The
first principle then in man's constitution is the social.
And
the second is not to yield to the persuasions of the body, for it is the
peculiar office of the rational and intelligent motion to circumscribe itself,
and never to be overpowered either by the motion of the senses or of the
appetites, for both are animal; but the intelligent motion claims superiority
and does not permit itself to be overpowered by the others. And with good
reason, for it is formed by Nature to use all of them.
The
third thing in the rational constitution is freedom from error and from deception.
Let then the ruling principle, holding fast to these things, go straight on,
and it has what is its own.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
Because human nature is rational, it
is ordered toward cooperation with others. My conscious and deliberate choice
can participate with the conscious and deliberate choice of my fellows, knowing
that we all share in the same end and purpose. We are better and stronger
together, not apart.
Because human nature is rational, it
is ordered toward ruling both itself and whatever is beneath it. My conscious
and deliberate choice can be the source of its own good, and can make good use
of all my other powers. The mind can master the senses and the passions, and
need not be mastered by them.
Because human nature is rational, it
is ordered toward the certainty of truth over the confusion of ignorance. My
conscious and deliberate choice is firmly grounded in the ability to
distinguish true from false, and right from wrong. Whatever possesses a mind
can know what it does, and thereby act with conviction.
I am made to live with my neighbor,
I am made to have my mind rule my body, and I am made to have a clear
understanding of my purpose. It perhaps sounds so obvious to me, but then I
recognize how often I stray from these principles.
We exist for one another, yet I will
still assume that I am in some state of war. We exist for the higher to inform
the lower, but I will still act as if the lower should drag down the higher. We
exist to have confidence in truth, but I will still succumb to so much doubt
and fear.
Why am I fighting? Why am I still a
slave? Why am I crippled by skepticism? I find that these are, of course,
universal problems for all of humanity, but they are also especially prevalent in
the modern age, where we are so deeply separated from a bond with Nature. We
are divorced from love, fueled by violent emotion, and dismissive of the idea
that there can be anything absolute beyond ourselves.
I remind myself that my commitment
to Stoic living will only be as complete as my willingness to put these
principles into daily practice. I should not only ponder them abstractly, but
also apply them concretely. Only then will I not be swept away by confusion
about who I am, why I am here, and where I should be going.
Written in 12/2007
IMAGE: Henrietta Rae, Doubts (1886)
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