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Patrick King

10-Minute Philosophy: From Buddhism to Stoicism, Confucius and Aristotle – Bite-Sized Wisdom From Some of History’s Greatest Thinkers

  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    your unhappiness stems from your desires and unwillingness to accept other outcomes
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    Epictetus’s Enchiridion? “Make the best use of what is in your power, and take the rest as it happens. Some things are up to us and some things are not up to us.”
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    Stoicism might be the first philosophy to preach the maxim of “no pain, no gain.”
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    We cannot control others, but we are always in control of our own actions and responses.
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    Suppose something happened we wish had not. Which is easier to change: our opinion and level of emotional impact or the event itself?
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    Investing emotional energy into things we cannot change or control, similar to Buddhism’s avoidance of attachment, is what causes unhappiness, not the actual negative event or outcome itself.
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    a compelling manner: “Some things are in our control and others not.”
  • b3150771477compartió una citahace 6 meses
    There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.”
  • Stacy Claudiacompartió una citahace 7 meses
    When you spend time deliberately realizing that everything you love and cherish could be taken from you tomorrow by some sick twist of fate, you feel humbled.
  • Stacy Claudiacompartió una citahace 7 meses
    Stoics were not masochist or anti-pleasure. They still enjoyed the fruits of life, but they recognized that proper perspective is needed to be non-reactive and also appreciate the good things.
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