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openclaw skills install the-manual-a-philosophers-guide-to-lifeProvides Stoic teachings from Epictetus's Enchiridion on control, emotional mastery, and virtuous living through 53 concise modern chapters.
openclaw skills install the-manual-a-philosophers-guide-to-lifeA modern rendering of Epictetus's Enchiridion by Sam Torode. 53 concise teachings on Stoic ethics, the dichotomy of control, emotional mastery, and the art of living with virtue.
Default to English when ambiguous.
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Title | The Manual: A Philosopher's Guide to Life |
| Original | Enchiridion of Epictetus (c. 125 AD) |
| Author | Epictetus (c. 50-135 AD) |
| Modern Rendition | Sam Torode (Ancient Renewal, 2017) |
| Structure | Foreword + 53 numbered chapters |
| Original Language | Koine Greek (recorded by Arrian) |
| Tradition | Stoicism |
| Core Question | How should we live? |
Epictetus was born a slave in Hierapolis (modern Turkey) around 50 AD. Despite his enslavement, he studied Stoic philosophy under Musonius Rufus, one of the most prominent Stoic teachers of the era. After gaining his freedom, Epictetus taught philosophy in Rome until Emperor Domitian banished all philosophers from the city around 93 AD. He then founded a school in Nicopolis, Greece, where he taught until his death around 135 AD.
Epictetus wrote nothing himself. His student Arrian compiled his lectures into the Discourses (eight books, four survive) and extracted the essential teachings into a concise handbook: the Enchiridion (from Greek encheiridion — "in the hand" or "manual"). This small book became one of the most widely read philosophical texts in Western history.
Sam Torode, a modern writer and translator, rendered the Enchiridion into contemporary English based on the Thomas Wentworth Higginson translation. He also produced modern versions of Marcus Aurelius's Meditations and the Tao Te Ching. Torode's Foreword recounts his personal discovery of Stoicism during the 2008 financial crisis — a moment of personal crisis that led him to the ancient wisdom of Epictetus.
Stoicism was founded by Zeno of Citium (c. 300 BCE) in Athens. Key Stoic figures include:
The Enchiridion had extraordinary influence beyond ancient times:
"There are things within our power, and things outside our power." — Chapter 1
The master key to Stoic philosophy. Distinguish sharply between what you control (opinions, aims, desires, aversions, thoughts, actions) and what you don't (body, wealth, reputation, status, others' actions, death). Attach your peace only to the former.
"People are not disturbed by things themselves, but by the views they take of those things." — Chapter 5
Events are neutral. Your judgment of an event creates the emotional disturbance. Change the judgment, change the experience. This principle is the foundation of cognitive behavioral therapy.
"If your favorite cup is broken, say to yourself, 'It is only a cup.'" — Chapter 3
Everything is borrowed. Your favorite cup, your health, your loved ones, your life itself — none of it is permanently yours. Love fully but accept impermanence. Treat everything as a traveler treats an inn.
"The power of choice cannot be abducted or taken away. It is a fortress no enemy can conquer." — Chapter 14
No one can compel your assent. A tyrant can chain your body but not your mind. No external force can make you believe a falsehood, consent to wrong, or act against your character. Your inner freedom is absolute.
"The sheep do not spit up grass to show the shepherd how much they've eaten, but digest their food within and produce wool and milk." — Chapter 25
Don't call yourself a philosopher. Let your actions speak. True philosophy is not recited but lived. Digest the principles and let your character produce the evidence.
"Before going to the public bath, prepare yourself for the usual incidents." — Chapter 4
Premeditation of adversity (praemeditatio malorum). Before any situation, run a mental rehearsal of what could go wrong — not to be pessimistic, but to be prepared. When adversity comes, you will not be surprised or unbalanced.
"Lay aside alibis... Begin with little things." — Chapter 12
Philosophical growth is like athletic training. It requires daily practice, small consistent efforts, and the willingness to endure discomfort. Start small — a spilled cup, a rude comment, a delayed meeting — and build your Stoic muscles one rep at a time.
| Intent | Route To | Key Question |
|---|---|---|
| Dealing with anxiety/fear about the future | ref-02 (Managing Emotions) + Principle 1 | "Is what I fear within my control?" |
| Handling anger at someone who wronged you | ref-04 (Relationships and Society) + Principle 2 | "Is my anger from the event or my judgment?" |
| Coping with grief or loss of a loved one | ref-02 (Managing Emotions) + ref-01 (Dichotomy of Control) + Principle 3 | "Can I see this as a loan returned?" |
| Making a difficult decision with unclear outcomes | ref-01 (Dichotomy of Control) + Principle 1 | "What part of this is actually up to me?" |
| Building a daily Stoic practice / habit system | ref-03 (Daily Practices) + Principle 7 | "What small thing can I train on today?" |
| Handling criticism or social rejection | ref-04 (Relationships) + Principle 4 | "Can their opinion change my character?" |
| Feeling stuck or not making progress | ref-05 (The Stoic Path) + Principle 5 | "Am I talking about philosophy or living it?" |
| Feeling overwhelmed by external circumstances | ref-01 (Dichotomy of Control) + Principle 1 | "What can I actually do right now?" |
| Wanting to impress others with Stoic knowledge | ref-05 (The Stoic Path) + Principle 5 | "Would a sheep brag about its grass?" |
| Experiencing unexpected small annoyances | ref-03 (Daily Practices) + Principle 7 | "Can I use this as training?" |
✅ "Is this within my control?" — Dichotomy of Control. Default Stoic question for any situation.
✅ "I am disturbed not by what happens but by my opinion of it." — Chapter 5. Core insight on emotional self-regulation.
✅ "I didn't lose it. I gave it back." — Chapter 11. Reframe for grief, loss, and disappointment.
✅ "It is only a cup." — Chapter 3. Proportional response to trivial losses.
✅ "The power of choice is a fortress no enemy can conquer." — Chapter 14. Absolute inner freedom.
✅ "The sheep do not spit up grass." — Chapter 25. Live philosophy, don't announce it.
✅ "Lay aside alibis." — Chapter 12. Stop making excuses and start the work.
✅ "Begin with little things." — Chapter 12. Start small. Spilled oil. Stolen wine. Each is training.
✅ "This is the price of my peace and tranquility." — Chapter 12. Accept small disturbances as tuition for your character.
✅ "People act according to their character." — Underlying principle for dealing with difficult people. Pity, don't rage.
When facing a specific difficulty, use the Intent Routing Table above. Identify your situation, route to the appropriate reference, and apply the relevant principle.
Pair the conversation starters at the bottom of each reference with one of the 10 Recall Triggers. Each trigger links back to a specific teaching and a concrete case.
| Reference | Topic | Key Applications |
|---|---|---|
| ref-01 | The Dichotomy of Control | Decision making, overcoming anxiety, prioritization |
| ref-02 | Managing Emotions | Anger, grief, fear, disappointment, distress |
| ref-03 | Daily Stoic Practices | Morning prep, evening review, small-beginnings training |
| ref-04 | Relationships and Society | Criticism, difficult people, social obligations, friendship |
| ref-05 | The Stoic Path | Progress, the three disciplines, authentic vs. false philosophy |
Epictetus. The Manual: A Philosopher's Guide to Life. Modern rendition by Sam Torode. Ancient Renewal, 2017.
Based on the Thomas Wentworth Higginson translation of the Enchiridion (also known as The Manual or The Handbook of Epictetus).
Epictetus would tell you to stop reading this file and go live it.
Listen and Execute