewell to them without concern.
Where, indeed, can Fortune invest
riches more securely than in a place from where they can always be recovered
without any squabble with their trustee?
—Seneca
the Younger, On the happy life,
Chapter 21 (tr Stewart)
I
believe that one of the great misunderstandings about Stoicism, and about any
philosophy that treats virtue as the measure of man, concerns what it means to
“despise” money, or any of the gifts of Fortune.
When I
love something, I recognize that it is good, and I desire it. Now I might
assume that the only contrary to love can be hate, in which case I recognize
that something is bad, and I avoid it. There is a third option, in that I
recognize that something is in itself neither good not bad, and I should
therefore neither desire it nor avoid it. This third view is the Stoic concept
of indifference, and it is what Stoic texts mean when they speak of despising
Fortune.
The
question is not whether we will, or should, possess wealth, but whether we will
care or worry about it for its own sake. This holds true for health, for the
comforts of home, for a long life, and for anything else in our circumstances. These
things may be given, or they may be taken away, but we are called throughout to
think only of the ways we can use both their presence and absence to the
improvement of moral character.
Some
people might assume that if I am not deliberately seeking wealth, then I must
be trying to avoid it. Other people might assume that if I happen to be
wealthy, that must be something I am dedicated to. Neither needs to be the
case. I often say that I have known rich men who are good men, but I have never
known a man to be good because he is rich.
Now we
all know that most people will appear more than happy to take advantage of an
upturn in their fortunes. Give a man more money, and he will most likely start
thinking about what to spend it on, where to invest, how to build his security
and his comfort. But take the money away, and he will most likely worry and
fret about losing everything. Both reactions are misguided, because both assume
that value is in the possession, and both reactions offers no benefit, because both
define happiness through the presence of something external.
The
result is that all fortune, both from things we receive or lose, will not help
a vicious man be happy, since he will use fortune poorly. Conversely, all
fortune, both from things we receive or lose, will help a virtuous man be
happy, since he will order fortune wisely.
It is
also fitting that only someone virtuous will actually make a good steward or
caretaker of wealth. He will understand that any benefits to be derived from
Fortune are directed to the improvement of the soul, and not about lining his
wallet. He will not be troubled about returning
what he had been given.
Written in 7/1995
Image: Salvator Rosa, Allegory of Fortune (c. 1659)
Image: Salvator Rosa, Allegory of Fortune (c. 1659)
This painting almost landed the artist in quite a bit of trouble, because the animals wallowing in the gifts of Fortune, and stomping on the gifts of learning, seem to clearly represent prominent leaders in the Church. Rosa wryly insisted that the donkey draped in red and gold, and covering the owl of wisdom in its shadow, need not necessarily be seen as a symbol of the Pope or the Church, but could easily represent any greedy and ignorant nobleman.
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