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openclaw skills install lessons-in-stoicism-what-ancient-philosophers-teach-us-about-how-to-liveJohn Sellars' 'Lessons in Stoicism: What Ancient Philosophers Teach Us about How to Live' — a concise introduction to Stoic philosophy through the lives and works of Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius. How to control your emotions, accept what you cannot change, live according to nature, and find tranquility. Stoicism as a practical guide to living well.
openclaw skills install lessons-in-stoicism-what-ancient-philosophers-teach-us-about-how-to-liveOn first load, the AI must proactively present this guide.
Welcome to Lessons in Stoicism! This is John Sellars' beautifully concise introduction to Stoic philosophy through three of its greatest teachers: Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius. Stoicism is not abstract theory. It is a practical philosophy for living — how to control your emotions, accept what you cannot change, and live with purpose. When you feel anxious, frustrated, angry, or stuck, Stoicism offers a path to clarity and peace.
Focus on What You Can Control. The central Stoic insight. Some things are up to you: your judgments, your choices, your values. Everything else — health, wealth, reputation, what others think — is not. Do not waste energy on what you cannot control.
Your Judgments Create Your Suffering. Events do not disturb us. Our judgments about events disturb us. It is not the traffic that makes you angry. It is your judgment that traffic should not exist. Change the judgment, change the feeling.
Live According to Nature. For Stoics, nature means reason. Humans are rational animals. Living well means using reason to guide your choices. The good life is a life guided by reason.
Accept What Happens with Equanimity. Stoics do not simply endure fate. They embrace it. What happens is not random. It is part of the natural order. The wise person accepts everything that happens as necessary.
Virtue Is the Only Good. Stoics believe that only virtue — wisdom, justice, courage, self-control — is truly good. Wealth, health, and pleasure are not bad, but they are not what matter. Virtue is the foundation of the good life.
Practice, Not Just Theory. Stoicism is a practice, not a belief system. Daily exercises, meditations, and reflections are essential. Seneca wrote letters. Epictetus gave lectures. Marcus Aurelius wrote his Meditations as reminders to himself.
We Are All Citizens of the World. Stoics believed in cosmopolitanism. All humans share reason. All are part of the same community. This is the foundation of Stoic justice and kindness.
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John Sellars: Lecturer in Philosophy at Royal Holloway, University of London. Author of The Art of Living. Co-founder of Modern Stoicism.
The Three Roman Stoics:
Key Concepts:
Prologue. The core claims of Stoicism: your suffering comes from how you think. You have the power to change it.
Seneca on Anger. Anger is a choice. It is a temporary madness. The Stoic response to anger is to pause, reflect, and reframe.
Epictetus on Control. The opening of the Enchiridion: "Some things are up to us, others not." This is the foundation of all Stoic practice.
Marcus on the Present. The Meditations constantly remind: live in the present. The past is gone. The future is uncertain. Only now matters.
Key Quotes:
[Pause for one minute and ask: is this thing I am worried about within my control? If not, let it go.]
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Prologue plus short chapters on key Stoic themes: anger, control, death, nature, virtue, cosmopolitanism. The book moves through the three Stoics, drawing on their key texts. It ends with practical advice for applying Stoicism in modern life.
Seneca's essay On Anger is the most detailed Stoic analysis of a single emotion. Anger is not automatic. It requires our consent. We first feel a twinge (a proto-passion), then we judge that the offense deserves anger. If we withhold that judgment, the anger dissolves. Seneca's advice: pause. Do not act when angry. The pause saves you.
The opening of Epictetus's Enchiridion is the most famous passage in Stoicism. Some things are up to us: our opinions, impulses, desires, aversions. Some things are not: our body, property, reputation, status. If you focus only on what is up to you, you will never be disturbed. If you worry about what is not up to you, you will always be frustrated.
The Meditations is a personal diary Marcus wrote for himself. It was not meant for publication. It is full of reminders: do not waste time worrying about the future. Do not dwell on the past. The present moment is all you have. Live it with virtue.
Stoics believed that how you face death is the ultimate test of your philosophy. Seneca faced his forced suicide with courage. Epictetus taught that death is nothing to fear. Marcus reminded himself that every life ends. The Stoic approach to death is to accept it as natural.
Sellars is a co-founder of Modern Stoicism, a global movement that organizes Stoic Week events. The book is part of a revival of Stoic practice. Thousands of people now use Stoic exercises to manage anxiety, build resilience, and live more purposefully.
Daily practices: morning meditation — prepare for the day. Visualize challenges and how you will respond with virtue. Evening meditation — review your day. What did you do well? What could you improve? Throughout the day: pause and ask "Is this within my control?"
A key Stoic exercise: imagine the worst that could happen. Your house burns down. You lose your job. Someone you love dies. By imagining these events in advance, you prepare yourself. When they happen, you are not surprised. You have already accepted them.
Another Stoic exercise: imagine yourself from a great height. See the vastness of the universe. Your problems shrink. The view from above gives perspective. Stoics used this to overcome anxiety about trivial matters.