Meditations
Marcus Aurelius
Paperback
(Independently published, Aug. 29, 2017)
One of the world's most celebrated and persuasive books, Meditations, by the Roman ruler Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 121– 180), fuses the stoic statutes he used to adapt to his life as a warrior and manager of a domain. Rising to the royal position of authority in A.D. 161, Aurelius discovered his rule assailed by catastrophic events and war. In the wake of these difficulties, he set down a progression of private reflections, plotting a logic of sense of duty regarding prudence above joy and peacefulness above joy. Mirroring the sovereign's own particular honorable and generous set of accepted rules, this persuasive and moving work draws and advances the convention of Stoicism, which focused on the look for internal peace and moral sureness in a clearly confused world. Tranquility was to be accomplished by copying in one's close to home lead the fundamental organization and legitimateness of nature. Furthermore, despite inescapable agony, misfortune, and passing — the torment at the center of life — Aurelius guides stoic separation from the things that are outside one's ability to control and an attention all alone will and discernment.