Consider
from where each thing is come, and of what it consists, and into what it
changes, and what kind of a thing it will be when it has changed, and that it
will sustain no harm.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.17 (tr
Long)
I’m not sure precisely when it
started, because I honestly wasn’t paying attention, but somewhere into the new
millennium Stoicism became a trendy thing once again.
The reason I wasn’t paying attention
had nothing to do with any disdain for others, or any cynical rejection of the
times, but rather arose from the fact that I didn’t see any honest connection
between the way I had been trying to live and the way certain others were now
trying to live.
By all means, follow the path that
you think is best; I simply know that this cannot be my path. I think this goes
beyond a difference of preference, to a basic difference of conscience.
A fellow, who was quite successful at
working in software over in California, once jumped out of his seat when he
overheard me mention Marcus Aurelius during a conversation. He came up to me
immediately, and explained how everyone at his company was reading the Meditations, and how deeply it was
changing their attitudes.
I was at first quite excited. I
babbled something about trying to run a business based on human values, not
simply on making money. He looked at me sideways.
“Oh no, we’re making more money than
we ever did, and it’s all because Marcus Aurelius helps us to empower
ourselves!”
As I often must do, I bit my lip,
because otherwise I will just end up saying something rude. But I was only
thinking of what he meant by being “empowered”, and I realized that any
philosophy, or any way of living, was only as good for him as it made him
richer and more important.
“Dude, have you actually taught this
shit? I can fly you out to our campus, and you can run a seminar, and I swear
it’ll help you get your name out there. Do you have a card? No? Don’t worry
man, here’s mine, and I’ll set you up.”
Were they actually reading the same Meditations? To his credit, I suspect he
found certain ideas about self-reliance, toughness of will, and overcoming
obstacles to be quite inspiring. These are indeed good things to learn. My
concern was that it was all outside of the larger context of Stoicism, and that
it employed certain virtues at the expense of others. It was intellectual and
moral cherry picking.
Look at the passage above. At first,
it just seems to be saying that we should make sense of things by breaking them
down. Yes, that is certainly good sense, in business or otherwise. But I
suggest that Marcus Aurelius is looking to something much deeper, to the Nature
of reality itself, and to the nature of the moral choices that ought to inform
our awareness.
Where did it come from? From
Providence, from the order and design of Divine Mind. This is our highest
measure.
Of what does it consist? All things
are simply bits and pieces, elements, expressions and aspects of the whole, in
and of themselves nothing, all joined together for the expression of
everything.
What does it change into? All things
change for a common end, and move in harmony with one another. No action exists
in isolation from any other action.
How does all of this serve what is
right and good? Nothing is in vain. Nothing is lost, and nothing is discarded,
and nothing is without meaning and purpose. For me to be a good man is to choose
to find my own place within this pattern.
Empowerment for this man meant
getting more of what he already wanted. Empowerment for me has come to mean
discovering the true needs I had always overlooked.
I respect you if you may think
differently, but I see no use in any Stoic discipline without a Stoic
metaphysics. I see no use in being committed if I do not understand what I must
be committed to. I see no use in strength without virtue.
By all means, be a successful man if
you wish, but first and foremost be a good man. I don’t think that was the message
Silicon Valley was getting.
Written in 12/2016
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