Stoa Conversations: Stoicism Applied

Caleb

Caleb Ontiveros and Michael Tremblay discuss how to build resilience, develop virtue, and make sense of the world through Stoic philosophy. One episode a week. Get the Stoa app: www.stoameditation.com/pod [https://www.stoameditation.com/pod] Get the Stoa Letter: www.stoaletter.com/subscribe [https://www.stoaletter.com/subscribe?utm_source=podcast_description] www.stoaletter.com

  1. 4D AGO

    Hunters Talk About Spears (Episode 205)

    Philosophy talks about big ideas. The good life. Virtue. Happiness. But talking about aspirations isn’t enough. You need mechanisms—concrete practices that actually change behavior. Caleb examines why serious thinkers focus on mechanisms over aspirations. Discussions about mechanisms force action and generate information. Discussions about aspirations turn into complaints about the world. The Stoics were good at this. They didn’t just discuss anger. Seneca and Marcus Aurelius gave specific advice about becoming less angry. They broke virtue down into smaller parts: self-control becomes orderliness, propriety, modesty, self-mastery. Each breakdown gets more specific and decision-relevant. But you can’t ignore aspiration entirely. You need both the effective cause (what brings about change) and the final cause (where you’re going). Training and performance. The concrete and the universal. The Stoic sage sees and acts with both the whole and the part in mind. Philosophy is tricky because the problems are abstract. But that’s exactly why you need to speak at the right level of detail. Mechanisms for a purpose. Aspirations to set the target. Concrete practice to get there. Download the Stoa app (it’s a free download): https://stoameditation.com/pod If you try the Stoa app and find it useful, but truly cannot afford it, email us and we’ll set you up with a free account. Listen to more episodes and learn more here: https://stoameditation.com/blog/stoa-conversations/ Thanks to Michael Levy for graciously letting us use his music in the conversations: https://ancientlyre.com/ Get full access to The Stoa Letter at www.stoaletter.com/subscribe

    8 min
  2. OCT 7

    Stoicism, Freedom, and Ernst Jünger with Sam Alaimo (Episode 204)

    Sam Alaimo is a Navy SEAL who discovered Stoicism after leaving the military. He is a cofounder of Zero Eyes, an AI company stopping gun violence, and writes at whatthen.org. Caleb and Sam discuss how affluent societies need philosophy, whether virtue alone makes life good, and why Ernst Jünger remains one of history’s most fascinating thinkers. The conversation moves from ancient philosophy to World War I trenches to the risks of letting AI do our thinking. (00:00) Sam’s background and writing journey (04:00) How Stoicism helped after military service (06:20) Why affluent societies invented Stoicism (08:00) AI as a war on human reason (10:30) Epictetus: the most extreme example (15:00) Marcus Aurelius: emperor and philosopher (20:10) Why Epictetus avoided the word “virtue” (24:10) Stoicism as energetic, not passive (26:20) Where the Stoics got it wrong (30:20) Existentialism and Stoicism on freedom (34:20) Ernst Jünger: war hero and philosopher (38:20) Storm of Steel and phenomenology of war (44:30) Philosophy divorced from reality (47:20) Jünger’s fiction and diaries Download the Stoa app (it’s a free download): https://stoameditation.com/pod If you try the Stoa app and find it useful, but truly cannot afford it, email us and we’ll set you up with a free account. Listen to more episodes and learn more here: https://stoameditation.com/blog/stoa-conversations/ Thanks to Michael Levy for graciously letting us use his music in the conversations: https://ancientlyre.com/ Get full access to The Stoa Letter at www.stoaletter.com/subscribe

    50 min
5
out of 5
43 Ratings

About

Caleb Ontiveros and Michael Tremblay discuss how to build resilience, develop virtue, and make sense of the world through Stoic philosophy. One episode a week. Get the Stoa app: www.stoameditation.com/pod [https://www.stoameditation.com/pod] Get the Stoa Letter: www.stoaletter.com/subscribe [https://www.stoaletter.com/subscribe?utm_source=podcast_description] www.stoaletter.com

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