Reviews

How to Be a Stoic: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Living by Massimo Pigliucci

zuomiriam's review against another edition

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5.0

Incredibly accessible and even harder to put down; Pigliucci has clearly spent a lot of time with Epicetus, his Stoic guide of choice, and I really enjoyed learning about his takeaways and experiences with Stoicism thus far. No spoilers on what those might be – read the book!

pascalibrary's review against another edition

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3.0

I'm glad I read this, but I think there are probably better sources for prospective ~stoics. I also don't really agree with the idea of explicitly choosing a "philosophy" and all that that entails. At least once, the author appeals to actions by stoic philosophers as proof that an action is acceptable in stoicism, as if this is the same as a mathematician deriving some theorem. This just strikes me as somewhat dogmatic, as if we are modeling ourselves after these people more than we are trying to philosophize. This is a minor issue, though.

The biggest reason I take stars off is because the book seemed a bit unfocused and too full of anecdotes that didn't end up being THAT useful.

Also, I think this ends up being VERY heavy on epictetus, and sadly, lets Seneca and Aurelius kind of fall to the wayside. Massimo acknowledges his favoritism, but that's hardly an excuse. Also, it would have been interesting to hear more modern updates to stoicism outside of CBT.

These are rough thoughts, though, and might not hold up to much scrutiny. If you do want to read something on stoicism, this book is very digestible. If you're on the fence, flip a coin, and definitely read one of the primary sources.

djryan's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful informative reflective fast-paced

5.0

bittersweet_symphony's review against another edition

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3.0

I sprinted through this over 24 hours, so I'm still ruminating over it. It communicates Stoicism well, so my dissatisfaction isn't necessarily with the writing. Massimo writes quite clearly. I suppose my disagreements regard the philosophical orientation that informs his presentation of Stoicism.

It very well could be quite historically accurate, in that How to Be a Stoic reflects how the ancient Stoics understood their philosophy of living. However, I found Massimo's perspective too scientistic or not sufficiently postmodern. Meaning, his presentation would have made more sense written before the linguistic turn.

In other words, and this could be, in part, because it's popular philosophy (nothing wrong with that!), but his portrayal of Stoicism lacks an awareness around the subjective or perspectival nature of language. Most things are presented as if language maps onto reality in a one-for-one relationship and presumes we can even know how well our language hooks up to reality when he asserts that Stoics "live according to nature," as if there is an essential nature to reality. Maybe there is! And maybe we can! Perhaps language isn't just a tool for coping with our environments but truly reflects some mind-independent reality "out there," unchanged by human experiences of it!

In simple terms, too often he leans on contemporary empirical research to suggest X "proves" this claim about Stoicism, or "as the evidence shows," or "an indisuptable fact," and so on. This could be Stoic metaphysics showing through, and maybe I just don't have much time for Stoic metaphysics. It's too static or fixed for my liking.

Furthermore, I realize I'm not particularly compelled by Stoic ethics or the obsession with virtue, at least in the way conceived by Stoics. Stoic virtue reads too essentialist for me. Sure, developing a sense of moral character is a wonderful enterprise. It's important. However, I'm not convinced one should or can build a life philosophy where everything is subsumed under the individual persuit of developing a virtuous character. It's just too rationalistic. I want the messy, moral-tragic portrayal of reality! Let me have my muddy, untidy pragmatist ethics, or terrifying but thrilling existential "leaps of faith."

Stoicism presents a world more orderly than my experiences would suggest.

However...

With the criticisms out of the way. The thing I appreciate the most about Stoicism is the "dichotomy of control," which is echoed in the "Serenity Prayer," and that is: focus on what you can control, let go of what you can't, and develop the ability to discern the difference between the two. It's this realm of psychological insight and ancient wisdom that makes Stoicism so worth it.

I can take or leave Stoicism's ethics and metaphysics, again, too rationalistic or Enlightenment-era-like in it's view of reason (this could just be Massimo's take).

Nonetheless, I think it's a worthwhile read and will benefit a lot of people. There's much to be gleaned from a Stoic mindset, and most of the daily practices are incredibly fruitful (speak without judging, remind of the impermanence of things, choose your company well, and pause and take a deep breath).

Just look to its descendants today: cognitive behavior therapy and logotherapy. CBT appears to be one of the most effective short-term interventions for addressing depression and anxiety.

I'd recommend Stoic Pragmatism by John Lachs for those who had disagreements similar to my own.

troi_bach's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

4.75

gyokusho's review against another edition

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informative inspiring medium-paced

5.0

delulubel's review against another edition

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.5

Me encanta pero le faltaron más ejemplos actuales 

ryan_reads_alot's review against another edition

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informative inspiring relaxing fast-paced

2.5

The author is biased towards atheism but a good introduction to stoicism 

rasec's review against another edition

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0

spe31's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.5