Thursday, January 31, 2013

BOOK 4 -30


One philosopher has no shirt, one has no book. Here is another half-naked: 'I have no bread', he says, 'but I am faithful to Reason.' But I, for my part, have all the food of learning, and yet I am not faithful.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

BOOK 4 -29


If one who does not recognize the contents of the universe is a stranger in it, no less a stranger is the one who fails to recognize what happens on it. He is a fugitive if he runs away from social principle; blind, if he shuts the eye of the mind; a beggar, if he depends on others and does not possess within him all he needs for life; a tumor on the universe, if he stands aside and separates himself from the principle of our common nature in dissatisfaction with his lot (for it is nature which brings this about, just as it brought you about too); a social splinter, if he splits his own soul away from the soul of all rational beings, which is a unity.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

BOOK 4 -28


A black character, an effeminate, unbending character, the character of a brute or dumb animal: infantile, stupid, fraudulent, coarse,  mercenary, despotic.

Friday, January 25, 2013

BOOK 4 -27


Either an ordered universe, or a stew of mixed ingredients, yet still coherent order. otherwise how could a sort of private order subsist within you, if there is disorder in the Whole? Especially given that all things, distinct as they are, nevertheless permeate and respond to each other.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

BOOK 4 -26


You have seen that: now look at this. do not trouble yourself, keep yourself simple. Someone does you wrong? He does wrong to himself. Has something happened to you? Fine. All that has happens has been fated by the Who;e from the beginning and spun for you own destiny. In sum, life is short: make your gain from the present moment with right reason and justice. keep sober and relaxed.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

BOOK 4 -25


Try out too how the life of the good man goes for you - the man content with his dispensation from the Whole, and satisfied in his own just action and kind disposition.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

BOOK 4 -24


'If you want to be happy' says Democritus, 'do little.' May it not be better to do what is necessary, what the reason of a naturally social being demands, and the way reason demands it done? This brings the happiness both of right action and of little action. Most of what we say and do is unnecessary: remove the superfluity, and you will have more time and less bother. So in every case one should prompt oneself: 'Is this, or is it not, something necessary?' And the removal of the unnecessary should apply not only to actions but to thoughts also: then no redundant actions either will follow.

Monday, January 21, 2013

BOOK 4 -23


Universe, your harmony is my harmony: nothing in your good time is too early or too late for me. Nature, all that you your seasons bring is fruit to me: all comes from you, exists in you, returns to you. The poet says, 'Dear city of Cecrops': will you not say "Dear city of Zeus'?

Sunday, January 20, 2013

BOOK 4 -22


No wandering. In every impulse, give what is right: in every thought, stick to what is certain.

Saturday, January 19, 2013

BOOK 4 -21 -2


We should consider, though, not only the multitudes of bodies thus buried, but also the number of animals eaten every day by us and other creatures - a huge quantity consumed and in a sense buried in the bodies of those who feed on them. And yet there is room for them because they are reduced to blood and changed into the elements of air and fire.

How to investigate the truth of this? By distinguishing the material and the causal.

Friday, January 18, 2013

BOOK 4 -20


You may ask how, if souls live on, the air can accommodate them all from the beginning of time. Well, how does the earth accommodate all those bodies buried in it over the same eternity? Just as here on earth, once bodies have kept their residence for whatever time, their change and decomposition makes room for other bodies, so it is with souls migrated to the air. They continue for a time, then change, dissolve, and take fire as they are assumed into the generative principle of the Whole: in this way they make room for successive residents. Such would be one's answer on the assumption that souls do live on.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

BOOK 4 -20


Everything in any way beautiful has its beauty of itself, inherent and self-sufficient: praise is no part of it. At any rate, praise does not make anything better or worse. This applies even to the popular conception of beauty, as in material things or works of art. So does the truly beautiful need anything beyond itself? No more than law , no more than truth, no more than kindness or integrity. Which of these things derives its beauty from praise, or withers under criticism? Does an emerald lose its quality if it is not praised? And what of gold, ivory, purple, a lyre, a dagger, a flower a bush?

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

BOOK 4 -19


One who is all in a flutter over his subsequent fame fails to imagine that those who remember him will very soon be dead - and he too. Then the same will be true of of all successors, until the whole memory of him will be extinguished in a sequence of lamps lit and snuffed out. But suppose immortality in those who will remember you, and everlasting memory, even so, what is that to you? And I do not simply mean that this is nothing to the dead, but to the living also what is the point of praise, other than for some practical aspect of management? As it is, you are losing the opportunity of that gift of nature which does not depend on another's word.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

BOOK 4 -18


What ease of mind you gain from not looking at what your neighbor has said or done or thought, but only at your own actions, to make them just, reverential, imbued with good! So do not glance at the black characters either side, but run right on  to the line: straight, not straggly

Monday, January 14, 2013

BOOK 4 -17


No, you do not have thousands of years to live. Urgency is on you. While you live, while you can, become good.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

BOOK 4 -16


Within ten days you will be regarded as a god by those very people who now see you as a beast or baboon - if you return to your principles and worship of Reason.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

BOOK 4 -15


Many grains of incense on the same alter. One falls to ash first, another later: no difference.

Friday, January 11, 2013

BOOK 4 -14



You have subsisted as a part of the Whole. You will vanish into that which gave you birth: or rather you will be changed, taken up into the generative principle of the universe.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

BOOK 4 -13


'Do you possess reason?' 'I do.' 'Why not use it then? With reason doing its job, what else do you want?'

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

BOOK 4 -12


Always have these two principles in readiness. First, to do only what the reason inherent in kingly and judicial power prescribes for the benefit of mankind. Second, to change your ground, if in fact there is someone to correct and guide you away from some notion. But this transference must always spring from a conviction of justice or the common good: and your preferred course must be likewise, not simply for apparent pleasure or popularity.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

BOOK 4 -11


When someone does you wrong, do not judge things as he interprets them or would like you to interpret them. Just see them as they are. in plain truth.

Monday, January 7, 2013

BOOK 4 -10


'All's right that happens in the world.' Examine this saying carefully, and you will find it true. I do not mean 'right' simply in the context of cause and effect, but in the sense of 'just' - as is some adjudicator were assigning dues. So keep on observing this, as you have started, and in all that you do combine doing it with being a good man, in the specific conception of 'good man'. Preserve this in every sphere of action.

BOOK 4 -9


The nature of the beneficial was bound to act thus.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

BOOK 4 -8


What does not make a human being worse in himself cannot make his life worse either: it cannot harm him from outside or inside.

Friday, January 4, 2013

BOOK 4 -7


Remove the judgement, and you have removed the thought 'I am hurt': remove the the thought 'I am hurt', and the hurt itself is removed.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

BOOK 4 -6


With such people such an outcome is both natural and inevitable - if you wish it otherwise you are hoping that figs will no longer produce their rennet. In any case remember that in a very brief time both you and he will be dead, and shortly after not even your names will be left.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

BOOK 4 -5



Death just like birth, is a mystery of nature: first a combination, then a dissolution, of the same elements. Certainly no cause for shame: because nothing out of the ordinary for an intelligent being or contrary to the principle of his constitution.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

BOOK 4 -4-4


From there, then, this common city, we take our very mind, our reason, our law - from where else? Just as the earthly part of me has been derived from some earth, the watery from the next element, the air of my breath from some other source, the hot and fiery from its origin (for nothing comes from nothing, nor returns to nothing) - so the mind also has its source.