Epictetus: The Discourses
Book Three, Chapter 15 That we ought to proceed with circumspection
to everything
In every act consider what precedes and what follows, and
then proceed to the act. If you do not consider, you will at first begin with
spirit, since you have not thought at all of the things which follow; but
afterward, when some consequences have shown themselves, you will basely desist.
"I wish to conquer at the Olympic games." "And I too, by the gods: for it is a
fine thing." But consider here what precedes and what follows; and then, if it
is for your good, undertake the thing. You must act according to rules, follow
strict diet, abstain from delicacies, exercise yourself by compulsion at fixed
times, in heat, in cold; drink no cold water, nor wine, when there is
opportunity of drinking it. In a word you must surrender yourself to the trainer
as you do to a physician. Next in the contest, you must be covered with sand,
sometimes dislocate a hand, sprain an ankle, swallow a quantity of dust, be
scourged with the whip; and after undergoing all this, you must sometimes be
conquered. After reckoning all these things, if you have still an inclination,
go to the athletic practice. If you do not reckon them, observe you behave like
children who at one time you wi play as wrestlers, then as gladiators, then blow
a trumpet, then act a tragedy, when they have seen and admired such things. So
you also do: you are at one time a wrestler, then a gladiator, then a
philosopher, then a rhetorician; but with your whole soul you are nothing: like
the ape, you imitate all that you see; and always one thing after another
pleases you, but that which becomes familiar displeases you. For you have never
undertaken anything after consideration, nor after having explored the whole
matter and put it to a strict examination; but you have undertaken it at hazard
and with a cold desire. Thus some persons having seen a philosopher and having
heard one speak like Euphrates- yet who can speak like him?- wish to be
philosophers themselves.
Man, consider first what the matter is, then your own
nature also, what it is able to bear. If you are a wrestler, look at your
shoulders, your thighs, your loins: for different men are naturally formed for
different things. Do you think that, if you do, you can be a philosopher? Do you
think that you can eat as you do now, drink as you do now, and in the same way
be angry and out of humour? You must watch, labour, conquer certain desires, you
must depart from your kinsmen, be despised by your slave, laughed at by those
who meet you, in everything you must be in an inferior condition, as to
magisterial office, in honours, in courts of justice. When you have considered
all these things completely, then, if you think proper, approach to philosophy,
if you would gain in exchange for these things freedom from perturbations,
liberty, tranquillity. If you have not considered these things, do not approach
philosophy: do not act like children, at one time a philosopher, then a tax
collector, then a rhetorician, then a procurator of Caesar These things are not
consistent. You must be one man either good or bad: you must either labour at
your own ruling faculty or at external things: you must either labour at things
within or at external things: that is, you must either occupy the place of a
philosopher or that of one of the vulgar.
A person said to Rufus when Galba was murdered, "Is the
world now governed by Providence?" But Rufus replied, "Did I ever incidentally
form an argument from Galba that the world is governed by Providence?"
Last reading: Chapter
14: Certain miscellaneous matters Next reading: Chapter
16: That we ought with caution to enter, into familiar intercourse with men
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