Enchiridion. Arrian Epictetus. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Arrian Epictetus
Издательство: Bookwire
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Философия
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9788027244768
Скачать книгу
freedom of choice. For if he avoids anything that is not a matter of free choice, he knows that some time he will encounter something in spite of his aversion to it, and will come to grief. Now if it is virtue that holds out the promise thus to create happiness and calm and serenity, then assuredly progress toward virtue is progress toward each of these states of mind. For it is always true that whatsoever the goal toward which perfection in anything definitely leads, progress is an approach thereto.

      Footnotes

      1. The characteristic moral achievement which the Stoics sought. The metaphor in the first expression, τὸ εὔρουν, is admirably rendered by Seneca, Epist. 120. 11, beata vita, secundo defluens cursu.

      2. See the Encheiridion, II. 2: "But for the present totally make way with desire."

      3. i.e., the result at which virtue aims.

      4. These are the three spheres or fields (τόποι) of human activity, inclination, choice, and intellectual assent, upon which the Stoics laid great stress. For a fuller discussion see below III 2, 1 ff.

      5. Broad-jumpers in antiquity carried weights which on being thrust backwards while the jumper was in mid-air seem to have added materially to the distance covered. These same weights were also used like our dumb-bells for the development of the arm and trunk muscles, as is apparently the case here.

      6. The title, apparently, of a short work by Chrysippus, but known only from this passage. Zeno and Cleanthes wrote also on the subject.

      7. The poison with which Socrates was put to death.

      8. Plato, Crito, 43 D.

      9. Probably by witnessing tragedies, the plots of which, although fictitious, may teach moral lessons.

      10. The phrase is from Plato, Crito, 48 B.

      11. Referring probably to the mind of Chrysippus.