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quarta-feira, julho 16, 2025

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     Approaches to Epictetus ’ Handbook and his Diatribes – our action in a world of instability

 Recently, the Netflix series “Adolescence” became a global success for bringing to light several problems related to the new configuration between growing up, “social” networks and violence: on the one hand, parents have no time or interest in their children; on the other, the macho sphere is ready to radicalize boys, vulnerable at a time when they still need support, but are alone; other parents are concerned about providing all the material comfort, but are not capable of listening to their problems.

 The paranoia that women hate men ends up “demanding” perverse action - more or less, with proportions, as the Jewish people were described by the ideology of the 1930s as dangerous. What adults should have taught has been replaced by the teaching of screens - with their imminent fanaticism and prejudice. The ancients even had a god, Janus, with two faces, god of the portals, to observe this transition - Carl Jung paid attention to the myth of the hero.

On the other hand, there has been much talk about borderline personality disorder, so named by psychiatry because it appears to be on the border between neurosis and psychosis, in which the individual experiences constant instability and impulsivity, going from a feeling of emptiness to uncontrolled anger, to hostility, making relationships and projects difficult. The population prevalence can reach 20% in hospitalized psychiatric patients (Psychiatry DataBase). 

Capitalism also encourages impulse, which is the new Superego (a social duty internalized in education). The recent trial of the Sean Combs case (P. Diddy) also points to the excesses and lack of control of power linked to sexual abuse, obsessive control and threat culture – a video shows how the businessman kicks and drags his girlfriend Cassie Ventura through the corridors of a hotel.

Far from proposing to debate these issues, which should be guided by informed discussions or properly addressed by modern therapies, we can draw attention to the way in which antiquity reflected on similar issues and proposed self-perception in a communal sense. Self -awareness has been pointed out as a central therapeutic factor even for borderline patients.

In the Platonic Dialogue Meno , Socrates will state that it is only self-knowledge that can bring us phronesis - practical wisdom - translated prudentia by the Roman Cicero - the most important skill to be learned. Michel Foucault will speak, in the last century, of the culture of self-care, which he identified in the first two centuries of our era (for example in The Hermeneutics of the Subject ). 

For Alcibiades, a young and ambitious nobleman, Socrates will show that he does not have the wealth and education to confront his rivals in the political field - nor does he have the tékhne (art), a knowledge born of prudence that would enable him to compete with rivals and govern the city well. Foucault thinks that this self-knowledge also comes from the other (in Stoicism - a philosophy of Greek origin adopted in the Roman world - self-care is reflected in the care of the other, for example).

Flavius Arrian Xenophon (ca. 86 -160), a Roman citizen and student of the Phrygian-born Stoic philosopher Epictetus , compiled his teacher's lessons in eight books (the Diatribes ) and synthesized them into a “manual” for everyday use, related to the Stoic tradition of “daily meditation” (Introduction to the Encheirídion – Dinucci, 2021).

Early in this manual he writes: “Of the things that exist, some are our responsibility, others are not. Our responsibility is judgment, impulse, desire, repulsion – in short, everything that is our action” (Encheiridion 1.1). In Diatribe 48 we read: “Signs of one who progresses: he does not blame anyone, he does not praise anyone, he does not accuse anyone, he does not complain about anyone.” Anyone who submits to the desire for external things or to the people who can offer them becomes a “slave” (Encheiridion 1.2).

Therefore, we must focus on what depends on us, on what we can actually control, these “ our burdens”: in this context, judgment (hypolepsis) - how we evaluate what appears to us, adding an opinion that directs our conduct; impulse (horme) - active movement that results from a choice; desire (orexis) approaching something that we consider good; repulsion (ekklisis) - the action of moving away from something, avoiding what we consider bad (notes to the Encheirídion , Op. Cit., p. 73-75). 

The part of the gods in the human being would be the capacity for impulse and restraint (Diatribe 1.1.12). Not even Zeus could subdue the rational being's capacity for choice.

Flavius Arrian already places at the beginning of the Diatribes a reflection on the things we choose to care for and to which we choose to attach ourselves (Diatribe 1.1.14). If we concern ourselves too much with things that we cannot really care for, such as property, the body, relatives, we are dragged along by them. Among the capacities or arts (dynamis), such as grammar or music, all relate to external objects ("how you ought" to do), only the rational capacity evaluates itself and the use of the other arts, indicating the propitious moment and "whether or not you ought" to perform the action. Because the rational capacity is what deals with what appears to us (the representations - phantasiai ).

One of the most moving aspects of Stoicism is its advice on how to deal with suffering—to "be content with what is given" (Diatribe 1.1.27 ), to maintain good humor and serenity in the face of suffering (Diatribe 1.1.22), and to accept the consequences of one's actions when lived according to natural "logical" principles (Diatribe 1.1.18-32). Firm adherence to what seems rational to us—based on correct judgments—does not submit to the authoritarianism of other people's passions.

We see with admiration how the ancients thought about phronesis, the art of self-observation, the education of choice and the beneficial action that arises from paying attention to the reaction to what is presented. All this with the understanding that vanity, criticism and ambition end up corrupting society – a leader serves the common good (as Marcus Aurelius states in the Meditations – Book 1.17 ).

The universe of the Greek city-state or the Roman Empire evidently presents a scenario that is absolutely distant from ours (the founder of Stoicism, the Phoenician Zeno, is 2,300 years away, for example); but it would not be impossible to think about how the ethical formulations of their thinkers dialogue with our own conduct and realities. 

We can have more control over a series of factors (and even know the need to take care of our body, for example – something that the Stoics do not deny, since things that are not virtue are “indifferent” in the moral sense); the body was also divine matter, the Ordered Whole; for example, the second leader of the school (scholarchē), Cleanthes [ ca. 330 BC - 230 BC], was a boxer born in what is now Turkey; Seneca exercised with his servant and recommended simple exercises such as “running, lifting weights and jumping” – Epistulae morales ad Lucilium , XV). 

However, we still live in a world of chronic instability. The avid desire for external things, the inability to judge what we receive, and aggressiveness based on errors of judgment are all very similar – even more so if we consider a scenario of increasing militarization, irresponsible neoliberalism, and plans for livestock production in schools.

Modernity has brought us greater respect for individuality and instincts, and a greater awareness of the necessary freedom in raising children, for example. We have almost freed ourselves from fundamentalist sects and dictatorial powers that sought to domesticate women, the LGBTQIA+ community, and non-whites. But when can our achievements become shadows, such as obsession and abandonment? 

Adolescents driven by conflicting emotions, aggressive instincts, and powerful desires would need the wisdom born of correct opinions from caregivers to avoid turning impulses into violence. A sense of community would be necessary when everything revolves around increasing sales and the desire to buy. Greater self-awareness would prevent the impulsiveness that fuels so many relationships lived in criticism and aggression.

As Pepe Mujica has rightly pointed out , capitalism is a cultural phenomenon, a kind of compulsion for money – it is no wonder that governments oriented towards individual accumulation and the creation of hierarchies end the Ministry of Culture, for example. Gaining spaces of inner freedom allows us to think about spaces of political freedom – to shape the social structure so that we can grow in harmony. 

We need to create spaces and times for reflection to avoid reducing the masses to fanaticism and exploitation. Thinking about oneself means avoiding being mere characters in the dreams of others. Or, as Marcus Aurelius would say, becoming “Caesars” ourselves (which is dangerous). With prudent criticism in mind, a little “daily meditation” from the Stoic tradition would not be amiss.

Afonso Jr. Ferreira de Lima 

 Encheiridion of Epictetus (2014). Translation from the Greek, introduction and commentary: Aldo Dinucci & Alfredo Julien. Annablume publisher/ University of Coimbra Press. https://ucdigitalis.uc.pt/pombalina/item/53859

Long live Vox Stoicism (blog). https://aldodinucci.blogspot.com

Marcus Aurelius (2023) Meditations : The Personal Writings of Marcus Aurelius. Penguin -Companhia das Letras.

Psychiatry DataBase . https://www.psychdb.com/personality/borderline

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