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Nicholas's avatar

1) I think of death almost every day and beyond death how the heat death of the universe will destroy everything even the legacies of well known people. It gives me a “what’s the point?” Which is why I turn to philosophy. This lead me to Camus and absurdism and the idea of rebelling against the inevitable pointlessness of things. For me it is comforting and I don’t see it as a far cry from the “live your best life” philosophy of Aurelius. I don’t live my best life because I’m a statesman or even anyone of significance beyond my immediate friends/family. But because being intentional with life takes effort and putting effort into life is all I can do. I recently read a holocaust survivor say “dying is easy, living is hard.” And that resonated with me and I think the ideas above.

2) this is my second reading and section twelve of book 2 stood out to me this time. Talking about how humans can use their intellectual powers to understand the true nature of things resonated with me both times. I think this aligns with my draw to philosophy because I feel like the only thing my senses see sometimes is the inevitability of entropy destroying everything.

3) I think you’re doing a great job and I appreciate the slow guided reading of this; it’s much different from my first read through of the book. My critique is really a request for more. I find the context you share about how Marcus would see the world and philosophy very insightful. To me it is a way that you add to my reading of the text. You did this very well in “this thing I am” and it helped me understand the text in a way that just reading Marcus’s words couldn’t. I’d love to see more of that in the future.

Thank you for sharing your knowledge and time. I am enjoying this series of articles immensely.

Karl L's avatar

How would Marcus Aurelius (and his contemporaries) understand the term "philosophy"?

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