STOICISM

stōˈĭsĭzəm, school of philosophy founded by Zeno of Citium (in Cyprus) c.300 b.c. The first Stoics were so called because they met in the Stoa Poecile [Gr.,=painted porch], at Athens, a colonnade near the Agora, to hear their master Zeno lecture. He had studied with Crates the Cynic, and his own teaching included the Cynic adaptation of the Socratic ideals of virtue, endurance, and self-sufficiency. He added to them the explanation of the physical universe given by Heraclitus and something of the logic of Aristotle. The development and organization of Zeno's doctrines into a great system of metaphysics was the work of Chrysippus (c.280–207 b.c.), successor to Cleanthes. Among the acknowledged leaders of the Stoics in the following period was Panaetius of Rhodes, who in the 2d cent. b.c. introduced Stoicism into Rome. He and his pupil Posidonius sought to lessen the attacks of critics by mingling with the Stoic doctrines some of Plato's psychological views. Cicero, a pupil of Posidonius, was indebted to a work of Panaetius for the basis of his own treatise De officiis. The Romans, who had received Stoicism more cordially than they did any other Greek philosophy, can claim the third period as their own. To it belong the philosophers Seneca and Epictetus of Phrygia and the emperor Marcus Aurelius. Stoicism, with its roots in earlier doctrines and theories of the human person and the universe, built up an ideal of the virtuous, wise man. Regarding philosophy as divided into physics, logic, and ethics, the Stoics made logic and physics a foundation for ethics. The Stoics, especially Chrysippus, are renowned for their logic, which contains the first systematic analysis of how the truth value of a compound proposition depends upon the truth values of its components. The physical theory underlying Stoicism is materialistic. All that has reality is material. Force, which is the shaping principle, is joined with matter. The universal working force, God, pervades all and becomes the reason and soul in the animate creation. In their ethical creed, the Stoics accepted virtue as the highest good in life. They identified virtue with happiness, claiming that it was untouched by changes in fortune. "To live consistently with nature" was a familiar maxim among the Stoics. Only by putting aside passion, unjust thoughts, and indulgence and by performing duty with the right disposition can people attain true freedom and rule as lords over their own lives.

See J. M. Rist, Stoic Philosophy (1969); A. A. Long, ed., Problems in Stoicism (1971); A. A. Long and P. N. Sedley, The Hellenistic Philosophers, (2 vol., 1987); M. Reesor, The Nature of Man in Early Stoic Philosophy (1989).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Stoicism  - 6205 results

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...122.--- ed., Problems in Stoicism . London: The Athlone Press, 1971. 123.--- Language and Thought in Stoicism , pp. 75-113 in 122. 124...130.--- "Soul and Body in Stoicism", Phronesis 27 1982 , 34-57...
...of ideas recalls Ciceros strictures on Stoicism ( De fin . iv. 21 and esp. v. 22...a distinct bias towards the modified stoicism typical of Cicero, and almost conventional...Smith expresses his disagreement with Stoicism on this point; cf. Raphael and Macfie...
...recognised the essential contradiction between Stoicism and Christianity (9) . The development...distinguished from interest in secular Stoicism, which seems to have increased in England...not interested in the conflict between Stoicism and Christianity, but in that between...
...States Period; Europe had so far failed to do so. Stoicism There was another ideal cherished in Kaempfers age...Europe. That was in the practice of the tenets of Stoicism, or Neo-Stoicism. Kaempfers repeated mention and praise of the stoicism...
...in Plato, 111 ; in Socrates, 77 ; in Stoicism, 180 ; in Thucydides, 57 Justin AD...on religion and morality, 78 ; and Stoicism, 183 knowledge: v. belief, 87 -9...observation, 32 ; and social law, 36 ; in Stoicism, 170 Lazy Argument, 171 Leucippus mid...
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Cold Grace: Christian Faith and Stoicism in the Poetry of J.V. Cunningham...calls "a basic religious attitude": Stoicism--"the only real alternative to Christianity...experience in the present" (Fields 32). Stoicism stressed the importance of aligning ones...
...Cognitive Therapy: the Reemergence of Stoicism by Robert W. Montgomery What disturbs...drawn upon in making a comparison between Stoicism and modern cognitive therapy; however...as an illustration of the link between Stoicism and cognitive therapy: "Men are disturbed...
...impressions, and is thus actually inferior to agnoia (ignorance)? Meinwald argues against this, and for the simple view that in Stoicism assent is either; in the case of the fool, doxa = agnoia; or alternatively, in that of the sage, episteme (knowledge...
...forth movement from military character to Stoicism in an effort to shed light on both...gracefully between expository work on Stoicism and analytic work on war, militarism...figures Sherman considers; it engages Stoicism critically; it analyzes military attitudes...
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magazine articles on: Stoicism  - 383 results

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An Unlikely Hero: For His Stoicism If Nothing Else, We Should Admire Becks. by Hunter Davies I used to say, when asked for three heroes, Glenn Hoddle, Alfred...
...of free self-consciousness. The new transcendent moment, Stoicism, "... has a negative attitude towards the master and slave...bad strategy, necessarily leading to defeat and ignominy. "STOICISM," Hegel says, "is the freedom which always comes directly...
...first eight pages of her inquiry into Stoicism and the military mind to Stockdale...experience as "an extreme application of Stoicism that is literally about empowerment in...forth movement from military character to Stoicism in an effort to shed light on both...
...is not alone in his struggles. THE MERIT OF STOICISM Among Western philosophies Stoicism is easily the most influential school of thought...the disintegrating force of multiculturalism, Stoicism points to the unity of the human race, its...
...superstition, on Platos philosophy, on Stoicism, on Epicureanism. (Plutarch was sound...Plutarch was officially critical of Stoicism, but the scholar who refers to his "recessive stoicism," "poised between the pessimism of...
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...Actually a Film about My Own Family; Just as the War and British Stoicism Informed the Bafta-And Oscarnominated Film, So They Also...the coast and the airfield." Just as the war and British stoicism informed The Kings Speech, so they also shaped the character...
Stoicism amid Horror. Even as the nation struggled to come to terms with the death and destruction visited upon London yesterday, something...
This Is Our 9/11; Norways Suzann Pettersen Will Mirror Her Grieving Nations Stoicism When She Plays Carnoustie in the British Open. She Will Not Be Defeated by a Mass Murderer. Byline: ALAN CAMPBELL WHEN leading...
PRESIDENT HIGGINS IN HIS OWN WORDS; Michael D Higginss Campaign Has Been a Triumph of Stoicism and Resilience but, Though Remarkable, It Is Dwarfed by His Past Achievements. Born into Poverty, He Excelled Academically...
THEY KEPT CALM AND CARRIED ON; BOOK OF THE WEEK; for Six Million Women, Life on the Home Front Required Stoicism, Sacrifice -- and Faking Stockings by Painting Their Legs with Coffee. Byline: Bel Mooney MILLIONS LIKE US: WOMENS LIVES IN...
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encyclopedia articles on: Stoicism  - 22 results

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STOICISM sto isiz m, school of philosophy founded...who in the 2d cent. b.c. introduced Stoicism into Rome. He and his pupil Posidonius...officiis. The Romans, who had received Stoicism more cordially than they did any other...
...succeeded him as head of the Academy in Athens. After Zeno, the founder of Stoicism , Chrysippus is considered the most eminent of the school. He systematized Stoicism and reconciled the factions that threatened to split the school. Chrysippus...
...form an idealistic philosophy and thus combat the trends of Stoicism and skepticism that had crept into interpretations of the philosophy...the later writings of Plato, particularly the Timaeus, and Stoicism had identified the World Soul with transcendent universal reason...
...all phenomena are explained by atoms and their motions in space. Other early Greek teaching, such as that of Epicurus and Stoicism , also conceived of reality as material in its nature. The theory was later renewed in the 17th cent. by Pierre Gassendi...
...to continuous change. The concept of natural law originated with the Greeks and received its most important formulation in Stoicism . The Stoics believed that the fundamental moral principles that underlie all the legal systems of different nations were reducible...
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