Theme: Agency

  • WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF PHILOSOPHY? 1) To develop mental fitness and distance fro

    WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF PHILOSOPHY?

    1) To develop mental fitness and distance from our impulses (to develop agency)

    2) To accumulate an inventory of human errors and bias so that we do not make them in our own lives, and are not affected by others who employ them.

    3) To survey the sets of myths and paradigms (stories we tell ourselves) such that we can choose goals in our lives.

    4) (the bad part) to find a verbal means of achieving some degree of the mindfulness that is trainable through religion(mythology), ritual (prayer or repetitious action), and self authoring (stoicism – a ritual), and meditation (a ritual in and of itself). Mindfuless serves as a sedative for animal impulse, without the soporific affect of chemicals

    that interfere with processing in general..

    As far as I know that is the end of philosophy. The rest is just left to religion(nonsense/lies) or science (decidability/truth).

    Nearly all of the corpus of philosophy is reducible to fantasy moral literature (french), or fantasy psychological Literature (german), fantasy pseudoscientific literature (ashkenazi), or the attempt to develop scientific versions of those fields (english, American.)

    The problem with science, law proper, and truth proper is that in matters of the personal and social we are not ambivalent neutral surveyors of the material – but seek only personal and group advantage in whatever we can filter from it to advance our interests.

    Yet science and truth are uncomfortable and dehumanizing.

    So to no small degree, philosophy is PRACTICED as the pseudoscience and pseudo-rationalism of finding excuses that comfort us given our genetic, social, economic, cultural, and temporal conditions without relying on the demands easily falsified and supernatural faith.

    In other words, like religion, it’s therapeutic self medication – sedation.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 15:02:00 UTC

  • photos_and_videos/your_posts/37010185_10156491961647264_2361468930255486976_o_10

    photos_and_videos/your_posts/37010185_10156491961647264_2361468930255486976_o_10

    photos_and_videos/your_posts/37010185_10156491961647264_2361468930255486976_o_10156491961637264.jpg SELF AUTHORING – STOICISM IS THE ANVIL OF THE SELF

    (Stoicism in Scientific Terms)

    Self Authoring and Journaling are the best training you can give yourself – other than basic physical fitness. I promise you.

    Why? Because we evolved our minds to search for possibilities optimistically. So its very easy to say stupid things to yourself in the madness of the moment; and much harder to write down stupid things in organized prose; and much, much harder to read stupid things you’ve written in organized prose even a day later. So journaling rapidly teaches you the frailty of human contemplation and forecasting. It teaches you intellectual honesty. This is why, prior to the leftist destruction of education, we were all taught to keep a diary (journal) of our thoughts – once we have any to journal that is. 😉

    Self authoring is simply setting goals for yourself for life, the year, and the day. And reviewing them. And revising them. That’s it.

    If you add two checklists to your life goals (“seven habits”) so that you satisfy your full self’s needs. And a set of “virtues” (you must select from the virtues you want, not assume all virtues will help you), then this is effectively a project plan for your life, that provides you with mindfulness.

    If you read Marcus Aurelius, do so with the intent of learning how to write to yourself. His book is the best living example of an exceptional man’s use of thinking about his thoughts of the day, by writing them down.

    You must write honestly. Most of us will write very simple things. We are not Marcus Aurelius, Emperor. We are mere Warriors for the Working Day.

    And you must not worry about the structure of your prose – punctuation or sentence structure or spelling even. That will come with practice.

    All plans are created only to assist you in thinking and measuring yourself, as well as insulating you from the opinions and coercions of others.

    However, the best strategic plan is opportunism in pursuit of your goals, and searching for and creating opportunities for the achievement of your goals. And so any plan is merely the default opportunity you plan to seize unless a better opportunity for a different plan surprises you.

    I work (like Napoleon) by doing an exhaustive amount of research then making a dozen or two plans, and then doing whatever will advance the majority of those plans, so that by accident of iteration, one of the twelve plans (or more) will work out. This is too computationally difficult for many people so keeping it simple is better for them. You have to discover your own equilibrium plan, revision, and opportunity – by trial and error.

    Now, I find that fb and my web site, and emails to myself work as a good journal for me and I just mark private stuff private (for me only). The reason is that when I write in public I am even more honest with myself than when I write to myself in private. This is a trick of personal psychology. All of us are different. I have a lot of confidence and so I don’t mind being public. Others won’t be.

    And the only way to ensure that you are not talking madness to yourself (letting the elephant run away with the rider), is to write it down and review your progress.

    You wouldn’t believe how much your mind will lie to you on behalf of the Elephant if you do not keep a journal on the directions of the Rider.

    But the fact remains – you are able to master yourself (agency) by practice if you are willing to spend 90 days practicing.

    After a year you will find you are dependent upon using the writing to feel you are thinking clearly and organizing your thoughts.

    When you have an idea and immediately feel the draw to ‘write it out’ and organize your thoughts then you are engaged in Self Authoring, and the training is complete. It’s only application after that.

    If you do this you will need no self-help books, no great philosophies, no religions, no teachers, other than to read a book that expands your knowledge now and then.

    There is no secret to the Ritual of Self Authoring, and questioning information as to whether it improves your goals or not.

    No one else’s opinions or attitudes matter. Events do not matter. All that matters is your gradual progress to your virtues and goals.

    -THE VIRTUES-

    EXCELLENCE

    Excellence is striving is to be better than the day before, never giving in to the voice that says, “That’s good enough.” Instead, listen for the voice that says, “Now that’s awesome!”

    ASSERTIVENESS

    Unapologetically go after what you want in life. Be assertive and let the world feel the full weight of who you are. Live with passion … without being a jackass.

    COMPETITIVENESS

    ( … )

    COMMITMENT

    Do what you say you’re going to do without excuse. Suit up, show up everyday, and give your best effort.

    TENACITY

    Tenacity is the ability to stick it out and never give up, to keep going when things are tough and there is no end in sight. This is the only way to live a life of contentedness because regret only happens when we give up.

    FITNESS

    ( … )

    VIOLENCE

    ( … )

    COURAGE

    Courage isn’t the absence of fear, it’s the strength to move forward in the face of fear. Courage is perhaps the most vital virtue to develop. When we feel the fear and do it anyway we develop courage.

    MINDFULNESS

    ( … )

    LOYALTY

    Staying true to yourself and standing by someone else’s side when they face adversity is mastery of loyalty. Never giving up on someone, no matter how hard it gets, for as long as it takes: that is the true measure of any great relationship.

    RESPECT

    The respect you show to others is a reflection of your self respect. For this reason, respect is something you do for yourself. That doesn’t mean you have to agree with others, but you simply value yourself enough to give others respect.

    HONOR

    Honor is respecting those over you and acting in a way that is deserving of respect from those under you. Honor is the reputation and alliance that you earn from those you serve and those who serve you.

    AUTHENTICY

    Being true to yourself isn’t easy. Pulling off the mask that hides your flaws and living in the fullness of who your are creates a contagion that gives others the courage to do the same.

    COOPERATION

    The most important virtue for success is the ability to cooperate. If you can’t play well with others you’re going to get kicked out of the sandbox. Learn to cooperate and you’ll be successful.

    TEAMWORK

    ( … )

    HONESTY

    You are only as good as your word. If your word isn’t worth anything, then you have lost a piece of your soul. Being honest is difficult, but it is the bedrock of character. A house is only as strong as its foundation.

    INTEGRITY

    Integrity is the solidarity of our virtues; it is the quality by which we live out our values and prioritize our principles. It is the culmination of character in action. To act with integrity is to be a good man.

    HUMILITY

    Humility is the leadership quality of taking the brunt of the blame when things go south and giving away the majority of the credit when things go well. The leader who practices humility will never ask anyone to do what they themselves cannot do. Humility is leading from a position of service.

    PRUDENCE

    Prudence is the capacity to face reality squarely in the eye, without allowing emotion or ego to get in the way, and do what is best for the team.

    TACT

    Be honest, but be tactful. Remember there is another human being on the other end of your words. Strive to live by the golden rule, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

    EMPATHY

    Empathy is the ability to put aside your ego, step into someone else’s shoes and experience their emotions. When we do this, we create connection. The number one emotional need we all have is for connection.

    COMPASSION

    The ability to step outside of yourself and perform an act of selflessness: this is the foundation of compassion. To be compassionate is to value others above yourself for the sole purpose of contributing to the greater good.

    GRACE

    Grace is giving something to someone who hasn’t earned it, doesn’t deserve it and yet we give it anyway. Simply put, grace is giving someone dessert even though they didn’t eat their vegetables.

    FORGIVENESS

    When we forgive we are giving up our right to collect on a debt. “An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind,” said Gandhi. When I no longer have the need for revenge, then I have forgiven.

    KINDNESS

    There is strength in kindness. A simple smile, a kind word or even an arm on a shoulder can change someone’s life for the better and thereby change the world … Kindness is your super-power.

    GENEROSITY

    Maya Angelou said, “People won’t remember what you said or did, they will remember how you made them feel.” Be generous with how you treat everyone … they will feel amazing and so will you.

    GRATITUDE

    Did you know you can’t be resentful and grateful at the same time? Try it. To be truly grateful is to consider all the gifts you have been given and to understand that no matter what, there is always something for which to be grateful.

    PATIENCE

    There is no truer act of love than patience … just ask anyone who has raised a two-year-old.

    ADAPTABILITY

    “Improvise, Adapt and Overcome” is the mantra of the United States Marine Corps. Adaptability is the ability to be flexible to change and gain the advantage in any situation. Things that aren’t adaptable break … things that aren’t adaptable don’t survive.

    CONTENTMENT

    Dissatisfaction is the misconception that you need more than what you already have. Contentment is a mind-set: it’s choosing not to look at lack but see the abundance that already exists.James Lyons Sr.Damn……does that mean I didn’t invent neuro(plus)plastictesis…I just tried to rebrand a known I known process?

    Gosh darn it, the more ya know.

    Good thing I didn’t try and claim it someone would sue me.Jul 12, 2018 3:07pmCurt Doolittleits called ‘stoicism’. Really. The rest of stoicism is merely exploration of the individual virtues – selecting from the chinese menu and making use of them to create your dish of life.Jul 12, 2018 3:13pmPaul FranklinDon’t need nothing else, when you have this. I mean, don’t need no other religion, no ‘God’ required.

    No other God than the one before we are completely honest? And when that is we ourselves?Jul 12, 2018 4:22pmVictor AckermanFantastic post. A very importantly timed one for me. Thank you for your wisdom.Jul 12, 2018 8:08pmCurt DoolittleIll work on refining it a bit. Not quite there.Jul 12, 2018 8:12pmJames SantagataWhat I love about this stuff, is that many of us, me including, stumbled on this,as the only thing that made sense in a Blue-Pilled world and it is so comforting to say, “omg, this is actually a fully formed philosophy” BUT we have the added advantage of neuroscience and 2.000 years of accumulated history to take it even further. Love it.Jul 12, 2018 9:17pmJames SantagataAnd microeconomics + nanoeconomics + behavioral economics. Omg, I’m gonna orgasm. We have the Holy Grail.Jul 12, 2018 9:20pmCurt DoolittleJames Santagata expand on that so I can post it?Jul 12, 2018 9:21pmJames SantagataCurt Doolittle We can now mathematically model Stoicism and we understand not just ourselves but everyone we interact with, through (as you are wont to say) incentives, we can look at max and min as well as elasticity / inelasticity through microeconomics and with all this granular data, we can look at nanoeconomisc (individual transaction) and then set all this against behavioral economisc / neuroeconomics and see that Stoicism is the way forward and we can improve it Stoicism 2.0 but added a few things and emphasizing a few others.Jul 12, 2018 9:25pmCurt Doolittlenow, give me a replacement for “what I love about this stuff”

    what ‘stuff’Jul 12, 2018 9:42pmJames SantagataWhat is powerful about Stoicism is that forces us to maintain an INTERNAL locus of control along with high agency. At the same time, filtering out emotions by considering what we have rather than what we don’t and aligning with natural law allow us to think, calculate and act in the most efficient, effective manner possible. Conserving energy, creating the smallest emotional wake (for ourselves and others, thus mitigating or eliminating negative 2nd and 3rd order effects) and economizing motion as well as emotion (Jim Beam talking).Jul 12, 2018 9:46pmJames Lyons Sr.Bourbon! I knew your fire was fueled proper like!

    Basil Hayden is my favorite libationJul 12, 2018 9:52pmJohn MarkCurt do your dozen or two plans have significant overlap? (Are some of them variations of the same basic outline with same basic goal?)Jul 13, 2018 12:27amJohn MarkBTW powerful post & I love the list of virtues. It seems a person could choose to pursue virtues that shore up weaknesses e.g. in Big5 personality traits (if naturally high agreeableness, pursue assertiveness).Jul 13, 2018 12:27amCurt Doolittleyes ;)Jul 13, 2018 1:56amGreg HamiltonThe Tactical Virtues: Strength, Courage, Mastery, and Honor.

    Well worth the read

    https://amzn.to/2ukiX6xJul 13, 2018 2:05amTobias DarbyJordan Peterson, Eat your heart out.. this is a proper guide..Jul 13, 2018 2:42amTobias DarbyI like tactical violenceJul 13, 2018 2:46amTobias DarbyHi Curt Doolittle.

    I had a shot at violence..

    VIOLENCE:

    Be polite. Keep your word. Threats without action are lies. Avoid ultimatums unless you are prepared to follow up on your end of the bargain.. Protect you and yours. Self Defence is a responsibility, not merely a right. Violence will solve most problems. Order and Justice are simply synonyms for violence.Jul 13, 2018 4:06amCurt Doolittleexcellent!!!Jul 13, 2018 7:57amCurt Doolittlewhat’s that from?Jul 13, 2018 7:57amJames SantagataCurt Doolittle Great paper — “RETHINKING OUR COMPOSING, RECOMPOSING OUR THINKING: COMPOSITION STUDIES AND COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY CONSIDER WRITING” from page 4 (the abstract down) https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/wcu/f/FergusonOles2011.pdfJul 13, 2018 8:04amPatrick HabetsWhoso would be a man must be a nonconformist. Ralph Waldo Emerson

    The warrior is a nonconformist. He refuses to lower his standards or his code of ethics to please others. The fact that other men may consider this action or that action to be acceptable, means nothing to the warrior. He is not interested in conforming to the opinions of others. He is only interested in living up to his own standards which he sets for himself.

    If the warrior was the type of man that simply went along with the crowd, he would not be so rare. Anyone can bend their standards to conform to the standards of the day, but it takes a real man to stand firm concerning his ethics when all other men are trying to convince him to conform to their way of thinking. The warrior has to not only have confidence in his own code of honor, but also has to have confidence in his ability to walk alone against the tide of public opinion.

    This attitude of independence is what makes the warrior a rare man of honor. He does what he knows in his heart to be right, independent of what anyone else says or does. He refuses to play the game of situational ethics. His ethics are set in stone.

    Others may not be able to decipher his code or understand his way of thinking, but they know that the warrior is a man of principle. He is not a man that can be manipulated by popular opinion or moral fads. The true warrior is a true nonconformist and always has been. Bohdi Sanders ~ author of the TOP 15 Bestseller, BUSHIDO: The Way of the Warrior, available on Amazon at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075TH53C9. Signed copies are available from: https://thewisdomwarrior.com.Jul 13, 2018 9:38amBryan Nova BreyMaddy Smith to improve agency.Jul 13, 2018 12:58pmGreg HamiltonI prefer strategic violence. But violence is a tool.Jul 13, 2018 1:08pmJorn BirxGood.Jul 14, 2018 8:03amNick ZitoAccountability !?!Jul 20, 2018 3:58amPatrick HabetsWhy do they hate the samurai?Jul 20, 2018 3:59amSELF AUTHORING – STOICISM IS THE ANVIL OF THE SELF

    (Stoicism in Scientific Terms)

    Self Authoring and Journaling are the best training you can give yourself – other than basic physical fitness. I promise you.

    Why? Because we evolved our minds to search for possibilities optimistically. So its very easy to say stupid things to yourself in the madness of the moment; and much harder to write down stupid things in organized prose; and much, much harder to read stupid things you’ve written in organized prose even a day later. So journaling rapidly teaches you the frailty of human contemplation and forecasting. It teaches you intellectual honesty. This is why, prior to the leftist destruction of education, we were all taught to keep a diary (journal) of our thoughts – once we have any to journal that is. 😉

    Self authoring is simply setting goals for yourself for life, the year, and the day. And reviewing them. And revising them. That’s it.

    If you add two checklists to your life goals (“seven habits”) so that you satisfy your full self’s needs. And a set of “virtues” (you must select from the virtues you want, not assume all virtues will help you), then this is effectively a project plan for your life, that provides you with mindfulness.

    If you read Marcus Aurelius, do so with the intent of learning how to write to yourself. His book is the best living example of an exceptional man’s use of thinking about his thoughts of the day, by writing them down.

    You must write honestly. Most of us will write very simple things. We are not Marcus Aurelius, Emperor. We are mere Warriors for the Working Day.

    And you must not worry about the structure of your prose – punctuation or sentence structure or spelling even. That will come with practice.

    All plans are created only to assist you in thinking and measuring yourself, as well as insulating you from the opinions and coercions of others.

    However, the best strategic plan is opportunism in pursuit of your goals, and searching for and creating opportunities for the achievement of your goals. And so any plan is merely the default opportunity you plan to seize unless a better opportunity for a different plan surprises you.

    I work (like Napoleon) by doing an exhaustive amount of research then making a dozen or two plans, and then doing whatever will advance the majority of those plans, so that by accident of iteration, one of the twelve plans (or more) will work out. This is too computationally difficult for many people so keeping it simple is better for them. You have to discover your own equilibrium plan, revision, and opportunity – by trial and error.

    Now, I find that fb and my web site, and emails to myself work as a good journal for me and I just mark private stuff private (for me only). The reason is that when I write in public I am even more honest with myself than when I write to myself in private. This is a trick of personal psychology. All of us are different. I have a lot of confidence and so I don’t mind being public. Others won’t be.

    And the only way to ensure that you are not talking madness to yourself (letting the elephant run away with the rider), is to write it down and review your progress.

    You wouldn’t believe how much your mind will lie to you on behalf of the Elephant if you do not keep a journal on the directions of the Rider.

    But the fact remains – you are able to master yourself (agency) by practice if you are willing to spend 90 days practicing.

    After a year you will find you are dependent upon using the writing to feel you are thinking clearly and organizing your thoughts.

    When you have an idea and immediately feel the draw to ‘write it out’ and organize your thoughts then you are engaged in Self Authoring, and the training is complete. It’s only application after that.

    If you do this you will need no self-help books, no great philosophies, no religions, no teachers, other than to read a book that expands your knowledge now and then.

    There is no secret to the Ritual of Self Authoring, and questioning information as to whether it improves your goals or not.

    No one else’s opinions or attitudes matter. Events do not matter. All that matters is your gradual progress to your virtues and goals.

    -THE VIRTUES-

    EXCELLENCE

    Excellence is striving is to be better than the day before, never giving in to the voice that says, “That’s good enough.” Instead, listen for the voice that says, “Now that’s awesome!”

    ASSERTIVENESS

    Unapologetically go after what you want in life. Be assertive and let the world feel the full weight of who you are. Live with passion … without being a jackass.

    COMPETITIVENESS

    ( … )

    COMMITMENT

    Do what you say you’re going to do without excuse. Suit up, show up everyday, and give your best effort.

    TENACITY

    Tenacity is the ability to stick it out and never give up, to keep going when things are tough and there is no end in sight. This is the only way to live a life of contentedness because regret only happens when we give up.

    FITNESS

    ( … )

    VIOLENCE

    ( … )

    COURAGE

    Courage isn’t the absence of fear, it’s the strength to move forward in the face of fear. Courage is perhaps the most vital virtue to develop. When we feel the fear and do it anyway we develop courage.

    MINDFULNESS

    ( … )

    LOYALTY

    Staying true to yourself and standing by someone else’s side when they face adversity is mastery of loyalty. Never giving up on someone, no matter how hard it gets, for as long as it takes: that is the true measure of any great relationship.

    RESPECT

    The respect you show to others is a reflection of your self respect. For this reason, respect is something you do for yourself. That doesn’t mean you have to agree with others, but you simply value yourself enough to give others respect.

    HONOR

    Honor is respecting those over you and acting in a way that is deserving of respect from those under you. Honor is the reputation and alliance that you earn from those you serve and those who serve you.

    AUTHENTICY

    Being true to yourself isn’t easy. Pulling off the mask that hides your flaws and living in the fullness of who your are creates a contagion that gives others the courage to do the same.

    COOPERATION

    The most important virtue for success is the ability to cooperate. If you can’t play well with others you’re going to get kicked out of the sandbox. Learn to cooperate and you’ll be successful.

    TEAMWORK

    ( … )

    HONESTY

    You are only as good as your word. If your word isn’t worth anything, then you have lost a piece of your soul. Being honest is difficult, but it is the bedrock of character. A house is only as strong as its foundation.

    INTEGRITY

    Integrity is the solidarity of our virtues; it is the quality by which we live out our values and prioritize our principles. It is the culmination of character in action. To act with integrity is to be a good man.

    HUMILITY

    Humility is the leadership quality of taking the brunt of the blame when things go south and giving away the majority of the credit when things go well. The leader who practices humility will never ask anyone to do what they themselves cannot do. Humility is leading from a position of service.

    PRUDENCE

    Prudence is the capacity to face reality squarely in the eye, without allowing emotion or ego to get in the way, and do what is best for the team.

    TACT

    Be honest, but be tactful. Remember there is another human being on the other end of your words. Strive to live by the golden rule, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

    EMPATHY

    Empathy is the ability to put aside your ego, step into someone else’s shoes and experience their emotions. When we do this, we create connection. The number one emotional need we all have is for connection.

    COMPASSION

    The ability to step outside of yourself and perform an act of selflessness: this is the foundation of compassion. To be compassionate is to value others above yourself for the sole purpose of contributing to the greater good.

    GRACE

    Grace is giving something to someone who hasn’t earned it, doesn’t deserve it and yet we give it anyway. Simply put, grace is giving someone dessert even though they didn’t eat their vegetables.

    FORGIVENESS

    When we forgive we are giving up our right to collect on a debt. “An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind,” said Gandhi. When I no longer have the need for revenge, then I have forgiven.

    KINDNESS

    There is strength in kindness. A simple smile, a kind word or even an arm on a shoulder can change someone’s life for the better and thereby change the world … Kindness is your super-power.

    GENEROSITY

    Maya Angelou said, “People won’t remember what you said or did, they will remember how you made them feel.” Be generous with how you treat everyone … they will feel amazing and so will you.

    GRATITUDE

    Did you know you can’t be resentful and grateful at the same time? Try it. To be truly grateful is to consider all the gifts you have been given and to understand that no matter what, there is always something for which to be grateful.

    PATIENCE

    There is no truer act of love than patience … just ask anyone who has raised a two-year-old.

    ADAPTABILITY

    “Improvise, Adapt and Overcome” is the mantra of the United States Marine Corps. Adaptability is the ability to be flexible to change and gain the advantage in any situation. Things that aren’t adaptable break … things that aren’t adaptable don’t survive.

    CONTENTMENT

    Dissatisfaction is the misconception that you need more than what you already have. Contentment is a mind-set: it’s choosing not to look at lack but see the abundance that already exists.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 14:10:00 UTC

  • photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/37010185_10156491961647264_23614689

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/37010185_10156491961647264_23614689

    photos_and_videos/TimelinePhotos_43196237263/37010185_10156491961647264_2361468930255486976_o_10156491961637264.jpg SELF AUTHORING – STOICISM IS THE ANVIL OF THE SELF

    (Stoicism in Scientific Terms)

    Self Authoring and Journaling are the best training you can give yourself – other than basic physical fitness. I promise you.

    Why? Because we evolved our minds to search for possibilities optimistically. So its very easy to say stupid things to yourself in the madness of the moment; and much harder to write down stupid things in organized prose; and much, much harder to read stupid things you’ve written in organized prose even a day later. So journaling rapidly teaches you the frailty of human contemplation and forecasting. It teaches you intellectual honesty. This is why, prior to the leftist destruction of education, we were all taught to keep a diary (journal) of our thoughts – once we have any to journal that is. 😉

    Self authoring is simply setting goals for yourself for life, the year, and the day. And reviewing them. And revising them. That’s it.

    If you add two checklists to your life goals (“seven habits”) so that you satisfy your full self’s needs. And a set of “virtues” (you must select from the virtues you want, not assume all virtues will help you), then this is effectively a project plan for your life, that provides you with mindfulness.

    If you read Marcus Aurelius, do so with the intent of learning how to write to yourself. His book is the best living example of an exceptional man’s use of thinking about his thoughts of the day, by writing them down.

    You must write honestly. Most of us will write very simple things. We are not Marcus Aurelius, Emperor. We are mere Warriors for the Working Day.

    And you must not worry about the structure of your prose – punctuation or sentence structure or spelling even. That will come with practice.

    All plans are created only to assist you in thinking and measuring yourself, as well as insulating you from the opinions and coercions of others.

    However, the best strategic plan is opportunism in pursuit of your goals, and searching for and creating opportunities for the achievement of your goals. And so any plan is merely the default opportunity you plan to seize unless a better opportunity for a different plan surprises you.

    I work (like Napoleon) by doing an exhaustive amount of research then making a dozen or two plans, and then doing whatever will advance the majority of those plans, so that by accident of iteration, one of the twelve plans (or more) will work out. This is too computationally difficult for many people so keeping it simple is better for them. You have to discover your own equilibrium plan, revision, and opportunity – by trial and error.

    Now, I find that fb and my web site, and emails to myself work as a good journal for me and I just mark private stuff private (for me only). The reason is that when I write in public I am even more honest with myself than when I write to myself in private. This is a trick of personal psychology. All of us are different. I have a lot of confidence and so I don’t mind being public. Others won’t be.

    And the only way to ensure that you are not talking madness to yourself (letting the elephant run away with the rider), is to write it down and review your progress.

    You wouldn’t believe how much your mind will lie to you on behalf of the Elephant if you do not keep a journal on the directions of the Rider.

    But the fact remains – you are able to master yourself (agency) by practice if you are willing to spend 90 days practicing.

    After a year you will find you are dependent upon using the writing to feel you are thinking clearly and organizing your thoughts.

    When you have an idea and immediately feel the draw to ‘write it out’ and organize your thoughts then you are engaged in Self Authoring, and the training is complete. It’s only application after that.

    If you do this you will need no self-help books, no great philosophies, no religions, no teachers, other than to read a book that expands your knowledge now and then.

    There is no secret to the Ritual of Self Authoring, and questioning information as to whether it improves your goals or not.

    No one else’s opinions or attitudes matter. Events do not matter. All that matters is your gradual progress to your virtues and goals.

    -THE VIRTUES-

    EXCELLENCE

    Excellence is striving is to be better than the day before, never giving in to the voice that says, “That’s good enough.” Instead, listen for the voice that says, “Now that’s awesome!”

    ASSERTIVENESS

    Unapologetically go after what you want in life. Be assertive and let the world feel the full weight of who you are. Live with passion … without being a jackass.

    COMPETITIVENESS

    ( … )

    COMMITMENT

    Do what you say you’re going to do without excuse. Suit up, show up everyday, and give your best effort.

    TENACITY

    Tenacity is the ability to stick it out and never give up, to keep going when things are tough and there is no end in sight. This is the only way to live a life of contentedness because regret only happens when we give up.

    FITNESS

    ( … )

    VIOLENCE

    ( … )

    COURAGE

    Courage isn’t the absence of fear, it’s the strength to move forward in the face of fear. Courage is perhaps the most vital virtue to develop. When we feel the fear and do it anyway we develop courage.

    MINDFULNESS

    ( … )

    LOYALTY

    Staying true to yourself and standing by someone else’s side when they face adversity is mastery of loyalty. Never giving up on someone, no matter how hard it gets, for as long as it takes: that is the true measure of any great relationship.

    RESPECT

    The respect you show to others is a reflection of your self respect. For this reason, respect is something you do for yourself. That doesn’t mean you have to agree with others, but you simply value yourself enough to give others respect.

    HONOR

    Honor is respecting those over you and acting in a way that is deserving of respect from those under you. Honor is the reputation and alliance that you earn from those you serve and those who serve you.

    AUTHENTICY

    Being true to yourself isn’t easy. Pulling off the mask that hides your flaws and living in the fullness of who your are creates a contagion that gives others the courage to do the same.

    COOPERATION

    The most important virtue for success is the ability to cooperate. If you can’t play well with others you’re going to get kicked out of the sandbox. Learn to cooperate and you’ll be successful.

    TEAMWORK

    ( … )

    HONESTY

    You are only as good as your word. If your word isn’t worth anything, then you have lost a piece of your soul. Being honest is difficult, but it is the bedrock of character. A house is only as strong as its foundation.

    INTEGRITY

    Integrity is the solidarity of our virtues; it is the quality by which we live out our values and prioritize our principles. It is the culmination of character in action. To act with integrity is to be a good man.

    HUMILITY

    Humility is the leadership quality of taking the brunt of the blame when things go south and giving away the majority of the credit when things go well. The leader who practices humility will never ask anyone to do what they themselves cannot do. Humility is leading from a position of service.

    PRUDENCE

    Prudence is the capacity to face reality squarely in the eye, without allowing emotion or ego to get in the way, and do what is best for the team.

    TACT

    Be honest, but be tactful. Remember there is another human being on the other end of your words. Strive to live by the golden rule, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

    EMPATHY

    Empathy is the ability to put aside your ego, step into someone else’s shoes and experience their emotions. When we do this, we create connection. The number one emotional need we all have is for connection.

    COMPASSION

    The ability to step outside of yourself and perform an act of selflessness: this is the foundation of compassion. To be compassionate is to value others above yourself for the sole purpose of contributing to the greater good.

    GRACE

    Grace is giving something to someone who hasn’t earned it, doesn’t deserve it and yet we give it anyway. Simply put, grace is giving someone dessert even though they didn’t eat their vegetables.

    FORGIVENESS

    When we forgive we are giving up our right to collect on a debt. “An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind,” said Gandhi. When I no longer have the need for revenge, then I have forgiven.

    KINDNESS

    There is strength in kindness. A simple smile, a kind word or even an arm on a shoulder can change someone’s life for the better and thereby change the world … Kindness is your super-power.

    GENEROSITY

    Maya Angelou said, “People won’t remember what you said or did, they will remember how you made them feel.” Be generous with how you treat everyone … they will feel amazing and so will you.

    GRATITUDE

    Did you know you can’t be resentful and grateful at the same time? Try it. To be truly grateful is to consider all the gifts you have been given and to understand that no matter what, there is always something for which to be grateful.

    PATIENCE

    There is no truer act of love than patience … just ask anyone who has raised a two-year-old.

    ADAPTABILITY

    “Improvise, Adapt and Overcome” is the mantra of the United States Marine Corps. Adaptability is the ability to be flexible to change and gain the advantage in any situation. Things that aren’t adaptable break … things that aren’t adaptable don’t survive.

    CONTENTMENT

    Dissatisfaction is the misconception that you need more than what you already have. Contentment is a mind-set: it’s choosing not to look at lack but see the abundance that already exists.James Lyons Sr.Damn……does that mean I didn’t invent neuro(plus)plastictesis…I just tried to rebrand a known I known process?

    Gosh darn it, the more ya know.

    Good thing I didn’t try and claim it someone would sue me.Jul 12, 2018 3:07pmCurt Doolittleits called ‘stoicism’. Really. The rest of stoicism is merely exploration of the individual virtues – selecting from the chinese menu and making use of them to create your dish of life.Jul 12, 2018 3:13pmPaul FranklinDon’t need nothing else, when you have this. I mean, don’t need no other religion, no ‘God’ required.

    No other God than the one before we are completely honest? And when that is we ourselves?Jul 12, 2018 4:22pmVictor AckermanFantastic post. A very importantly timed one for me. Thank you for your wisdom.Jul 12, 2018 8:08pmCurt DoolittleIll work on refining it a bit. Not quite there.Jul 12, 2018 8:12pmJames SantagataWhat I love about this stuff, is that many of us, me including, stumbled on this,as the only thing that made sense in a Blue-Pilled world and it is so comforting to say, “omg, this is actually a fully formed philosophy” BUT we have the added advantage of neuroscience and 2.000 years of accumulated history to take it even further. Love it.Jul 12, 2018 9:17pmJames SantagataAnd microeconomics + nanoeconomics + behavioral economics. Omg, I’m gonna orgasm. We have the Holy Grail.Jul 12, 2018 9:20pmCurt Doolittle@[525087895:2048:James Santagata] expand on that so I can post it?Jul 12, 2018 9:21pmJames Santagata@[741197263:2048:Curt Doolittle] We can now mathematically model Stoicism and we understand not just ourselves but everyone we interact with, through (as you are wont to say) incentives, we can look at max and min as well as elasticity / inelasticity through microeconomics and with all this granular data, we can look at nanoeconomisc (individual transaction) and then set all this against behavioral economisc / neuroeconomics and see that Stoicism is the way forward and we can improve it Stoicism 2.0 but added a few things and emphasizing a few others.Jul 12, 2018 9:25pmCurt Doolittlenow, give me a replacement for “what I love about this stuff”

    what ‘stuff’Jul 12, 2018 9:42pmJames SantagataWhat is powerful about Stoicism is that forces us to maintain an INTERNAL locus of control along with high agency. At the same time, filtering out emotions by considering what we have rather than what we don’t and aligning with natural law allow us to think, calculate and act in the most efficient, effective manner possible. Conserving energy, creating the smallest emotional wake (for ourselves and others, thus mitigating or eliminating negative 2nd and 3rd order effects) and economizing motion as well as emotion (Jim Beam talking).Jul 12, 2018 9:46pmJames Lyons Sr.Bourbon! I knew your fire was fueled proper like!

    Basil Hayden is my favorite libationJul 12, 2018 9:52pmJohn MarkCurt do your dozen or two plans have significant overlap? (Are some of them variations of the same basic outline with same basic goal?)Jul 13, 2018 12:27amJohn MarkBTW powerful post & I love the list of virtues. It seems a person could choose to pursue virtues that shore up weaknesses e.g. in Big5 personality traits (if naturally high agreeableness, pursue assertiveness).Jul 13, 2018 12:27amCurt Doolittleyes ;)Jul 13, 2018 1:56amGreg HamiltonThe Tactical Virtues: Strength, Courage, Mastery, and Honor.

    Well worth the read

    https://amzn.to/2ukiX6xJul 13, 2018 2:05amTobias DarbyJordan Peterson, Eat your heart out.. this is a proper guide..Jul 13, 2018 2:42amTobias DarbyI like tactical violenceJul 13, 2018 2:46amPatrick HabetsJul 13, 2018 3:24amTobias DarbyHi @[741197263:2048:Curt Doolittle].

    I had a shot at violence..

    VIOLENCE:

    Be polite. Keep your word. Threats without action are lies. Avoid ultimatums unless you are prepared to follow up on your end of the bargain.. Protect you and yours. Self Defence is a responsibility, not merely a right. Violence will solve most problems. Order and Justice are simply synonyms for violence.Jul 13, 2018 4:06amCurt Doolittleexcellent!!!Jul 13, 2018 7:57amCurt Doolittlewhat’s that from?Jul 13, 2018 7:57amJames Santagata@[741197263:2048:Curt Doolittle] Great paper — “RETHINKING OUR COMPOSING, RECOMPOSING OUR THINKING: COMPOSITION STUDIES AND COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY CONSIDER WRITING” from page 4 (the abstract down) https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/wcu/f/FergusonOles2011.pdfJul 13, 2018 8:04amPatrick HabetsWhoso would be a man must be a nonconformist. Ralph Waldo Emerson

    The warrior is a nonconformist. He refuses to lower his standards or his code of ethics to please others. The fact that other men may consider this action or that action to be acceptable, means nothing to the warrior. He is not interested in conforming to the opinions of others. He is only interested in living up to his own standards which he sets for himself.

    If the warrior was the type of man that simply went along with the crowd, he would not be so rare. Anyone can bend their standards to conform to the standards of the day, but it takes a real man to stand firm concerning his ethics when all other men are trying to convince him to conform to their way of thinking. The warrior has to not only have confidence in his own code of honor, but also has to have confidence in his ability to walk alone against the tide of public opinion.

    This attitude of independence is what makes the warrior a rare man of honor. He does what he knows in his heart to be right, independent of what anyone else says or does. He refuses to play the game of situational ethics. His ethics are set in stone.

    Others may not be able to decipher his code or understand his way of thinking, but they know that the warrior is a man of principle. He is not a man that can be manipulated by popular opinion or moral fads. The true warrior is a true nonconformist and always has been. Bohdi Sanders ~ author of the TOP 15 Bestseller, BUSHIDO: The Way of the Warrior, available on Amazon at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B075TH53C9. Signed copies are available from: https://thewisdomwarrior.com.Jul 13, 2018 9:38amBryan Nova Brey@[29900084:2048:Maddy Smith] to improve agency.Jul 13, 2018 12:58pmGreg HamiltonI prefer strategic violence. But violence is a tool.Jul 13, 2018 1:08pmJorn BirxGood.Jul 14, 2018 8:03amNick ZitoAccountability !?!Jul 20, 2018 3:58amPatrick HabetsWhy do they hate the samurai?Jul 20, 2018 3:59amSELF AUTHORING – STOICISM IS THE ANVIL OF THE SELF

    (Stoicism in Scientific Terms)

    Self Authoring and Journaling are the best training you can give yourself – other than basic physical fitness. I promise you.

    Why? Because we evolved our minds to search for possibilities optimistically. So its very easy to say stupid things to yourself in the madness of the moment; and much harder to write down stupid things in organized prose; and much, much harder to read stupid things you’ve written in organized prose even a day later. So journaling rapidly teaches you the frailty of human contemplation and forecasting. It teaches you intellectual honesty. This is why, prior to the leftist destruction of education, we were all taught to keep a diary (journal) of our thoughts – once we have any to journal that is. 😉

    Self authoring is simply setting goals for yourself for life, the year, and the day. And reviewing them. And revising them. That’s it.

    If you add two checklists to your life goals (“seven habits”) so that you satisfy your full self’s needs. And a set of “virtues” (you must select from the virtues you want, not assume all virtues will help you), then this is effectively a project plan for your life, that provides you with mindfulness.

    If you read Marcus Aurelius, do so with the intent of learning how to write to yourself. His book is the best living example of an exceptional man’s use of thinking about his thoughts of the day, by writing them down.

    You must write honestly. Most of us will write very simple things. We are not Marcus Aurelius, Emperor. We are mere Warriors for the Working Day.

    And you must not worry about the structure of your prose – punctuation or sentence structure or spelling even. That will come with practice.

    All plans are created only to assist you in thinking and measuring yourself, as well as insulating you from the opinions and coercions of others.

    However, the best strategic plan is opportunism in pursuit of your goals, and searching for and creating opportunities for the achievement of your goals. And so any plan is merely the default opportunity you plan to seize unless a better opportunity for a different plan surprises you.

    I work (like Napoleon) by doing an exhaustive amount of research then making a dozen or two plans, and then doing whatever will advance the majority of those plans, so that by accident of iteration, one of the twelve plans (or more) will work out. This is too computationally difficult for many people so keeping it simple is better for them. You have to discover your own equilibrium plan, revision, and opportunity – by trial and error.

    Now, I find that fb and my web site, and emails to myself work as a good journal for me and I just mark private stuff private (for me only). The reason is that when I write in public I am even more honest with myself than when I write to myself in private. This is a trick of personal psychology. All of us are different. I have a lot of confidence and so I don’t mind being public. Others won’t be.

    And the only way to ensure that you are not talking madness to yourself (letting the elephant run away with the rider), is to write it down and review your progress.

    You wouldn’t believe how much your mind will lie to you on behalf of the Elephant if you do not keep a journal on the directions of the Rider.

    But the fact remains – you are able to master yourself (agency) by practice if you are willing to spend 90 days practicing.

    After a year you will find you are dependent upon using the writing to feel you are thinking clearly and organizing your thoughts.

    When you have an idea and immediately feel the draw to ‘write it out’ and organize your thoughts then you are engaged in Self Authoring, and the training is complete. It’s only application after that.

    If you do this you will need no self-help books, no great philosophies, no religions, no teachers, other than to read a book that expands your knowledge now and then.

    There is no secret to the Ritual of Self Authoring, and questioning information as to whether it improves your goals or not.

    No one else’s opinions or attitudes matter. Events do not matter. All that matters is your gradual progress to your virtues and goals.

    -THE VIRTUES-

    EXCELLENCE

    Excellence is striving is to be better than the day before, never giving in to the voice that says, “That’s good enough.” Instead, listen for the voice that says, “Now that’s awesome!”

    ASSERTIVENESS

    Unapologetically go after what you want in life. Be assertive and let the world feel the full weight of who you are. Live with passion … without being a jackass.

    COMPETITIVENESS

    ( … )

    COMMITMENT

    Do what you say you’re going to do without excuse. Suit up, show up everyday, and give your best effort.

    TENACITY

    Tenacity is the ability to stick it out and never give up, to keep going when things are tough and there is no end in sight. This is the only way to live a life of contentedness because regret only happens when we give up.

    FITNESS

    ( … )

    VIOLENCE

    ( … )

    COURAGE

    Courage isn’t the absence of fear, it’s the strength to move forward in the face of fear. Courage is perhaps the most vital virtue to develop. When we feel the fear and do it anyway we develop courage.

    MINDFULNESS

    ( … )

    LOYALTY

    Staying true to yourself and standing by someone else’s side when they face adversity is mastery of loyalty. Never giving up on someone, no matter how hard it gets, for as long as it takes: that is the true measure of any great relationship.

    RESPECT

    The respect you show to others is a reflection of your self respect. For this reason, respect is something you do for yourself. That doesn’t mean you have to agree with others, but you simply value yourself enough to give others respect.

    HONOR

    Honor is respecting those over you and acting in a way that is deserving of respect from those under you. Honor is the reputation and alliance that you earn from those you serve and those who serve you.

    AUTHENTICY

    Being true to yourself isn’t easy. Pulling off the mask that hides your flaws and living in the fullness of who your are creates a contagion that gives others the courage to do the same.

    COOPERATION

    The most important virtue for success is the ability to cooperate. If you can’t play well with others you’re going to get kicked out of the sandbox. Learn to cooperate and you’ll be successful.

    TEAMWORK

    ( … )

    HONESTY

    You are only as good as your word. If your word isn’t worth anything, then you have lost a piece of your soul. Being honest is difficult, but it is the bedrock of character. A house is only as strong as its foundation.

    INTEGRITY

    Integrity is the solidarity of our virtues; it is the quality by which we live out our values and prioritize our principles. It is the culmination of character in action. To act with integrity is to be a good man.

    HUMILITY

    Humility is the leadership quality of taking the brunt of the blame when things go south and giving away the majority of the credit when things go well. The leader who practices humility will never ask anyone to do what they themselves cannot do. Humility is leading from a position of service.

    PRUDENCE

    Prudence is the capacity to face reality squarely in the eye, without allowing emotion or ego to get in the way, and do what is best for the team.

    TACT

    Be honest, but be tactful. Remember there is another human being on the other end of your words. Strive to live by the golden rule, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

    EMPATHY

    Empathy is the ability to put aside your ego, step into someone else’s shoes and experience their emotions. When we do this, we create connection. The number one emotional need we all have is for connection.

    COMPASSION

    The ability to step outside of yourself and perform an act of selflessness: this is the foundation of compassion. To be compassionate is to value others above yourself for the sole purpose of contributing to the greater good.

    GRACE

    Grace is giving something to someone who hasn’t earned it, doesn’t deserve it and yet we give it anyway. Simply put, grace is giving someone dessert even though they didn’t eat their vegetables.

    FORGIVENESS

    When we forgive we are giving up our right to collect on a debt. “An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind,” said Gandhi. When I no longer have the need for revenge, then I have forgiven.

    KINDNESS

    There is strength in kindness. A simple smile, a kind word or even an arm on a shoulder can change someone’s life for the better and thereby change the world … Kindness is your super-power.

    GENEROSITY

    Maya Angelou said, “People won’t remember what you said or did, they will remember how you made them feel.” Be generous with how you treat everyone … they will feel amazing and so will you.

    GRATITUDE

    Did you know you can’t be resentful and grateful at the same time? Try it. To be truly grateful is to consider all the gifts you have been given and to understand that no matter what, there is always something for which to be grateful.

    PATIENCE

    There is no truer act of love than patience … just ask anyone who has raised a two-year-old.

    ADAPTABILITY

    “Improvise, Adapt and Overcome” is the mantra of the United States Marine Corps. Adaptability is the ability to be flexible to change and gain the advantage in any situation. Things that aren’t adaptable break … things that aren’t adaptable don’t survive.

    CONTENTMENT

    Dissatisfaction is the misconception that you need more than what you already have. Contentment is a mind-set: it’s choosing not to look at lack but see the abundance that already exists.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 14:10:00 UTC

  • 13) But their choice is always and everywhere without exception – lack of agency

    13) But their choice is always and everywhere without exception – lack of agency. ie: they are still animals. And as animals must be ruled by those who possess it. (aristocracy). (END)


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 13:31:44 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1017401121898418176

    Reply addressees: @Hispanogoyim @egoissocial @IberianSoldier

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1017382157776510977


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  • 12) There are any number of people who have found that they lack the agency to f

    12) There are any number of people who have found that they lack the agency to function as judges and prosecutors of truth (speech) and reciprocity(action), and who can compete in markets in everything (natural aristocracy).


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 13:31:33 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1017401074779676672

    Reply addressees: @Hispanogoyim @egoissocial @IberianSoldier

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  • 11) Propertarianism (my work) cannot be applied by people lacking the agency to

    11) Propertarianism (my work) cannot be applied by people lacking the agency to serve as judges of truth(speech) and reciprocity(action). The weak need their falsehoods. And they are unfit for rule by rule of law.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 13:31:25 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1017401043930501120

    Reply addressees: @Hispanogoyim @egoissocial @IberianSoldier

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1017382157776510977


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  • ARISTOTLE: THOSE WITHOUT AGENCY ARE BEASTS TO BE RULED From Alexander of Macedon

    ARISTOTLE: THOSE WITHOUT AGENCY ARE BEASTS TO BE RULED

    From Alexander of Macedon by Peter Green

    “He had the whole body of Greek civilized opinion

    behind him. Euripides held that it was proper (eikos) for

    ‘barbarians’ to be subject to Greeks. Plato and Isocrates

    both thought of all non-Hellenes as natural enemies who

    could be enslaved or exterminated at will. Aristotle himself

    regarded a war against barbarians as essentially j ust.48 Such

    theories may well be dismissed as grotesque; but they are no

    more grotesque than de Gobineau’s concept of the Aryan

    superman. And grotesque or not, they have the power to

    compel belief, and thus to affect men’s lives in the most

    fundamental way. When Hitler exterminated the European

    Jews, he based his actions, precisely, on the belief that

    certain categories of mankind could be dismissed as sub-

    human — that is, like Aristotle, he equated them with

    beasts or plants.

    For Aristotle, however, the brute or vegetable nature of

    barbarians had a special quality, which must have struck a

    responsive chord in his pupil. ‘No one,’ he wrote, ‘would

    value existence for the pleasure of eating alone, or that of

    sex . . . unless he were utterly servile’ (i.e. slave or bar-

    barian). To such a person, on the other hand, it would

    make no difference whether he were beast or man. The key example he cites is the Assyrian voluptuary Sardanapalus

    (Assurbanipal): barbarians, it is clear, are to be despised

    above all because they live exclusively through and for the senses.

    The purely hedonistic life, in fact, was something which

    Aristotle taught his pupil to regard as beneath contempt.

    Such a doctrine must have had a strong appeal for Alex-

    ander, who always placed a premium on self-control and

    self-denial (at least during the earlier stages of his career),

    and whose enthusiastic, impressionable nature reveals a

    strong hero-worshipping streak. (It made no odds to him

    whether his hero was mythical or contemporary: he may

    have modelled himself on Achilles, but he was equally

    ready to adopt the quick-stepping gait of his old tutor

    Leonidas.) The Alexander who ate so sparingly, who gave

    away the spoils of war with such contemptuous generosity,

    keeping little for himself, and who said he was never more

    conscious of his own mortality than ‘during the time he lay

    with a woman or slept’50 — this, surely, was a man whose

    debt to Aristotle’s teaching and influence was fundamental.

    For good or ill, the years at Mieza left a permanent mark

    on him.

    Aristotle’s advice on the respective treatment of Greeks

    and barbarians is, of course, capable of a more mundane

    interpretation: that in order to get the best out of those

    whom one intends to exploit, one must humour them far

    enough to win their cooperation. Greeks required to be

    treated as equals, to have their sense of independence –

    however illusory -— fostered with the greatest care. Asiatics,

    on the other hand, would only respond to, or respect, a

    show of rigorous authoritarianism — the Victorian district

    officer’s creed. Whether Aristotle intended this lesson or not,

    it was one that Alexander learnt all too well. As we shall

    see, he applied it to every individual or group with whom he

    subsequently came in contact.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 12:47:00 UTC

  • “Agency is a massive duty. There is nothing easy about it.”—-Greg Hamilton

    —“Agency is a massive duty. There is nothing easy about it.”—-Greg Hamilton


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 03:09:17 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1017244475226247169

  • Curt Doolittle updated his status. —“Agency is a massive duty. There is nothin

    Curt Doolittle updated his status.

    —“Agency is a massive duty. There is nothing easy about it.”—-Greg Hamilton


    Source date (UTC): 2018-07-12 03:08:49 UTC

  • Aristotle: Those without Agency Are Beasts to Be Ruled

    From Alexander of Macedon by Peter Green “He had the whole body of Greek civilized opinion behind him. Euripides held that it was proper (eikos) for ‘barbarians’ to be subject to Greeks. Plato and Isocrates both thought of all non-Hellenes as natural enemies who could be enslaved or exterminated at will. Aristotle himself regarded a war against barbarians as essentially j ust.48 Such theories may well be dismissed as grotesque; but they are no more grotesque than de Gobineau’s concept of the Aryan superman. And grotesque or not, they have the power to compel belief, and thus to affect men’s lives in the most fundamental way. When Hitler exterminated the European Jews, he based his actions, precisely, on the belief that certain categories of mankind could be dismissed as sub- human — that is, like Aristotle, he equated them with beasts or plants. For Aristotle, however, the brute or vegetable nature of barbarians had a special quality, which must have struck a responsive chord in his pupil. ‘No one,’ he wrote, ‘would value existence for the pleasure of eating alone, or that of sex . . . unless he were utterly servile’ (i.e. slave or bar- barian). To such a person, on the other hand, it would make no difference whether he were beast or man. The key example he cites is the Assyrian voluptuary Sardanapalus (Assurbanipal): barbarians, it is clear, are to be despised above all because they live exclusively through and for the senses. The purely hedonistic life, in fact, was something which Aristotle taught his pupil to regard as beneath contempt. Such a doctrine must have had a strong appeal for Alex- ander, who always placed a premium on self-control and self-denial (at least during the earlier stages of his career), and whose enthusiastic, impressionable nature reveals a strong hero-worshipping streak. (It made no odds to him whether his hero was mythical or contemporary: he may have modelled himself on Achilles, but he was equally ready to adopt the quick-stepping gait of his old tutor Leonidas.) The Alexander who ate so sparingly, who gave away the spoils of war with such contemptuous generosity, keeping little for himself, and who said he was never more conscious of his own mortality than ‘during the time he lay with a woman or slept’50 — this, surely, was a man whose debt to Aristotle’s teaching and influence was fundamental. For good or ill, the years at Mieza left a permanent mark on him. Aristotle’s advice on the respective treatment of Greeks and barbarians is, of course, capable of a more mundane interpretation: that in order to get the best out of those whom one intends to exploit, one must humour them far enough to win their cooperation. Greeks required to be treated as equals, to have their sense of independence – however illusory -— fostered with the greatest care. Asiatics, on the other hand, would only respond to, or respect, a show of rigorous authoritarianism — the Victorian district officer’s creed. Whether Aristotle intended this lesson or not, it was one that Alexander learnt all too well. As we shall see, he applied it to every individual or group with whom he subsequently came in contact.