The Golden Sayings of Epictetus

Presented by

Public Domain Books

XLVI

The beginning of philosophy is to know the condition of one’s own mind. If a man recognises that this is in a weakly state, he will not then want to apply it to questions of the greatest moment. As it is, men who are not fit to swallow even a morsel, buy whole treatises and try to devour them. Accordingly they either vomit them up again, or suffer from indigestion, whence come gripings, fluxions, and fevers. Whereas they should have stopped to consider their capacity.

Continue...

I  •  II  •  III  •  IV  •  V  •  VI  •  VII  •  VIII  •  IX  •  X  •  XI  •  XII  •  XIII  •  XIV  •  XV  •  XVI  •  XVII  •  XVIII  •  XIX  •  XX  •  XXI  •  XXII  •  XXIII  •  XXIV  •  XXV  •  XXVI  •  XXVII  •  XXVIII  •  XXIX  •  XXX  •  XXXI  •  XXXII  •  XXXIII  •  XXXIV  •  XXXV  •  XXXVI  •  XXXVII  •  XXXVIII  •  XXXIX  •  XL  •  XLI  •  XLII  •  XLIII  •  XLIV  •  XLV  •  XLVI  •  XLVII  •  XLVIII  •  XLIX  •  L  •  LI  •  LII  •  LIII  •  LIV  •  LV  •  LVI  •  LVII  •  LVIII  •  LIX  •  LX  •  LXI  •  LXII  •  LXIII  •  LXIV  •  LXV  •  LXVI  •  LXVII  •  LXVIII  •  LXIX  •  LXX  •  LXXI  •  LXXII  •  LXXIII  •  LXXIV  •  LXXV  •  LXXVI  •  LXXVII  •  LXXVIII  •  LXXIX  •  LXXX  •  LXXXI  •  LXXXII  •  LXXXIII  •  LXXXIV  •  LXXXV  •  LXXXVI  •  LXXXVII  •  LXXXVIII  •  LXXXIX  •  XC  •  XCI  •  XCII  •  XCIII  •  XCIV  •  XCV  •  XCVI  •  XCVII  •  XCVIII  •  XCIX  •  C  •  CI  •  CII  •  CIII  •  CIV  •  CV  •  CVI  •  CVII  •  CVIII  •  CIX  •  CX  •  CXI  •  CXII  •  CXIII  •  CXIV  •  CXV  •  CXVI  •  CXVII  •  CXVIII  •  CXIX  •  CXX  •  CXXI  •  CXXII  •  CXXIII  •  CXXIV  •  CXXV  •  CXXVI  •  CXXVII  •  CXXVIII  •  CXXIX  •  CXXX  •  CXXXI  •  CXXXII  •  CXXXIII  •  CXXXIV  •  CXXXV  •  CXXXVI  •  CXXXVII  •  CXXXVIII  •  CXXXIX  •  CXL  •  CXLI  •  CXLII  •  CXLIII  •  CXLIV  •  CXLV  •  CXLVI  •  CXLVII  •  CXLVIII  •  CXLIX  •  CL  •  CLI  •  CLII  •  CLIII  •  CLIV  •  CLV  •  CLVI  •  CLVII  •  CLVIII  •  CLIX  •  CLX  •  CLXI  •  CLXII  •  CLXIII  •  CLXIV  •  CLXV  •  CLXVI  •  CLXVII  •  CLXVIII  •  CLXIX  •  CLXX  •  CLXXI  •  CLXXII  •  CLXXIII  •  CLXXIV  •  CLXXV  •  CLXXVI  •  CLXXVII  •  CLXXVIII  •  CLXXIX  •  CLXXX  •  CLXXXI  •  CLXXXII  •  CLXXXIII  •  CLXXXIV  •  CLXXXV  •  CLXXXVI  •  CLXXXVII  •  CLXXXVIII  •  CLXXXIX  •  Fragments Attributed to Epictetus

[Buy at Amazon]
The Apology, Phaedo and Crito of Plato; the Golden Sayings of Epictetus; the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius with Introductions and Notes (The Harvard Classics [Leatherbound], Deluxe Edition, Registered Edition)
By Benjamin Jowett
At Amazon