
Premium
Titlepage
1/19/2025
Preface
1/19/2025
Book I
1/19/2025
I: Of the Things Which Are in Our Power, and Not in Our Power
1/19/2025
II: How a Man on Every Occasion Can Maintain His Proper Character
1/19/2025
III: How a Man Should Proceed from the Principle of God Being the Father of All Men to the Rest
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IV: Of Progress or Improvement
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V: Against the Academics
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VI: Of Providence
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VII: Of the Use of Sophistical Arguments and Hypothetical and the Like
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VIII: That the Faculties Are Not Safe to the Uninstructed
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IX: How from the Fact That We Are Akin to God a Man May Proceed to the Consequences
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X: Against Those Who Eagerly Seek Preferment at Rome
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XI: Of Natural Affection
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XII: Of Contentment
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XIII: How Everything May Be Done Acceptably to the Gods
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XIV: That the Deity Oversees All Things
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XV: What Philosophy Promises
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XVI: Of Providence
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XVII: That the Logical Art Is Necessary
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XVIII: That We Ought Not to Be Angry with the Errors (Faults) of Others
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XIX: How We Should Behave to Tyrants
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XX: About Reason, How It Contemplates Itself
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XXI: Against Those Who Wish to Be Admired
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XXII: On Precognitions
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XXIII: Against Epicurus
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XXIV: How We Should Struggle with Circumstances
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XXV: On the Same
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XXVI: What Is the Law of Life
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XXVII: In How Many Ways Appearances Exist, and What Aids We Should Provide Against Them
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XXVIII: That We Ought Not to Be Angry with Men; and What Are the Small and the Great Things Among Men
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XXIX: On Constancy (Or Firmness)
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XXX: What We Ought to Have Ready in Difficult Circumstances
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Book II
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I: That Confidence (Courage) Is Not Inconsistent with Caution
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II: Of Tranquillity (Freedom from Perturbation)
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III: To Those Who Recommend Persons to Philosophers
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IV: Against a Person Who Had Once Been Detected in Adultery
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V: How Magnanimity Is Consistent with Care
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VI: Of Indifference
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VII: How We Ought to Use Divination
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VIII: What Is the Nature (Ἡ Οὐσία) of the Good
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IX: That When We Cannot Fulfil That Which the Character of a Man Promises, We Assume the Character of a Philosopher
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X: How We May Discover the Duties of Life from Names
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XI: What the Beginning of Philosophy Is
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XII: Of Disputation or Discussion
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XIII: On Anxiety (Solicitude)
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XIV: To Naso
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XV: To or Against Those Who Obstinately Persist in What They Have Determined
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XVI: That We Do Not Strive to Use Our Opinions About Good and Evil
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XVII: How We Must Adapt Preconceptions to Particular Cases
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XVIII: How We Should Struggle Against Appearances
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XIX: Against Those Who Embrace Philosophical Opinions Only in Words
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XX: Against the Epicureans and Academics
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XXI: Of Inconsistency
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XXII: On Friendship
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XXIII: On the Power of Speaking
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XXIV: To (Or Against) a Person Who Was One of Those Who Were Not Valued (Esteemed) by Him
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XXV: That Logic Is Necessary
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XXVI: What Is the Property of Error
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Book III
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I: Of Finery in Dress
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II: In What a Man Ought to Be Exercised Who Has Made Proficiency; and That We Neglect the Chief Things
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III: What Is the Matter on Which a Good Man Should Be Employed, and in What We Ought Chiefly to Practice Ourselves
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IV: Against a Person Who Showed His Partisanship in an Unseemly Way in a Theatre
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V: Against Those Who on Account of Sickness Go Away Home
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VI: Miscellaneous
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VII: To the Administrator of the Free Cities Who Was an Epicurean
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VIII: How We Must Exercise Ourselves Against Appearances (Φαντασίας)
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IX: To a Certain Rhetorician Who Was Going Up to Rome on a Suit
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X: In What Manner We Ought to Bear Sickness
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XI: Certain Miscellaneous Matters
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XII: About Exercise
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XIII: What Solitude Is, and What Kind of Person a Solitary Man Is
1/19/2025
XIV: Certain Miscellaneous Matters
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XV: That We Ought to Proceed with Circumspection to Everything
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XVI: That We Ought with Caution to Enter Into Familiar Intercourse with Men
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XVII: On Providence
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XVIII: That We Ought Not to Be Disturbed by Any News
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XIX: What Is the Condition of a Common Kind of Man and of a Philosopher
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XX: That We Can Derive Advantage from All External Things
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XXI: Against Those Who Readily Come to the Profession of Sophists
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XXII: About Cynism
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XXIII: To Those Who Read and Discuss for the Sake of Ostentation
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XXIV: That We Ought Not to Be Moved by a Desire of Those Things Which Are Not in Our Power
1/19/2025
XXV: To Those Who Fall Off (Desist) from Their Purpose
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XXVI: To Those Who Fear Want
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Book IV
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I: About Freedom
1/19/2025
II: On Familiar Intimacy
1/19/2025
III: What Things We Should Exchange for Other Things
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IV: To Those Who Are Desirous of Passing Life in Tranquillity
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V: Against the Quarrelsome and Ferocious
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VI: Against Those Who Lament Over Being Pitied
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VII: On Freedom from Fear
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VIII: Against Those Who Hastily Rush Into the Use of the Philosophic Dress
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IX: To a Person Who Had Been Changed to a Character of Shamelessness
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X: What Things We Ought to Despise, and What Things We Ought to Value
1/19/2025
XI: About Purity (Cleanliness)
1/19/2025
XII: On Attention
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XIII: Against or to Those Who Readily Tell Their Own Affairs
1/19/2025