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Glossary›Stoicism

Glossary

Stoicism

An ancient Greek philosophy founded in Athens around 300 BCE, teaching that virtue, reason, and acceptance of what we cannot control lead to tranquility.

What is Stoicism?

Stoicism is a school of Hellenistic philosophy founded in Athens around 300 BCE that teaches the development of self-control, fortitude, and rational thinking as means to overcome destructive emotions and achieve eudaimonia (flourishing or tranquility). The philosophy holds that virtue (defined as wisdom, courage, justice, and temperance) is the sole intrinsic good, and that external events lie beyond our control—our power resides only in how we perceive and respond to them. Stoics practice distinguishing between what is within their control (judgments, intentions, responses) and what is not (other people’s actions, natural events, outcomes), cultivating equanimity through this fundamental dichotomy.

Origins & Lineage

Stoicism was founded by Zeno of Citium (c. 334–262 BCE) in Athens, where he taught from a decorated public colonnade called the Stoa Poikile (Painted Porch)—giving the philosophy its name. The tradition developed through three major periods: the Early Stoa (Zeno, Cleanthes, Chrysippus), the Middle Stoa (Panaetius, Posidonius), and the Late or Roman Stoa (Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius).

Chrysippus (c. 279–206 BCE) systematized Stoic logic and physics, though most of his 700+ works are now lost. The philosophy spread to Rome, where it profoundly influenced educated elites. Seneca the Younger (4 BCE–65 CE), a Roman statesman, wrote Letters from a Stoic and On the Shortness of Life. Epictetus (c. 50–135 CE), born enslaved in Phrygia, established a school in Nicopolis; his student Arrian transcribed his teachings as the Discourses and condensed them into the Enchiridion (Handbook). Marcus Aurelius (121–180 CE), Roman Emperor, composed Meditations—a private journal of Stoic exercises never intended for publication—during military campaigns.

How It’s Practiced

Stoic practice centers on prosoche (attention or vigilance)—continuous mindfulness of one’s judgments and impressions. Practitioners employ several formal exercises:

Premeditatio malorum (negative visualization): mentally rehearsing potential adversities (illness, loss, death) to reduce their psychological impact and cultivate gratitude for what one currently has.

The dichotomy of control: systematically examining situations to identify what lies within one’s control (one’s own thoughts, desires, aversions) versus what does not (outcomes, others’ opinions, natural events), then directing effort solely toward the former.

View from above: imagining oneself from an increasingly distant perspective (the city, the continent, the cosmos) to contextualize personal troubles within the vastness of existence.

Evening review: reflecting each night on the day’s actions, examining where one acted according to virtue and where one fell short, without self-condemnation.

Daily practice involves treating obstacles as opportunities to exercise virtue—what Marcus Aurelius called “turning the obstacle upside down.” Stoics cultivate apatheia (not apathy, but freedom from destructive passions) and develop preferred indifferents (health, wealth, reputation) as things reasonably pursued but not essential to flourishing.

Stoicism Today

Stoicism has experienced a significant revival since the early 21st century, particularly through Modern Stoicism, an international organization that hosts the annual Stoic Week online event and Stoicon conference. The philosophy appeals to diverse audiences: Silicon Valley executives apply it to business resilience, military personnel use it for stress management, cognitive-behavioral therapists recognize its influence on CBT’s foundational principles, and secular seekers adopt it as a practical life philosophy requiring no supernatural beliefs.

Accessible entry points include Ryan Holiday’s popularizing books (The Daily Stoic, The Obstacle Is the Way), Donald Robertson’s integration of Stoicism with psychotherapy, Massimo Pigliucci’s academic-practical synthesis, and the Stoicism subreddit with over 600,000 members. Retreats, online courses, and local Stoic groups (Stoic Fellowship chapters) now exist globally. The philosophy appears in unexpected contexts—from NFL locker rooms to addiction recovery programs—valued for its pragmatic, testable techniques rather than requiring doctrinal faith.

Common Misconceptions

Stoicism is frequently confused with emotional suppression or unfeeling detachment. This misunderstanding conflates Stoic apatheia (freedom from irrational passions like rage or anxiety) with contemporary “being stoic” (showing no emotion). Authentic Stoicism cultivates appropriate feelings—joy at virtue, caution about vice—while eliminating destructive emotional reactions based on false judgments.

Stoicism is not fatalism or passive resignation. While Stoics accept what has already occurred or what lies genuinely beyond their influence, they actively engage with what falls within their sphere of choice. The philosophy does not counsel indifference to injustice or suffering, but rather responding to them rationally and virtuously rather than with panic or despair.

Stoicism is not “toxic masculinity” or emotional unavailability, though it has been misappropriated to justify suppressing vulnerability. The historical Stoics, including Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius, wrote extensively about compassion, kindness, and our interconnectedness with all humanity—the concept of cosmopolitanism (being a “citizen of the cosmos”).

How to Begin

Begin with primary sources in accessible translations: Gregory Hays’s translation of Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations, Robin Hard’s translation of Epictetus’s Discourses and Enchiridion, or Seneca’s Letters from a Stoic (any modern edition). Read slowly, treating these as practical manuals rather than theoretical philosophy.

Implement one practice: start with the evening review, spending five minutes before sleep reflecting on the day’s events—what you controlled (your responses) versus what you didn’t (circumstances), and how you might respond more virtuously tomorrow.

Modern Stoicism’s free online resources, including Stoic Week (held annually each October), provide structured introductions with daily readings and exercises. Donald Robertson’s How to Think Like a Roman Emperor combines Marcus Aurelius’s biography with practical techniques, while Massimo Pigliucci’s A Handbook for New Stoics offers a 52-week practice program.

Local philosophy groups and Stoic meetups exist in many cities; online communities like the r/Stoicism subreddit provide discussion forums. No teacher certification or lineage transmission exists in Stoicism—the philosophy is accessed directly through texts and personal practice, though mentorship from experienced practitioners proves valuable.

Related terms

mindfulnesscontemplative practicephilosophy as spiritual practiceself inquiryequanimitynon attachment
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