Letters from a StoicRecommendations

Author:
Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Buy on Amazon
Buy on Apple Books

About the book

The power and wealth which Seneca the Younger (c.4 B.C. - A.D. 65) acquired as Nero's minister were in conflict with his Stoic beliefs. Nevertheless he was the outstanding figure of his age. The Stoic philosophy which Seneca professed in his writings, later supported by Marcus Aurelius, provided Rome with a passable bridge to Christianity. Seneca's major contribution to Stoicism was to spiritualize and humanize a system which could appear cold and unrealistic.

Selected from the Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium, these letters illustrate the upright ideals admired by the Stoics and extol the good way of life as seen from their standpoint. They also reveal how far in advance of his time were many of Seneca's ideas - his disgust at the shows in the arena or his criticism of the harsh treatment of slaves. Philosophical in tone and written in the 'pointed' style of the Latin Silver Age these 'essays in disguise' were clearly aimed by Seneca at posterity.

Related books

Metaphors We Live By

George Lakoff

Notes from Underground

Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Self Reliance

Ralph Waldo Emerson

The End of Faith

Sam Harris

The Evolving Self

Robert Kegan

The Healing Journey

Claudio Naranjo

The Swerve

Stephen Greenblatt

The Warrior Ethos

Steven Pressfield

We Learn Nothing

Tim Kreider