Constantly,
and, if it be possible, on the occasion of every impression on the soul, apply
to it the principles of Physics, of Ethics, and of Dialectic.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
The Stoics often distinguish between
three disciplines or branches of philosophy: Physics is about the natural order,
ethics is about the morality of our actions, and dialectic is about the right
use of our reason.
These do not exist in separation or
isolation from one another, but are all concerned with understanding different
aspects of the world, and of our place within it.
We will now often compartmentalize
or pigeonhole different subjects, but the Stoic mindset is always built upon
the unity and harmony of all things. It helps me to think of this as the
necessary relationship between how the Universe works, how I should choose to
live within it, and by what means I can employ my reason to understand this. No
one of these can exist without the others, just as no part can have any meaning
outside of the whole.
We will also now often think of
disciplines completely in abstraction, as the pursuit of theory removed from
practice. How often have I heard students telling me that algebra and chemistry
have nothing to do with their lives, as well as seen professional academics
failing to serve others through their profound studies? Yet for the Stoic,
theory and practice are two sides of the same coin; thinking and doing are
inexorably joined.
In this light, it should not seem
odd that Marcus Aurelius asks us to always consider the nature of being, the
nature of what is good, and the nature of what is true. He isn’t asking us to
get lost in obscure corners of specialized studies; he isn’t asking us to put
our noses in books, or hide our heads in the clouds.
He is rather suggesting that we look
at every experience, and at every action, in the context of the whole. He is
simply saying that we cannot live well without thinking rightly.
There can be no meaning in life
without grasping how things work, there can no purpose in action without the
awareness of a goal, and there can be no knowledge at all without the
discipline of an ordered mind. I must look at everything that happens to me,
and everything that I do, within the complete pattern of everything else.
This is hardly too obscure, for
anyone at all, because it is nothing else than the fullness of human life. Philosophy
is not a luxury, but a necessity. A man can still be happy without a fancy
trade, but he can never be happy without a sense of who he is and where he
belongs.
Anything less is just stumbling
about blindly.
Written in 2/2008
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