ISBN: | 9781599869704 |
Publisher: | Filiquarian Publishing |
Published: | 1 May, 2006 |
Format: | Paperback |
Language: | English |
Editions: |
388 other editions
of this product
|
- A Room of One's Own
- A Tale of A Tub
- A Tale of a Tub
- Common Sense
- De Brevitate Vitae
- Meditations
- On Art and Life
- On Friendship
- On Natural Selection
- On the Pleasure of Hating
- On the Shortness of Life
- On the Suffering of the World
- Prize Essay on the Freedom of the Will
- The Christians and the Fall of Rome
- The Communist Manifesto
- The Confessions of St. Augustine
- The Inner Life
- The Prince
- The Social Contract
- Why I Am So Wise
- Why I Write
- Why I Write (Great Ideas)
Profound as philosophy these Meditations certainly are not; but Marcus Aurelius was too sincere not to see the essence of such things as came within his experience. Ancient religions were for the most part concerned with outward things. Do the necessary rites, and you propitiate the gods; and these rites were often trivial, sometimes violated right feeling or even morality. Even when the gods stood on the side of righteousness, they were concerned with the act more than with the intent. But Marcus Aurelius knows that what the heart is full of, the man will do. 'Such as thy thoughts and ordinary cogitations are, ' he says, 'such will thy mind be in time.' And every page of the book shows us that he knew thought was sure to issue in act. He drills his soul, as it were, in right principles, that when the time comes, it may be guided by them.
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