Open The Volume

Meditations

Marcus Aurelius/175 / Classical Antiquity
DutyImpermanenceLiving According To NatureSelf-Discipline

Ethics in the Stoicism tradition, oriented around duty and impermanence.

Meditations is Marcus Aurelius's private notebook, written during military campaigns as he tried to practice Stoic philosophy under the pressures of imperial rule. The work is not a formal treatise but a sequence of reminders about duty, self-command, mortality, and the rational order of nature.

309 excerpts/14 sections

Chapters

The structural skeleton of the work

Section 1

INTRODUCTION

15 excerpts

Section 2

THE FIRST BOOK

10 excerpts

Section 3

THE SECOND BOOK

12 excerpts

Section 4

THE THIRD BOOK

8 excerpts

Section 5

THE FOURTH BOOK

33 excerpts

Section 6

THE FIFTH BOOK

22 excerpts

Section 7

THE SIXTH BOOK

33 excerpts

Section 8

THE SEVENTH BOOK

38 excerpts

Section 9

THE EIGHTH BOOK

37 excerpts

Section 10

THE NINTH BOOK

26 excerpts

Section 11

THE TENTH BOOK

29 excerpts

Section 12

THE ELEVENTH BOOK

20 excerpts

The Soul's Self-Sufficiency

The natural properties, and privileges of a reasonable soul are: That she seeth herself; that she can order, and compose herself: that she makes herself as she will herself: that she reaps her own fruits whatsoever, whereas plants, trees, unreasonable creatures, what fruit soever (be it either fruit properly, or analogically only) they bear, they bear them unto others, and not to themselves. Again; whensoever, and wheresoever, sooner or later, her life doth end, she hath her own end nevertheless. For it is not with her, as with dancers and players, who if they be interrupted in any part of their action, the whole action must needs be imperfect: but she in what part of time or action soever she be surprised, can make that which she hath in her hand whatsoever it be, complete and full, so that she may depart with that comfort, 'I have lived; neither want I anything of that which properly did belong unto me.' Again, she compasseth the whole world, and penetrateth into the vanity, and mere outside (wanting substance and solidity) of it, and stretcheth herself unto the infiniteness of eternity; and the revolution or restoration of all things after a certain period of time, to the same state and place as before, she fetcheth about, and doth comprehend in herself; and considers withal, and sees clearly this, that neither they that shall follow us, shall see any new thing, that we have not seen, nor they that went before, anything more than we: but that he that is once come to forty (if he have any wit at all) can in a manner (for that they are all of one kind) see all things, both past and future.

Section 13

THE TWELFTH BOOK

20 excerpts