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Deep Dive into Stoicism / Introduction: What Is Stoicism?

Introduction: What Is Stoicism?

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Welcome to the Course

Stoicism is one of the most enduring philosophical traditions in Western history. Founded around 300 BCE by Zeno of Citium in the Stoa Poikile (Painted Porch) of Athens, it became the dominant philosophy of the Hellenistic and Roman worlds, influencing emperors and slaves alike.

What Makes Stoicism Unique?

Unlike many ancient schools, Stoicism offered a unified system spanning three domains:

  1. Logic (logikê) — the study of reasoning, language, and epistemology
  2. Physics (physikê) — the study of the natural world, cosmology, and theology
  3. Ethics (êthikê) — the study of how to live well

The Stoics used the metaphor of an egg: logic is the shell, physics is the white, and ethics is the yolk — the core purpose of the whole enterprise.

The Central Promise

The Stoics promised eudaimonia — a flourishing life — achievable through virtue alone. External goods like wealth, health, and reputation are "preferred indifferents" (proêgmena): naturally desirable but never necessary for happiness. This radical claim sets Stoicism apart from Aristotle's ethics and remains provocative today.

The Stoic Sage

Central to Stoic philosophy is the ideal of the Sage (sophos) — a perfectly rational being who:

  • Never holds false beliefs
  • Is free from destructive emotions (pathê)
  • Acts in perfect accordance with Nature
  • Remains unshaken by fortune

The Stoics acknowledged that no one (perhaps with rare exceptions) actually achieves sagehood. The ideal functions as a regulative standard, a direction rather than a destination. We are all prokopton — those "making progress."

Historical Context

Zeno arrived in Athens around 312 BCE after a shipwreck (according to tradition) led him to discover philosophy through Socratic writings. He studied under:

  • Crates of Thebes (Cynic philosophy)
  • Stilpo (Megarian logic)
  • Polemo (Academic ethics)

This eclectic education shaped Stoicism's synthetic character. Zeno wove together Socratic ethics, Heraclitean physics, and Aristotelian logic into a new whole.

Key Terminology

Term Greek Meaning
Virtue aretê Excellence of character; the only true good
Nature physis The rational order of the cosmos
Assent synkatathesis The act of endorsing an impression as true
Impression phantasia A mental representation of reality
Impulse hormê A movement of the soul toward or away from something
Preferred indifferent proêgmenon Something naturally valuable but not a true good

What to Expect

Over the coming lessons you will:

  • Trace the historical development of Stoicism across five centuries
  • Engage with primary sources in translation
  • Analyze core Stoic arguments and their critics
  • Practice Stoic exercises adapted for modern life
  • Develop your own philosophical toolkit

Let's begin.

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