Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius

Meditations

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Genre
Philosophy
Citation
book.chapter.section
Chunks
486
§1.1.1–§12.36.1
Aligned sentences
7,916
日本語 2484 · English 1505 · 简体中文 1682 · 한국어 2245

Source edition

Marcus Aurelius. M. Antoninus Imperator Ad Se Ipsum. Leopold, Jan Hendrik, editor. Leipzig: Teubner, 1908

Source data

Perseus Digital Library · CC BY-SA 4.0

Cloned and adapted by Humanitext, with ongoing edits.

Summary

Written by the Roman Emperor and Stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius, Meditations is a collection of personal reflections and philosophical thoughts on how to live a virtuous life in accordance with the rational order of the universe. Formatted as a private spiritual diary rather than a formal treatise, the work consists of aphorisms, self-admonitions, and deep meditations on nature, duty, and mortality. The work opens with a moving expression of gratitude, where the author recalls the moral virtues and valuable lessons he inherited from his family, teachers, and the divine. Throughout the middle sections, he confronts the transience of human existence, the inevitability of death, and the constant flux of the cosmos, urging himself to remain indifferent to external fame or pain while focusing on keeping his ruling center (hegemonikon) pure and serving the common good. As the work draws to a close, it achieves a serene acceptance of destiny, concluding that because the universe is governed by a benevolent providence, one must welcome the end of life with a tranquil mind, just like an actor departing the stage contentedly.

Contents

486 chunks

Cited by book.chapter.section