There was a request to repost this brief reflection, so here it is!
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I was once asked by a parent what I thought the most important things
any students, at any age, needed to learn. I think I was expected to
give the usual noble but vague statements about finding themselves, or
preparing them for the journey of life, or helping them to be
successful, but I immediately said that there were two sets of four
principles I would like them to learn. This brought on a double-take.
The poor fellow's jaw dropped when I simply listed them.
"I'm convinced
that a person who truly understands the Four Causes can solve any
intellectual problem, and that a person who truly understands the Four
Cardinal Virtues can solve any moral problem. He is now set up to live."
I really wasn't trying to be facetious, and I meant it from the bottom of my heart. What else could really matter than both thinking rightly and living rightly?
The Four Causes arise in the Aristotelian, or Peripatetic, tradition, but
they are in many ways a culmination of all Ancient thought. If I ask
the question "why" something is the way it is, I need to consider four
different aspects.
The efficient cause asks where something came from, or what brought it about. It's about agency.
The material cause asks what something is made of, what the parts or components of something are. It's about the building blocks.
The formal cause asks what something is in its identity, how all those parts are put together. It's about the structure.
The final cause asks where something is going, the end for which it is ordered. It's about the purpose.
Think of a house. The efficient causes are the architect and the
builders. The material causes are the lumber, cement, plaster, pipes, or
wiring. The formal cause is the blueprints and the way all the
materials are put together. The final cause is to give someone a place
to live.
Notice how often we confuse these different aspects of causality in life.
"He made me do it!" No, he pushed your buttons, but you made a choice.
He was the material cause, but your were your own efficient cause.
"I'm not guilty of stealing, because I did it to pay my bills!" Good
grief. What you did, the formal cause, isn't justified in this case
because of the purpose you did it for, the final cause.
I can only make sense of my world if I can unravel why it works the way
it does, and I believe that the Four Causes, and their proper use, are
the most important tools we have to do so.
The Four Cardinal Virtues originate from the Platonic, or Academic,
tradition, but once again, they are in many ways a culmination of all
Ancient thought. How should I live my life? What should guide my
choices? Look at what makes us human beings, and we will see what
aspects of our nature we need to perfect.
I am a being ruled by a mind. The ability to distinguish true from false, good from bad, is the virtue of prudence.
I am a being with passions and desires. The ability to control, order, and direct my passions is the virtue of temperance.
I am a being of drive and aggression. The ability to control, order, and direct my aggression is the virtue of fortitude.
I am a being who lives with others. The ability to respect both myself
and others, to give each their deserved rights and dignity, is the
virtue of justice.
A machine is functioning properly when all the parts are working
together in harmony. Now a man is hardly a machine, because he can think
and decide, but he too must have all his parts working together in
harmony, through his own thought and choice. Consider the aspect of life
that must be improved, and work upon that specific power of the soul.
By all means, express these principles using the terms of a different
school, or the values of a different culture. Many philosophers, and
narrow or smug people in general, like to miss the forest for the trees,
mainly because they just like arguing and looking important. There's a
good reason the Golden Rule is universal, and there's a good reason the
Four Causes and the Four Cardinal Virtues are universal as well. They
are hardwired by Nature.
Whenever I am asked to teach anyone anything, from changing a light bulb
to writing a term paper, from working at a job to dealing with the deepest worries of life, I return back to these ideals, the only
two-by-four you'll ever need.
Written in 4/2001
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Building upon many years of privately shared thoughts on the real benefits of Stoic Philosophy, Liam Milburn eventually published a selection of Stoic passages that had helped him to live well. They were accompanied by some of his own personal reflections. This blog hopes to continue his mission of encouraging the wisdom of Stoicism in the exercise of everyday life. All the reflections are taken from his notes, from late 1992 to early 2017.
The Death of Marcus Aurelius
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