Living in Agreement with Nature
The Stoic answer to "what is the good life?": live in tune with the rational order of the cosmos, where virtue alone suffices.
The Stoics taught that the goal of human life (the telos) is to live "in agreement with Nature" — to bring one's own reason into harmony with the rational order that governs the whole universe. Because that cosmic order is itself rational and providential, living according to it means living virtuously, and the Stoics insisted that virtue alone is good, vice alone bad, and everything else (health, wealth, reputation) merely "indifferent." Zeno first coined the formula, and later heads of the school refined it: Cleanthes stressed agreement with universal Nature, while Chrysippus added our own human nature as well. To flourish, then, is not to chase pleasure or fortune but to align the self with the way things truly are.
How it traveled
- DiscoursesNicopolis · 108explains
- De communibus notitiis adversus StoicosChaeronea · 120challenges
- De Stoicorum repugnantiisChaeronea · 120explains
- De Amore ProlisChaeronea · 120explains
- Ad Se IpsumVindobona (Vienna) · 170explains
- Vitae philosophorum— · 240explains
Key passages(20)
Vitae philosophorum · Diogenes Laertius
De Stoicorum repugnantiis · Plutarch
De communibus notitiis adversus Stoicos · Plutarch
De communibus notitiis adversus Stoicos · Plutarch