When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. On Passions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Passions

    Cicero provides (§25–26) definitions and examples of the various passions. He explains (§27–28) the analogy between body and soul, and between disease and health. He describes (§31) the limitations of the analogy (a healthy soul cannot become diseased like a healthy body can); and explains (§32) how the clever are less prone to sickness ...

  3. Stoic passions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoic_Passions

    One report of the Stoic definitions of these passions appears in the treatise On Passions by Pseudo-Andronicus (trans. Long & Sedley, pg. 411, modified): Distress (lupē) Distress is an irrational contraction, or a fresh opinion that something bad is present, at which people think it right to be depressed. Fear (phobos)

  4. Negative visualization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_visualization

    Negative visualization or futurorum malorum præmeditatio [1] [2] (Latin, literally, pre-studying bad future) is a method of meditative praxis or askēsis by visualization of the worst-case scenario(s). The method originated with the Cyreanic philosophers [3] and was later adopted by Stoic philosophers.

  5. Stoicism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoicism

    Stoicism considers all existence as cyclical, the cosmos as eternally self-creating and self-destroying (see also Eternal return). Stoicism does not posit a beginning or end to the Universe. [32] According to the Stoics, the logos was the active reason or anima mundi pervading and animating the entire Universe. It was conceived as material and ...

  6. Paradoxa Stoicorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradoxa_Stoicorum

    The Paradoxa Stoicorum (English: Stoic Paradoxes) is a work by the academic skeptic philosopher Cicero in which he attempts to explain six famous Stoic sayings that appear to go against common understanding: (1) virtue is the sole good; (2) virtue is the sole requisite for happiness; (3) all good deeds are equally virtuous and all bad deeds equally vicious; (4) all fools are mad; (5) only the ...

  7. Cleanthes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleanthes

    Cleanthes was an important figure in the development of Stoicism, and stamped his personality on the physical speculations of the school, and by his materialism gave a unity to the Stoic system. [5] He wrote some fifty works, of which only fragments have survived preserved by writers such as Diogenes Laërtius , Stobaeus , Cicero , Seneca and ...

  8. Why Your Body Fat Percentage Matters and How to Reduce It - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/body-fat-percentage-way...

    For example, DEXA Scan is a 10-minute scan that quantifies your body composition; hydrostatic (dunk tank) testing measures body fat percentage by calculating the amount of water displaced when you ...

  9. Philosophy of happiness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_happiness

    Stoicism was a school of philosophy established by Zeno of Citium (c. 334 – c. 262 BCE). While Zeno was syncretic in thought, his primary influence were the Cynics, with Crates of Thebes (c. 365 – c. 285 BCE) as his mentor. Stoicism is a philosophy of personal ethics that provides a system of logic and views about the natural world. [25]