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
Thursday, September 30, 2021
Epictetus, Golden Sayings 146
Dhammapada 157
Epictetus, Discourses 1.11.7
What is the motive? This perhaps is not the moment to define it; but it is enough that we should be convinced of this —if what philosophers say is sound—that we must not look for it somewhere outside us, but that it is always one and the same motive which causes us to do or not to do a thing, to speak or not to speak, to be elated or depressed, to fly or to pursue—the very motive which has moved you and me at this moment, you to come and sit and listen to me, and me to say what I do.
What is the motive? Surely it is nothing but this—that we are so minded?
“Nothing else.”
There are the times when I feel like I can’t keep my eyes off something, and then there are the times when I feel like I have to look away. I may believe that my gaze is being forced this way or that, as if the object itself is exerting a force over me, and yet I know full well that the decision to stare or turn my head is really coming from my own inner workings.
There is an attic window in an old Victorian house near where I grew up, and I glance up at it whenever I walk or ride by, since I still have fond memories of a group of friends who spent hours and hours right there, solving all the world’s problems. There is a street near where I went to college, and I take circuitous routes to avoid seeing it, since I still have painful memories of someone I miss dreadfully.
The house and the street aren’t doing that to me, and not even those ghosts from my past are doing that to me. I am doing that to myself, on account of what I have chosen to value. If I did not first deeply care about something attached to those locations, they would have no effect on me at all.
The Roman didn’t faint at the sight of a race in which he didn’t have a stake, and I never laugh or cry at anything I have not determined to give a meaning for myself. It matters to me for no other reason than that I put it in my mind to matter.
Yes, it may hurt, and so I assume that the hurt is making me run away. Yes, it may gratify, and so I assume that the gratification is drawing me in. Let me be careful.
First, I am in charge of whether I pick a pleasure over a pain, as anyone who has ever made the conscious choice to bear a suffering for a greater good can understand. Second, I am further in charge of something far more fundamental, my very estimation of what constitutes the good and the bad to begin with.
We are often inclined, perhaps because it seems easier, perhaps because it saves us the weight of responsibility, to claim that the circumstances make us do things. The Stoic knows, rather, that the circumstances give us the conditions under which we do such things, while they never coerce us into anything at all. It may have come from a flawed judgment, or from a healthy judgment, but it nonetheless came from a judgment.
Wednesday, September 29, 2021
The Feast of St. Michael
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
Epictetus, Discourses 1.11.6
“Certainly not.”
Would you pray to be so loved by your own people, as to be always left alone by them when you were ill, because of their exceeding affection, or would you, if it were a question of being left alone, rather pray, supposing that were possible, to have the affection of your enemies? And if that is so, we are forced to the conclusion that your conduct was not that of affection.
Epictetus here arrives at something akin to the Golden Rule, which has its noble name for a very good reason. Whatever the time or the place, in any culture or tradition, those who genuinely reflect upon human nature will discover that each and every person shares in the same fundamental dignity, and that doing good for oneself must always be joined to doing good for another.
The preferences and the circumstances may be different, yet in the end, a sincere man cannot help but recognize himself when he looks at his neighbor. We all have a common identity, defined by a mind that is made to understand what is true, and a will that is made to love what is good, from which we must learn that we are all made for one another.
Such a principle is not the result of convenience or convention, arising instead from the order of Nature itself. That is why the Stoic, the Christian, the Hindu, the Buddhist, or the humanist can arrive at precisely the same conclusion.
The official may have felt affection for his daughter, though he was certainly not putting it into practice. I can only imagine that his concern for his own feelings was overpowering any feelings he had for her, so that while he thought of his own comfort, her comfort did not enter his mind. He did not make that crucial connection, that helping her cope with her pain was just as important as coping with his own.
When the lost love of my life begged me to stop smoking, it did not occur to her that she shouldn’t actually start smoking when I wasn’t around. When I picked up the cigarettes again, just to spite her, it did not occur to me that my malice had made my whole promise to her worthless.
When she later asked me to love her without condition, it did not occur to her that she should avoid hooking up with different men. When I unleashed my nasty temper at her, it did not occur to me that this was not the love that she had asked for.
While we are all prone to terrible errors of judgment, no one, absolutely no one, wishes to be abused, or to be treated as a mere object of utility and pleasure. We rightly ask to be respected.
If I am expecting to receive such respect, why am I hesitant to provide it? I am the other, and the other is me. Right reason tells us this, and the willing heart follows through.
Written in 12/2000
Monday, September 27, 2021
Aesop's Fables 44
Sayings of Ramakrishna 114
Epictetus, Discourses 1.11.5
“Let us consider it then.”
Was it right, I ask, for you, being affectionately disposed to your child, to run away and leave her? Is her mother not fond of the child?
“She is indeed.”
Should the mother then have left her too, or should she not?
“She should not.”
What of the nurse? Is she fond of the child?
“She is,” he said.
Ought she then to have left her?
“By no means.”
Again, is not the child's attendant fond of her?
“He is.”
Ought he then to have gone away and left her? Was it right that as a consequence the child should be thus left desolate and helpless because of the great affection of you its parents and of those about it, or should die in the hands of those who had no love or care for it?
“Heaven forbid!”
Once more, it is not fair or reasonable, is it, that a man should not allow others equally affectionate with himself to do what, because he is affectionate, he thinks proper for himself. It is absurd.
However I might feel, and whatever I might choose to do, the right act will always be an act according to reason, not because morality is merely cerebral, but because it is only possibly for me to do what is good if I first understand why it is good. It is my thoughts that give meaning to my passions, and it is my awareness that informs my deeds with purpose.
It is a surefire sign that I am straying from the good when I treat it in an inconsistent and contradictory manner, where the principle is compromised for the sake of convenience. I remain confident that other people should act with care and concern, and yet I simultaneously consider myself exempt from acting with the very same care and concern. That man over there should surely do it, but because I believe that I am special, the responsibility does not apply to me.
And so it is, that just as all virtue proceeds out of wisdom, so all vice proceeds out of ignorance. Where sound judgment is lacking, there can never be any good living.
Hence the official finds it obvious that a mother, or a nurse, or a servant should express their affection by being present, though he can apparently express his affection by being absent. His choices have become crooked, since he isn’t thinking straight.
Many instances come to mind where others have used such a double standard around me, yet casting blame has a way of feeding my resentment. No, let me look within myself for an example of wanting to have it both ways.
From an early age, I would distance myself from people whenever I was feeling fearful or insecure. This could take the form of averting my eyes, or refusing to engage in conversation, or crawling off into a corner with a book.
It became quite the habit, and while I figured I was just protecting myself from injury and pain, there was a part of me that wanted someone to come after me, to seek me out, to prove me wrong in thinking that there were no kind and decent folks. If they didn’t do so, it gave me an excuse to be bitter.
With that sort of a temperament, you’d think I would have been far more sensitive to other people calling for help, and yet I still cringe at the memory of the times I walked away when someone else was clearly reaching out. My motive throughout was somehow keeping myself safe and secure, even as it expressed itself in a glaring contradiction: I expected everyone to take a risk in being kind, except myself.
Sunday, September 26, 2021
Stoic Snippets 102
Saturday, September 25, 2021
Stockdale on Stoicism 12
The capital A's on Author and Another are Stoic code markings for "another name for God." Our minds are part of the Divine Mind of God; it is like a flame, and individual consciousnesses are sparks in it. Conversely, we are fragments of God; each one of us has within us a part of Him. We're part of God and he's part of us.
Dhammapada 156
Epictetus, Discourses 1.11.4
“Of course.”
Again, is it true that affection is natural and good, and reason not good?
“Certainly not.”
Is there a conflict then between reason and affection?
“I think not.”
If there were a conflict, then, as one of the two is natural, the other must needs be unnatural?
“Certainly,” he said.
It follows then that whenever we find reason and affection united in an action, we confidently affirm that it is right and good.
“Granted,” he said.
It may sound far too obvious to say, but conflict breeds such deep discontent. Now what am I to do about the conflict? I am usually advised, by those who consider themselves experts, to overwhelm the opposition. Where an obstacle stands in the way, force it out of the way. In the most direct of terms, if you don’t like it, destroy it.
Perhaps I am too sentimental, and so I don’t have that instinct to stomp on my neighbor, yet what cuts closest to the bone is the deeper problem of fighting myself. If one part of me says this, and another part says that, am I to kill off the one part at the expense of the other?
An old hippie friend of mine, now long missing in action, used to wonder if it was better to roll over it, or to roll with it. He nodded and grinned when I asked him if he’d stolen that from Lao Tzu, and he told me that no truth can ever be stolen.
Wherever a contradiction is hastily assumed, it is best to take a step back, and to question whether that tension can be resolved into a harmony. I have learned, the hard way, that unclear terms are the first obstacles to understanding, and that false dichotomies follow closely behind.
Let me look at my own inner workings. Must my thinking and my feelings be at war? After all, whole historical movements have been based on the friction between them.
Do you like Classicism or Romanticism?”
“Um, both?”
“You’re funny! Seriously, which one?”
Whenever I believe that my appetites and my intellect are somehow in conflict, I am failing to grasp the nature of either. An emotion, in and of itself, has no meaning or value without the understanding. A thought, in and of itself, has no reference or context without the passions.
The whole of Nature works together, and so it should come as no surprise that the bits of my own nature are made to work together.
Yes, affection is good, though the goodness becomes apparent through the act of reason. Yes, reason is good, though it will hardly matter if it does not express itself in the act of affection.
Friday, September 24, 2021
Thomas a Kempis, The Imitation of Christ 3.36
Epictetus, Discourses 1.11.3
“How can they be?”
No, I suppose if the Egyptians' views are right the other nations' must of necessity be wrong; if the Jews' opinions are good, other people's must be bad.
“Of course.”
And where there is ignorance, there is also want of insight and education as to necessary things.
“Yes.”
When once you have realized this, then, said Epictetus, you will make this your one interest in the future, and to this alone devote your mind—to discover the means of judging what is natural and to use your criterion to distinguish each particular case as it arises.
I deal with dozens of standards every day, many of them rather precise and elaborate, and yet I don’t attend nearly enough to the most important standard of all, on how to be a thoughtful and decent human being.
That sort of neglect on my part will inevitably bring me confusion and misery.
Sometimes we get tied up in knots, unsure of how to find a highest measure by which to direct our lives. Some things are matters of individual preference, and others are expressions of social convention, but what is necessary above and beyond any of these is a universal comprehension of our human nature, and how it is joined to the order in all of Nature.
There is little use in mucking about with the many details if I don’t already have a plan in mind. The effects will only make sense through an awareness of the causes, and the circumstances are only given direction by understanding the first principles.
This will, at first, feel incredibly frustrating, since I don’t know quite where to begin, but I can be encouraged by the fact that any new endeavor is initially intimidating. I struggled with learning my letters, and riding a bicycle, and solving quadratic equations, though I somehow managed, with time and effort.
All the more important, then, to get started early, and to make the pursuit of a human calling my primary commitment. It will be a lifelong vocation, as I will never stop discovering something new.
On a more manageable scale, for example, I could think about how to eat well. My tastes may incline me in one way, and tradition may point me in another, but if I am going to do more than just be led about by passion or custom, I will be well advised to learn something about what sort of foods are best for the health and strength of my body. It would be very foolish to say that it’s all the same, that any old diet will do.
Is not the health and the strength of the soul even more important than that of the body, as the greater demands more attention than the lesser? No bone, muscle, or sinew will be of help without a sound sense of judgment.
Thursday, September 23, 2021
Sayings of Ramakrishna 113
Epictetus, Discourses 1.11.2
“I cannot, “he said, “rather do you prove to me how it is wrong or unnatural.”
He answered, suppose we were discussing black and white, what test should we call in to distinguish between them?
“The sight,” he said.
What if we were discussing things hot or cold, hard and soft, what test should we use?
“Touch.”
Well then, as we are discussing what is natural and right and the opposite, what test would you have us take?
“I do not know,” said he.
Look here, it is no great loss perhaps not to know the proper test for colors and smells, nay, and flavors too, but do you think it is a small loss to man not to know what is good and what is evil, what is natural and what is unnatural?
“No, the greatest possible loss.”
“After all, it’s only natural . . .”
“Hey, I’m only human!”
A little bell rings my head when I hear such phrases. They may sound so innocuous at first, and yet I can’t help but notice how often they are used to casually brush aside accountability. It is just a small step to saying, “I couldn’t help myself.”
It may be natural to feel fear, or to fall into an honest mistake; yet will it be natural to lie for convenience, or to cheat on my wife? There is a line here between what is bound to happen, and what I myself have decided to do. This was not always so clear to me before I looked at the world with Stoic eyes.
I understand that people will run away when they are hurt, having done it myself, while I also keep in mind that this does not necessarily make fleeing the natural thing to do, and therefore the right thing to do. The passions are conditions we work with, not the masters of our choices.
The official is confused about the way he responded to his daughter’s sickness. How is he to react, when his emotions are pushing him in all sorts of conflicting directions? He took those impressions merely at face value, not reflecting upon their purpose, and right there is the missing piece.
Our nature provides us with all sorts of faculties to regard our world, The five senses allow us to perceive various qualities of matter, or the memory and imagination allow us to retain and combine these impressions, and we can become rather skilled at training such powers. We correctly admire the man with a sharp eye, or an attuned ear, or a quick inventiveness.
And while such abilities help us to describe things, they are unable to understand things. They do not get beyond the appearances to the content, and so they offer us no guidance about what is true and false, right and wrong.
For this our human nature was given an intellect, by which to comprehend, and a will, by which to choose. I can stare at something all I want, and I will find no answers there; it is when the mind goes to work that the meaning and the value can finally be revealed.
The official was doing a lot of feeling, but not very much thinking. He recognized the importance of the senses, even as he drew a blank on the need for contemplation. What could be more critical, however, than the ability to distinguish at the level of identity, to arrive at that which stands behind all appearances? Only then is someone truly aware and truly free.
I find this to be a common problem for many of us, where we settle for the outside without exploring on the inside, and so we become competent at particular skills, while we remain quite clueless at the whole art of living itself.
Do you know how to drive a car, and pay your taxes, and file the right forms for the boss, and give an impressive presentation at the departmental meeting?
“Yes, I’d like to think I’m good at those things.”
Now what about knowing how to love a friend without conditions, or grasping why you should speak with absolute honesty, or judging when things are good, bad, or merely indifferent?
“I don’t know what you mean. I’m not sure anyone can do all that.”
Written in 12/2000
Wednesday, September 22, 2021
Stoic Snippets 101
Ellis Walker, Epictetus in Poetical Paraphrase 18
Should never die, but share immortal life
With the blest Gods, 'tis perfect lunacy;
Bedlam hath many a wiser man than thee:
A doctor and dark room may do thee good;
Take physick, I advise thee, and let blood.
Will nothing but impossibles go down?
Thou wishest that what's not in thy pow'r, may own
Subjection to thy will, and would'st confine
What's in another's pow'r to be in thine.
Thus if thou wish thy son may blameless be,
Though he hath rak'd the sink of infamy,
'Tis a return of thy infirmity;
A spice of madness still: As well you might
With vice were virtue, with that black were white,
"Is wishing then deny'd? And must our mind
To the dull present only be confin'd?"
No, doubtless you may wish; nor need you fear
Defeat, provide you wish within your sphere.