call Now 9811711561 Cash Payment乂 Call Girls in Dwarka Mor
A guide to the good life summary
1. 1
A Guide to The Good Life (the ancient art of stoic joy)
by William B. Irvine
The Book in Three Sentences
1. The insight and advice of the Stoic philosophy is still, remarkably applicable today.
2. The Stoics had psychological techniques for attaining tranquility, minimizing worry
and more.
3. Contentedness comes from appreciating what we already have.
The Five Big Ideas
1. If you lack a grand goal in living, you lack a coherent philosophy in life. Without
one, there is a danger you will mislive and you will end up living a bad life.
2. While enjoying the companionship of loved ones, then, we should periodically stop
to reflect on the possibility that this enjoyment will come to an end. By consciously
thinking about the loss of what we have, we can regain our appreciation of it, and
with this regained appreciation we can revitalize our capacity for joy.
3. Our most important choices in life, according to Epictetus, is whether to concern
ourselves with things external to us or things internal.
4. Suppose you find out that someone has been saying bad things about you. Epictetus
advises you to respond not by behaving defensively but by questioning his
competence as an insulter.
5. To help us advance our practice of Stoicism, Seneca advises that we periodically
meditate on the events of daily living, how we responded to these events, and how, in
accordance with Stoic principles, we should have responded to them.
A Guide to The Good Life Summary
If you lack a grand goal in living, you lack a coherent philosophy of life.
Tranquility is a state marked by the absence of negative emotions such as anger,
grief, anxiety, and fear, and the presence of positive emotions—in particular, joy.
“Pay attention to your enemies, for they are the first to discover your mistakes.”—
Antisthenes
The Stoics enjoyed whatever “good things” happened to be available, but even as
they did so, they prepared themselves to give up the things in question.
For the Stoics, a person’s virtue does not depend, for example, on her sexual history.
Instead, it depends on her excellence as a human being—on how well she performs
the function for which humans were designed.
To be virtuous is to live as we were designed to live; it is to live, as Zeno put it, in
accordance with nature.
2. 2
Stoic tranquility was a psychological state marked by the absence of negative
emotions, such as grief, anger, and anxiety, and the presence of positive emotions,
such as joy.
“Begin each day by telling yourself: Today I shall be meeting with interference,
ingratitude, insolence, disloyalty, ill-will, and selfishness—all of them due to the
offenders’ ignorance of what is good or evil.”— Marcus Aurelius
“He robs present ills of their power who has perceived their coming beforehand.”—
Seneca
Irvine on hedonic adaptation: “We humans are unhappy in large part because we are
insatiable; after working hard to get what we want, we routinely lose interest in the
object of our desire. Rather than feeling satisfied, we feel a bit bored, and in response
to this boredom, we go on to form new, even grander desires.”
“One key to happiness is to forestall the [hedonic] adaptation process: We need to
take steps to prevent ourselves from taking for granted, once we get them, the things
we worked so hard to get.”
“The easiest way for us to gain happiness is to learn how to want the things we
already have.”
“The Stoics recommended that we spend time imagining that we have lost the things
we value—that our wife has left us, our car was stolen, or we lost our job.”
“We should love all of our dear ones …, but always with the thought that we have no
promise that we may keep them forever—nay, no promise even that we may keep
them for long.”—Seneca
While enjoying the companionship of loved ones, we should periodically stop to
reflect on the possibility that this enjoyment will come to an end. If nothing else, our
own death will end it.
“We should live as if this very moment were our last.”
As we go about our day, we should periodically pause to reflect on the fact that we
will not live forever and therefore that this day could be our last.
“When the Stoics counsel us to live each day as if it were our last, their goal is not to
change our activities but to change our state of mind as we carry out those activities.”
Besides contemplating the loss of our life, we should contemplate the loss of our
possessions.
“After expressing his appreciation that his glass is half full rather than being
completely empty, [a Stoic] will go on to express his delight in even having a glass:
It could, after all, have been broken or stolen.”
3. 3
“Hedonic adaptation has the power to extinguish our enjoyment of the world.
Because of adaptation, we take our life and what we have for granted rather than
delighting in them.”
Negative visualization is a powerful antidote to hedonic adaptation. By consciously
thinking about the loss of what we have, we can regain our appreciation of it, and
with this regained appreciation we can revitalize our capacity for joy.
The negative visualization technique can also be used in reverse: Besides imagining
that the bad things that happened to others happen to us, we can imagine that the bad
things that happen to us happened instead to others.
“If we were at someone’s house and his servant broke a cup, we would be unlikely to
get angry; indeed, we might try to calm our host by saying ‘It’s just a cup; these
things happen.’”
A few times each day or a few times each week a Stoic will pause in his enjoyment
of life to think about how all this, all these things he enjoys, could be taken from him.
“Negative visualization teaches us to embrace whatever life we happen to be living
and to extract every bit of delight we can from it. But it simultaneously teaches us to
prepare ourselves for changes that will deprive us of the things that delight us. It
teaches us, in other words, to enjoy what we have without clinging to it.”
“By contemplating the impermanence of everything in the world, we are forced to
recognize that every time we do something could be the last time we do it, and this
recognition can invest the things we do with a significance and intensity that would
otherwise be absent.”
“Our most important choice in life, according to Epictetus, is whether to concern
ourselves with things external to us or things internal.”
A good strategy for getting what you want is to make your goal to want only those
things that are easy to obtain—and ideally to want only those things that you can be
certain of obtaining.
“While most people seek to gain contentment by changing the world around them,
Epictetus advises us to gain contentment by changing ourselves—more precisely, by
changing our desires.”
“Your primary desire, says Epictetus, should be your desire not to be frustrated by
forming desires you won’t be able to fulfill.”
“There are things over which we have complete control, things over which we have
no control at all, and things over which we have some but not complete control.”
“One way to preserve our tranquility, the Stoics thought, is to take a fatalistic attitude
toward the things that happen to us.”
4. 4
“According to Epictetus, we should keep firmly in mind that we are merely actors in
a play written by someone else—more precisely, the Fates.”
“We must learn to welcome whatever falls to our lot and persuade ourselves that
whatever happens to us is for the best.”
“We sometimes should think about the past to learn lessons that can help us in our
efforts to shape the future.”
“Instead of thinking about how our situation could be worse, we refuse to think about
how it could be better.”
“Besides contemplating bad things happening, we should sometimes live as if they
had happened.”
Irvine on voluntary discomfort: “By exposing ourselves to a small amount of a
weakened virus now, we create in ourselves an immunity that will protect us from a
debilitating illness in the future.”
“Besides periodically engaging in acts of voluntary discomfort, we should, say the
Stoics, periodically forgo opportunities to experience pleasure.”
The Stoics discovered that willpower is like muscle power: The more they exercised
their muscles, the stronger they got, and the more they exercised their will, the
stronger it got. Indeed, by practicing Stoic self-denial techniques over a long period,
Stoics can transform themselves into individuals remarkable for their courage and
self-control.
The Stoics discovered that exercising self-control has certain benefits that might not
be obvious. In particular, as strange as it may seem, consciously abstaining from
pleasure can itself be pleasant.
“To help us advance our practice of Stoicism, Seneca advises that we periodically
meditate on the events of daily living, how we responded to these events, and how, in
accordance with Stoic principles, we should have responded to them.”
“When contemplating whether to criticize someone, he should consider not only
whether the criticism is valid but also whether the person can stand to be criticized.”
“If you are going to publish, you must be willing to tolerate criticism.”
Epictetus suggests that as we go about our daily business, we should simultaneously
play the roles of participant and spectator.
“Throughout the millennia and across cultures, those who have thought carefully
about desire have drawn the conclusion that spending our days working to get
whatever it is we find ourselves wanting is unlikely to bring us either happiness or
tranquility.”
5. 5
“The Stoics recommend that we prepare for our dealings with other people before we
have to deal with them.”
“Spend time with an unclean person, and we will become unclean as well.”
“Marcus recommends that when we interact with an annoying person, we keep in
mind that there are doubtless people who find us to be annoying.”
“When we find ourselves irritated by someone’s shortcomings, we should pause to
reflect on our own shortcomings. Doing this will help us become more empathetic to
this individual’s faults and therefore become more tolerant of him.”
“When dealing with an annoying person, it also helps to keep in mind that our
annoyance at what he does will almost invariably be more detrimental to us than
whatever it is he is doing.”
“A good Stoic, Marcus says, will not think about what other people are thinking
except when he must do so in order to serve the public interest.”
Irvine on social fatalism: “In our dealings with others, we should operate on the
assumption that they are fated to behave in a certain way.”
“One of their sting-elimination strategies is to pause, when insulted, to consider
whether what the insulter said is true.”
“Another sting-elimination strategy, suggested by Epictetus, is to pause to consider
how well-informed the insulter is.”
“One particularly powerful sting-elimination strategy is to consider the source of an
insult.”
“Under such circumstances, rather than feeling hurt by his insults, I should feel
relieved: If he disapproves of what I am doing, then what I am doing is doubtless the
right thing to do.”
“When a dog barks, we might make a mental note that the dog in question appears to
dislike us, but we would be utter fools to allow ourselves to become upset by this
fact, to go through the rest of the day thinking, ‘Oh, dear! That dog doesn’t like
me!’”
“One other important sting-elimination strategy, say the Stoics, is to keep in mind,
when insulted, that we ourselves are the source of any sting that accompanies the
insult.”
“Remember,” says Epictetus, “that what is insulting is not the person who abuses you
or hits you, but the judgment about them that they are insulting.”
Counter insults with humor.
6. 6
“Epictetus advises you to respond not by behaving defensively but by questioning his
competence as an insulter; for example, you can comment that if the insulter knew
you well enough to criticize you competently, he wouldn’t have pointed to the
particular failings that he did but would instead have mentioned other, much worse
failings.”
The Stoics advocated a second way to respond to insults: with no response at all.
“Refusing to respond to an insult is, paradoxically, one of the most effective
responses possible.”
“Notice, too, that by not responding to an insulter, we are showing him and anyone
who is watching that we simply don’t have time for the childish behavior of this
person.”
“If in the course of trying to train a horse, we punish him, it should be because we
want him to obey us in the future, not because we are angry about his failure to obey
us in the past.”
“The best way to deal with insults directed at the disadvantaged, Epictetus would
argue, is not to punish those who insult them but to teach members of disadvantaged
groups techniques of insult self-defense.”
“The Stoics primary grief-prevention strategy was to engage in negative
visualization.”
“In normal, prospective negative visualization, we imagine losing something we
currently possess; in retrospective negative visualization, we imagine never having
had something that we have lost.”
“Epictetus also offers advice on grief management. He advises us, in particular, to
take care not to “catch” the grief of others.”
“When angry, says Seneca, we should take steps to ‘turn all [anger’s] indications into
their opposites.’ We should force ourselves to relax our face, soften our voice, and
slow our pace of walking. If we do this, our internal state will soon come to resemble
our external state, and our anger, says Seneca, will have dissipated.”
Stoics value their freedom, and they are therefore reluctant to do anything that will
give others power over them.
“If we wish to retain our freedom, says Epictetus, we must be careful, while dealing
with other people, to be indifferent to what they think of us.”
“Marcus agrees with Epictetus that it is foolish for us to worry about what other
people think of us and particularly foolish for us to seek the approval of people
whose values we reject.”
https://www.samuelthomasdavies.com/book-summaries/philosophy/a-guide-to-the-good-life/