Epictetus: The Discourses
Book Two


CHAPTERS
Chapter 1 That confidence is not inconsistent with caution
Chapter 2 Of Tranquillity
Chapter 3 To those who recommend persons to philosophers
Chapter 4 Against a person who had once been detected in adultery
Chapter 5 How magnanimity is consistent with care
Chapter 6 Of indifference
Chapter 7 How we ought to use divination
Chapter 8 What is the nature of the good
Chapter 9 That when we cannot fulfill that which the character of a man promises, we assume the character of a philosopher
Chapter 10 How we may discover the duties of life from names
Chapter 11 What the beginning of philosophy is
Chapter 12 Of disputation or discussion
Chapter 13 On anxiety
Chapter 14 To Naso
Chapter 15 To or against those who obstinately persist in what they have determined
Chapter 16 That we do not strive to use our opinions about good and evil
Chapter 17 How we must adapt preconceptions to particular cases
Chapter 18 How we should struggle against appearances
Chapter 19 Against those who embrace, philosophical opinions only in words
Chapter 20 Against the Epicureans and Academics
Chapter 21 Of inconsistency
Chapter 22 On friendship
Chapter 23 On the power of speaking
Chapter 24 To a person who was one of those who was not valued by him
Chapter 25 That logic is necessary
Chapter 26 What is the property of error