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Ultimately, that is the message of this book and what has defined the stories we have told and the figures we have profiled.

We hope these pages contribute to the unbroken chain of influence that these Stoics’ lives have had, an influence that remains active to this day. Indeed, one of the most difficult choices made here was the decision not to profile any so-called “modern Stoics” who are continuing to wrestle with, practice, and exemplify Stoic principles in their own lives.

Whether that’s media titan Arianna Huffington, who carries a laminated note card of a Marcus Aurelius quote in her purse at all times, or General James Mattis, who has carried Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations with him on military campaigns for decades, Stoicism is alive and well in the modern world—with all the same brilliance, boldness, and humanness. There are writers like Tim Ferriss who have helped popularize Stoicism to millions, and Laura Kennedy, whose thoughtful “Coping” column runs in The Irish Times, and Donald Robertson, who specializes in the treatment of anxiety and the use of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).

Chrysippus had been an elite athlete and a Stoic, while today Stoicism is a daily practice for stars in the NFL, the NBA, MLB, World Cup rugby and soccer. Michele Tafoya of Sunday Night Football is an active student of the philosophy, which would make Musonius Rufus smile. On the wall of the clubhouse of the Pittsburgh Pirates is a quote from Epictetus: “It’s not things that upset us. It’s our judgement about things.” Zeno and Seneca and Cato and Cicero were Stoics who oversaw enormous fortunes and large business ventures, just as today Silicon Valley entrepreneurs like Kevin Rose and Wall Street billionaires like Thomas Kaplan maintain their own Stoic practices alongside their businesses. Right now in Washington, D.C., there are senators who get together each morning in the Capitol building and discuss Stoicism, just as their counterparts did in Rome thousands of years ago and the founding fathers did in 1776. May the spirit of Helvidius Priscus grow in that chamber.

As was true in the ancient world, there are also countless other Stoics with less glamorous occupations, who nevertheless experience trials and tribulations that they endure thanks to the wisdom these philosophers helped discover. They are parents. They are citizens. They are teachers. They are mortals with the same desires and fears, hopes and dreams as everyone who has ever lived.

Like you, like Seneca, like Epictetus, like Posidonius, they are trying to do the best they can. They are trying to be the best version of themselves they can be. They are reading and practicing, trying and failing, getting back up and trying again.

As we all must do.

And they will ultimately and inevitably—as all the Stoics in this book did—come to the end of their life at some point. Every one of us dies, the Stoics said, but too few of us actually live. Too many of us die before our time, living—unthinkingly—the kind of life that Seneca described as hardly being different than death.

The irony of this book is that while it is about the lives of the Stoics, in many cases, the most interesting and significant act in the lives of these men and women was their death.

To the Stoics, all of life was a preparation for death. As Cicero had said, to philosophize is to learn how to die. Seneca, even at the height of his powers, was preparing for the close of life. So was Cato. So was Thrasea. So was Zeno. That’s how they were able to muster—in that terrifying or sad moment—courage and dignity, cleverness and compassion.

Whether a Stoic died at the hands of a tyrant or from laughing too hard at a good joke—as Chrysippus did—they were teaching us, they were applying what they had studied for so long in the most important of settings.

In a way, that is a fitting lesson to conclude with. Many of the Stoics fell short of their philosophy in life, but there are no Stoics in these pages who did not die well.

Except for Cicero, who wavered at the end, who compromised, who fled. And it should be noted—not smugly, but convincingly—that he was the one lover of Stoicism who could not truly commit, who prescribed the medicine but refused to take it himself.

As Epictetus wrote, “Is it possible to be free from error? Not by any means, but it is possible to be a person stretching to avoid error.”

That’s what Stoicism is. It’s stretching. Training. To be better. To get better. To avoid one more mistake, to take one step closer toward that ideal. Not perfection, but progress—that’s what each of these lives was about.

The only question that remains for us, the living heirs to this tradition: Are we doing that work?

Interested in learning even more about Stoicism?

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TIMELINE OF THE STOICS AND THE GRAECO-ROMAN WORLD

Boldface indicates either philosophers who were a universal influence on all Stoics afterward or a Stoic person/place/event.

BC

535–475

Life of Heraclitus of Ephesus (influenced all the early Stoics)

490

First Persian invasion of Greece and the Battle of Marathon

470

Birth of Socrates outside the walls of Athens

450s

Completion of the Stoa Poikilē, the famous “painted porch” on the Athenian agora

430

Birth of Xenophon of Athens, student of Socrates

412

Birth of Diogenes of Sinope, founder with Antisthenes and Crates of Thebes of the Cynic school

399

Trial and execution of Socrates in Athens

387

Plato founds the Academy in Athens

384

Birth of Aristotle in Stagira, Chalkidiki

382

Birth of Antigonus the One-Eyed in Elimiotis, Macedonia

371

Birth of Theophrastus, successor to Aristotle, in Eresos, Lesbos

365

Birth of Crates of Thebes, Cynic student of Diogenes of Sinope

360

Birth of Stilpo of Megara

356

Birth of Alexander the Great in Pella, Macedonia

354

Death of Xenophon, whose book on Socrates would convert Zeno to philosophy

347

Aristotle establishes first school in Assos

343

Aristotle appointed tutor of the young Alexander the Great

336

Philip II of Macedon murdered; Alexander succeeds him

335

Aristotle founds the Lyceum in Athens

334

Birth of Zeno, founding scholarch (official head) of the Stoa, in Kition, Cyprus

333

Alexander liberates Cyprus from Persian rule

330

Birth of Cleanthes, the second scholarch of the Stoa, in Assos

323

Death of Alexander and start of the Wars of Succession

Death of Diogenes of Sinope in Corinth

323–322

Aristotle departs Athens for Chalcis, Euboea, where he dies in 322; Theophrastus succeeds him as head of the Lyceum

312

Zeno arrives in Athens following a shipwreck (following Persaeus’s account “at age twenty-two”)

Kition’s last king, Pumathion, killed by Ptolemy I