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Marcus Aurelius Meditations A New T
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Meditations
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Meditations to his father’s chara
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surely Marcus’s adopted father, A
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Another area where Marcus’s polic
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seriously weakened the Roman positi
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underlies the work, but also with t
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fuse drives the flower,” and is p
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Cato, Thrasea, and Helvidius were d
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with which he addresses these quest
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us (by others or by nature). We con
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(especially in Book 7), and Socrati
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Although the sect numbered not a fe
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and exploratory, like the notes of
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aw quotations from tragedies in Boo
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transience. All things change or pa
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heaven.’ Why are you still here?
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dialogue “The Caesars” Marcus i
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I saw him for the last time a few y
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surviving fragments are translated
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He prides himself on not having tak
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Book 1 DEBTS AND LESSONS
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imaginary descriptions of The Simpl
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Optimism in adversity—especially
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He never exhibited rudeness, lost c
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Book 2 ON THE RIVER GRAN, AMONG THE
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Discard your thirst for books, so t
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us with pain or are loudly trumpete
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Book 3 IN CARNUNTUM
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3. Hippocrates cured many illnesses
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temptations (as Socrates used to sa
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If you can embrace this without fea
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Book 4
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Or are you complaining about the th
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—Yes. Well, why not use it? Isn
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every moment, “Is this necessary?
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- Page 92 and 93: 10. (i) Mixture, interaction, dispe
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- Page 96 and 97: Take Antoninus as your model, alway
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- Page 104 and 105: alone or with others—can aim at o
- Page 106 and 107: 20. My only fear is doing something
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- Page 116 and 117: The others? Nothing but anxiety and
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- Page 132 and 133: 25. Identify its purpose—what mak
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- Page 140 and 141: which they came. Because our elemen
- Page 142 and 143: 12. Why all this guesswork? You can
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- Page 150 and 151: Apply this to life as a whole. 3. T
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- Page 154 and 155: Even if cowardice has kept you from
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- Page 160 and 161: happen, the impositions of the body
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HIPPOCRATES: Greek doctor active in
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iography of him by Suetonius. (12.2
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THE MODERN LIBRARY EDITORIAL BOARD
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2002 Modern Library Edition Introdu