Discources
  • Book One
  • CHAPTER 1. Of the things which are in our Power, and not in our Power
  • CHAPTER 2. How a Man on every occasion can maintain his Proper Character
  • CHAPTER 3. How a man should proceed from the principle of God being the father of all men to the rest
  • CHAPTER 4. Of progress or improvement
  • CHAPTER 5. Against the academics
  • CHAPTER 6. Of providence
  • CHAPTER 7. Of the use of sophistical arguments, and hypothetical, and the like
  • CHAPTER 8. That the faculties are not safe to the uninstructed
  • CHAPTER 9. How from the fact that we are akin to God a man may proceed to the consequences
  • CHAPTER 10. Against those who eagerly seek preferment at Rome
  • CHAPTER 11. Of natural affection
  • CHAPTER 12. Of contentment
  • CHAPTER 13. How everything may he done acceptably to the gods
  • CHAPTER 14. That the deity oversees all things
  • CHAPTER 15. What philosophy promises
  • CHAPTER 16. Of providence
  • CHAPTER 17. That the logical art is necessary
  • CHAPTER 18. That we ought not to he angry with the errors of others
  • CHAPTER 19. How we should behave to tyrants
  • CHAPTER 20. About reason, how it contemplates itself
  • CHAPTER 21. Against those who wish to be admired
  • CHAPTER 22. On precognitions
  • CHAPTER 23. Against Epicurus
  • CHAPTER 24. How we should struggle with circumstances
  • CHAPTER 25. On the same
  • CHAPTER 26. What is the law of life
  • CHAPTER 27. In how many ways appearances exist, and what aids we should provide against them
  • CHAPTER 28. That we ought not to he angry with men; and what are the small and the great things among men
  • CHAPTER 29. On constancy
  • CHAPTER 30. What we ought to have ready in difficult circumstances
  • Book Two
  • CHAPTER 1. That confidence is not inconsistent with caution
  • CHAPTER 2. Of Tranquillity
  • CHAPTER 3. To those who recommend persons to philosophers
  • CHAPTER 4. Against a person who had once been detected in adultery
  • CHAPTER 5. How magnanimity is consistent with care
  • CHAPTER 6. Of indifference
  • CHAPTER 7. How we ought to use divination
  • CHAPTER 8. What is the nature of the good
  • CHAPTER 9. That when we cannot fulfill that which the character of a man promises, we assume the character of a philosopher
  • CHAPTER 10. How we may discover the duties of life from names
  • CHAPTER 11. What the beginning of philosophy is
  • CHAPTER 12. Of disputation or discussion
  • CHAPTER 13. On anxiety
  • CHAPTER 14. To Naso
  • CHAPTER 15. To or against those who obstinately persist in what they have determined
  • CHAPTER 16. That we do not strive to use our opinions about good and evil
  • CHAPTER 17. How we must adapt preconceptions to particular cases
  • CHAPTER 18. How we should struggle against appearances
  • CHAPTER 19. Against those who embrace, philosophical opinions only in words
  • CHAPTER 20. Against the Epicureans and Academics
  • CHAPTER 21. Of inconsistency
  • CHAPTER 22. On friendship
  • CHAPTER 23. On the power of speaking
  • CHAPTER 24. To a person who was one of those who was not valued by him
  • CHAPTER 25. That logic is necessary
  • CHAPTER 26. What is the property of error
  • Book Three
  • CHAPTER 1. Of finery in dress
  • CHAPTER 2. In what a man ought to be exercised who has made proficiency; and that we neglect the chief things
  • CHAPTER 3. What is the matter on which a good man should he employed, and in what we ought chiefly to practice ourselves
  • CHAPTER 4. Against a person who showed his partisanship in an unseemly way in a theatre
  • CHAPTER 5. Against those who on account of sickness go away home
  • CHAPTER 6. Miscellaneous
  • CHAPTER 7. To the administrator of the free cities who was an Epicurean
  • CHAPTER 8. How we must exercise ourselves against appearances
  • CHAPTER 9. To a certain rhetorician who was going up to Rome on a suit
  • CHAPTER 10. In what manner we ought to bear sickness
  • CHAPTER 11. Certain miscellaneous matters
  • CHAPTER 12. About exercise
  • CHAPTER 13. What solitude is, and what kind of person a solitary man is
  • CHAPTER 14. Certain miscellaneous matters
  • CHAPTER 15. That we ought to proceed with circumspection to everything
  • CHAPTER 16. That we ought with caution to enter, into familiar intercourse with men
  • CHAPTER 17. On providence
  • CHAPTER 18. That we ought not to be disturbed by any news
  • CHAPTER 19. What is the condition of a common kind of man and of a philosopher
  • CHAPTER 20. That we can derive advantage from all external things
  • CHAPTER 21. Against those who readily come to the profession of sophists
  • CHAPTER 22. About cynicism
  • CHAPTER 23. To those who read and discuss for the sake of ostentation
  • CHAPTER 24. That we ought not to be moved by a desire of those things which are not in our power
  • CHAPTER 25. To those who fall off from their purpose
  • CHAPTER 26. To those who fear want
  • Book Four
  • CHAPTER 1. About freedom
  • CHAPTER 2. On familiar intimacy
  • CHAPTER 3. What things we should exchange for other things
  • CHAPTER 4. To those who are desirous of passing life in tranquility
  • CHAPTER 5. Against the quarrelsome and ferocious
  • CHAPTER 6. Against those who lament over being pitied
  • CHAPTER 7. On freedom from fear
  • CHAPTER 8. Against those who hastily rush into the use of the philosophic dress
  • CHAPTER 9. To a person who had been changed to a character of shamelessness
  • CHAPTER 10. What things we ought to despise, and what things we ought to value
  • CHAPTER 11. About Purity
  • CHAPTER 12. On attention
  • CHAPTER 13. Against or to those who readily tell their own affairs

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