... the values that permeate western culture are largely based on Christianity even for those who don't believe in God. — Ross Campbell
is Stoicism a better guide to living than Christianity and should it replace the latter as a set of values to live by? — Ross Campbell
Two different things or one thing?Christianity is the most popular religion and set of values — Ross Campbell
So I put the question for debate is Stoicism a better guide to living than Christianity and should it replace the latter as a set of values to live by? — Ross Campbell
So it would seem that modern psychotherapy has more in common with Stoicism than Christianity and yet the values that permeate western culture are largely based on Christianity even for those who don't believe in God. — Ross Campbell
One objection to that statement is that since most people believe in God, there can be no harm following a system that believes in God, like Christianity. — Apollodorus
So I put the question for debate is Stoicism a better guide to living than Christianity and should it replace the latter as a set of values to live by? — Ross Campbell
I think this is a modern rendition of stoicism. The original one had methapyhsical underpinnings which are unpalatable to many modern people, but which made all the difference and prevented stoicism from being merely a quetism.Stoicism strikes me as resignation to one's circumstances as encapsulated in its spirit of acceptance - to not grieve over one's misfortunes and not rejoice over one's fortunes. The idea behind stoicism seems to be to keep things the way they are and simply adapt yourself to them. — TheMadFool
The Stoic ethic espouses a deterministic perspective; in regard to those who lack Stoic virtue, Cleanthes once opined that the wicked man is "like a dog tied to a cart, and compelled to go wherever it goes".[11] A Stoic of virtue, by contrast, would amend his will to suit the world and remain, in the words of Epictetus, "sick and yet happy, in peril and yet happy, dying and yet happy, in exile and happy, in disgrace and happy",[12] thus positing a "completely autonomous" individual will, and at the same time a universe that is "a rigidly deterministic single whole".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoicism#:~:text=Stoicism%20is%20a%20school%20of,views%20on%20the%20natural%20world.
The Stoics were by no means advocating passivity in terms of action, as some modern usages of the term indicate. — baker
Oh! If stoicism recommends acceptance of one's cricumstances, how would we explain such an attitude? It could be, other reasons being possible, that there's nothing we can do to change our condition. What are these "...other reasons possible..."? — TheMadFool
Well, let's see ... other than the old adage (I can't source it at the moment) 'Epicurean during peace, Stoic during war', what do you make of these reputed 'Stoic warriors' ...Can you imagine a military general, out on the battle field, who is a Stoic? — baker
Thanks for illustrating my point! The modern day stoic is a passive-aggressive wimp, while there is nothing in the original Stoicism that would stand in the way of being proactive.Can you imagine a military general, out on the battle field, who is a Stoic?
— baker
Well, let's see ... other than the old adage (I can't source it at the moment) 'Epicurean during peace, Stoic during war', what do you make of these reputed 'Stoic warriors' ... — 180 Proof
Of course, because pantheism gives one a definitive sense that one is part of divinity, and that as such, one's life is worth living, that life is a big and worthy project worth striving for, all taking place in a big and worthy universe.You believe that pantheism somehow preventsStoicism from being quietism? — praxis
You believe that Pantheism somehow prevents Stoicism from being Quietism?
— praxis
Of course, because pantheism gives one a definitive sense that one is part of divinity, and that as such, one's life is worth living, that life is a big and worthy project worth striving for, all taking place in a big and worthy universe. — baker
*sigh*Care to elaborate on how you got this "passive-aggressive wimp" from my 'stoic warriors' post? — 180 Proof
No, there is no personal god to commune with in pantheism. — baker
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