Class 8 / 11 of The Stoics, a philosophy course by Dan Taylor. This week, we explore the revival of Stoicism in early modern Europe. We explore the underappreciated role of Justus Lipsius in popularising (Roman) Stoic ideas and synthesising them with Christianity. Our focus is then Michel de Montaigne. We explore Stoic resonances across his essays, with a particular focus on his final, masterly "Of Experience". Comparisons are drawn towards the end with Shakespeare's Hamlet.
About the course:
Pitched at an introductory to intermediate level, spanning the Stoics from the ancient Athenian porch to 21st century neo-Stoicisms.
Along the way we take in Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, as well as resonances in the Book of Ecclesiastes, the Dhammapada, Montaigne's essays and Spinoza. We explore how Stoic thinking is challenged by Nietzsche and Camus. We conclude with Viktor Frankl and Foucault on the search for meaning and the care of the self - logos and ethos.
Read more about the course, the readings and the materials here: [ Ссылка ]
This course was taught during the covid-19 lockdown of 2020. Each class had a YouTube lecture (here) then a two-hour Zoom discussion where things came to life.
This video isn't an exhaustive guide then nor a substitute for teaching. It is shared here simply out of goodwill, offering a longer and deeper introduction to thinkers who really matter.
Ещё видео!