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Seneca 's Theory Of Ethics Caught My Interest

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Born in 1 BCE, Lucius Annaeus Seneca was a Stoic philosopher whose writings cover a vast range of topics concerning the human experience. The public’s conception of stoicism as a school of philosophy predominantly focused on “embracing misfortune without complaint” is somewhat distorted from the actual beliefs its outstanding figures held. Seneca’s approach to ethics caught my interest, after thinking over his arguments, I found myself agreeing with much of what he had to say, that is if I interpreted it correctly. I believe the principles espoused by the stoics to be particularly relevant over the past century. The 1920’s is often associated as an age of materialism, an unsustainable time-period inundated with mass-consumption and fixated on pleasure. Perhaps it is not as extreme as then nowadays, I would not know for I was not alive; however, it feels like we are in a similar climate. Everyone wants the newest products, the new iPhone that comes out every year, that new pair of shoes, that new videogame system, that new watch, or that new house, etc. Although we have yet to reach the world described by Aldous Huxley in that of the literary classic “Brave New World,” which depicts a society constructed upon drowning in excess consumption of sex and soma, where John, the savage, is perceived as a lunatic for his quaint habits of being virtuous. More interesting, is the growing desire to be happy, this is shown by the increasing amounts of literature and social science

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