2021/01/26

(1) Stoicism Group (Stoic Philosophy) | Facebook

(1) Stoicism Group (Stoic Philosophy) | Facebook:
Nafees M U 2t5Sc rnaoJmcaponnusodnairdmrecyg 2e02ddn0  · 
 Did stoic philosophers believe in God?

Did stoic philosophers believe in God?
37
262 comments
3 shares
Like
Comment
Share

Comments

View previous comments
  • Some do, some don't, so what?
    3
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • This is a FAQ.
    Ancient stoics would have considered the pros and cons of Gods existing. This leads to the inevitable conclusion that behaving as if they do has no downside while behaving as if they do not may have a downside. Risk management would mean behaving as if Gods exist even if you are unconvinced they exist. So while ancient stoics often talked as if Gods exist, we really can’t tell if they personally believed Gods exist.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • They didn't think gods were gods.
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Epictetus certainly believed Gods exist. Marcus Aurelius did too.
      Now departure from the world of men is nothing to fear, if gods exist: because they would not involve you in any harm. If they do not exist, or if they have no care for humankind, then what is life to me in a world devoid of gods, or devoid of providence? But they do exist, and they do care for humankind: and they have put it absolutely in man's power to avoid falling into the true kinds of harm."
      —Marcus Aurelius, Meditations 2.11
      Zeno believed the Universe itself was God.
      Cleanthes, Zeno’s successor, even wrote a hymn:
      Lead me, Zeus, and you too, Destiny,
      To wherever your decrees have assigned me.
      I follow readily, but if I choose not,
      Wretched though I am, I must follow still.
      Fate guides the willing, but drags the unwilling
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
      • Edited
    • David Moss
      , I think James' point was that the Stoics didn't believe the gods were the same gods as those of Greek/Roman myth - and definitely not the God of Abraham.
      They didn't believe the gods were personified deities in the heavens; and furthermore, they only believed in one god, which was the universe or nature (God, Zeus, The Universe, Nature, Cosmos, Providence, etc are all synonymous) and any reference to individual gods are descriptors of individual natural events rather than the gods of myth, but everything in the universe is connected through a web of causality.
      "All things are interwoven, and the bond that unites them is sacred, and hardly anything is alien to any other thing, for they have been ranged together and are jointly ordered to form a common universe. For there is one universe made up of all that is, and one god who pervades all things, and one substance and one law, and one reason common to all intelligent creatures, and one truth, if indeed there is one perfection for all creatures who are of the same stock and partake of the same reason." (Meditations, 7.9)
      For the Stoics, God was something natural and physical, with evidence - not supernatural and metaphysical reliant on faith. It's the god that fascinated Einstein, and continues to be of constant discussion by the world's physicists today.
      I say this often, but you could explain the Stoics entire theory of (meta)physics without once using the word "god", and you'd still arrive at the same conclusions. When the Stoics talk of god or the gods, they're not talking of the same gods as most people would understand.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Jc Gentner
       does anyone believe in the same God/s as anyone else? We know the early stoics spoke as if they believed the Gods of their culture existed. Social harmony may have been the reason, or they may have actually believed in the Gods. As I said earlier there is no downside to assuming God/s exist. Practicality rules!
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
  • Hey, just to be a Stoic does not mean all other reality is off limits!
    How f boring that would be!
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • ON THE ISSUE OF RELIGION, ONLY THE GREEKS DISCOVERED TRUTH ...
    In the Hellenic tradition, our Gods are the laws that govern and control the universe and everything in the universe.
    Our Gods are the universe and the universe is our Gods.
    Our Gods are above us, below us, around us and within us.
    Ellinikotita Ellinismos Hellenism / Greece
    ELLINIKOTITAELLINISMOSHELLENISM.BLOGSPOT.COM
    Ellinikotita Ellinismos Hellenism / Greece
    Ellinikotita Ellinismos Hellenism / Greece
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • «In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.»
    Well, where “Word” put “Logos”and I believe you have a pretty good idea of what they believed in...
    (Who came first? Stoics or Evangelists?)
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Stoics came before Christians
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Jesse GlascoShaffer
       sorry for the misunderstanding; it was a rhetorical question to prove that what was preached later was only rephrasing what was already been said.
      I think Stoics were believers with a holistic approach and appreciation of the divine.
      Hope I made my self clear now.
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
  • Idk does stoic philosophers believe in Truth?
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    7 replies
  • Most stoic believers do not profess their belief. They present themselves as who they are personally.
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • I think that depends on whether you're talking about ancient stoics or modern stoics
    There's nothing about stoicism though that would require a belief in a god, just a belief in the natural world
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    5 replies
  • Marcus Aurelius, Seneca and Epictetus believe in God. Their belief in God are all over in their writings. Unless you have not read their works, your question appears to have some other intention?
    3
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Do Stoic Philosophers
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Yes, but they were materialists, they understood God as equivalent to the universe which is made of matter.
    2
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Some Stoic philosophers believed in God, and gods, but there is no reason why modern Stoics need to do so. We pretty much know how the universe came about and we certainly know that life on earth has evolved. There is no role for the gods to play any more.
    2
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Except the Stoics called the universe god, and the big bang is the same..No magic.
      You have the wrong kind of God in mind.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • It's the kind of God 99% of the modern population has in mind when they ask if people believe in God.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • And no, modern academics still don't have consensus on how the material plane evolved. They don't even accept the existence of immaterial planes
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • If one needs belief in God, then one hasn't had a personal revelation. Belief is extinguished with contemplation, introspection, and meditation of internal causality.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Roman elite create religions when they needed them. Cicero believe the Roman needed to be change to something that look more like Christianity and Emperor Claudius wrote book of subject changing and create religion. Some belief the Emperor Titus created Christianity to counter the zealots in the Jewish faith that why it is very anti-Jewish in nature.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Here we go again
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Some do. Some do not.
    3
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Edited
  • Yes. I believe that stoicism is rooted in theological philosophy, especially in regards to virtue, vice, indulgence and charity.
    As a personal note, I feel the Orthodox church lends itself well with the stoic philosophy.
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Edited
  • They used to, yes, but it's not a requirement of the philosophy. That said, the View From Above sticks well with religious people who see it as taking the perspective of God. Up to you what you believe.
    2
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Does it matter? Alot has changed since then, including science. But you can include your beliefs to stoicism if you need that in your life. The pillars of stoicism though, remains the same no matter the timeline.. 😊
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Dennis Dupont
       obviously it matters to OP. Does science have anything to do with the question?
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Yes actually.
      If OP was getting at "then we can't be stoics unless we are also theistic" the reminder that these philosophers knew fuck all about how the world worked (due to a lack of scientific understanding at the time) would be incredibly relevant. Because we believe (or rather, know) lots of things that they didn't.
      Our understandings don't need to match. We need only be concerned with the philosophy.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • I have never said that science should affect the way we should look at philosophy. What i was meant to say was only that "Yes, they where theistic, and no, it has nothing to do with the practise of the virtues" i probably shouldnt have said science, i guess" it just plays a role in the way i look at the old greeks. And their beliefs.. Its probably not relevant for this post, i am sorry for the confusion. And have a nice day 😊
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • And sorry for the grammar, i am danish 😂
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • The Stoics of antiquity certainly did.
    These days you can be a theist or an atheist.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Kalen Berreman
       ah no you cant be a theist. First it is irrational and second it is immoral and third relies on emotionalism. So theism is out.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
  • Yes, there was a Stoic God. A monotheistic concept, more pantheistic though. They also were involved in the standard religion of their day, but it depends on which Stoic.
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • They were not monotheists. They had many gods.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Bruce Macmillan
       the Platonic God. It's a monotheistic concept, which does not exclude the pantheon. Hard to understand from a Christian point of view, I know.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Khyel Walker
       Well, I know the ancients entertained all sorts of gods, some of them singular in nature. I think the cult of Mithras was popular with Roman officers. Then there were the Egyptian gods, which some Romans took a shine to. Especially if they were stationed in, or lived in Egypt.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
  • correct grammar please
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • does??? u mean do?
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Lookie how smart you are
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
  • This question doesn't make sense to me. To believe or not is a personal matter.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Edited
  • Well Supposed first Stoic philosophers worshiped Zeus , as God of Atoms , and Logos guided the Cosmos .
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Yes, they did. Otherwise their philosophy doesn’t make sense.
    But their belief in gods had nothing to do with ours monotheistic belief
    2
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    5 replies
  • Epictetus made many references to God. Same as the Marcus Aurelius
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • I only believe in grammar
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • According to Seneca, as much as Marcus Aurelius, refer the metaphysical inquiry as the LOGOS. It is a transcendental active and changing process what others would call god or gods — to be all knowing it must be changing and evolving like an ongoing primordial fire that sparked itself that would be borrowed by the transcendentalists in the Romantic Age. But to believe in deities like the Hebrew god or Olympian ones was foolish to them, they questioned the nature of fate and providence and completed perfection of all minds or deities of their age
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • I have copied this:
    In this last extract we see Epictetus refer to the ideal Stoic practice as that of 'following the gods'. This means essentially the same as 'following nature', for God, who is immanent in the world (as the Stoics understand it) is identified with the way the world manifests, so if one follows nature, one must also be following God (see Discourses 1.20.15, 1.30.4, 4.7.20 and 4.10.14).
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    1 reply
  • I don't there's any relation.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • I think the following is FAKE NEWS
    “Live a good life. If there are gods and they are just, then they will not care how devout you have been, but will welcome you based on the virtues you have lived by. If there are gods, but unjust, then you should not want to worship them. If there are no gods, then you will be gone, but will have lived a noble life that will live on in the memories of your loved ones.”
    but it is true to what I believe in... If a God will put me in an eternal lake of fire for just believing in Mohammad or Buddha or whatever in not right down to the tee right from the Bible God like whatrever even if I am a really damn great person of a Muslim, Buddhist, Homosexual, Pagan whatever then YES I am happy to stand before that God and spit in thou eye.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    3 replies
  • Probably not as we mean it, but scholars have often compared Seneca’s writings, for example, with st Jerome’s
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Yup! God is vital to stoicism, since it's God who puts everything into motion.
    Stoics believe in fate, and you cant have fate without god
    No photo description available.
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • No photo description available.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Why can't you have fate without God?
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Edwardo Lobo
       Because the Stoics credit God for fate.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • They may have, but that doesn't support your claim that you can't have fate without God.
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
    • Edwardo Lobo because fate is define as, "the development of events beyond a person's control, regarded as determined by a supernatural
      1
      • Like
      • Reply
      • Share
      • 1 y
      • Edited
  • There are stoic believer and stoic non believer in God.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Classical Stoics generally believed in a God or Gods but not generally in the way you might think. Some of them literally believed that the main God was Zeus and believed somewhat in the Greek pantheon.
    Others used god as a more abstract concept of lo… 
    See more
    1
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    • Edited
  • Oh, you can. Not a good one, though
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • is that an external event? or is god within my circle of control? if not then its irrelevant.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    1 reply
  • You can find interesting texts about stoicism and god in www.thestoicgym.com
    The Stoic Gym
    THESTOICGYM.COM
    The Stoic Gym
    The Stoic Gym
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • The idea of the Logos is that of an agnostic god. some called it Zeus and others Nature. In other words some did some did not
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • God is god, however you define it.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
    1 reply
  • yes. Marcus Aurelius believed the universe was divine and that there is something divine in every human. here's a couple good passages:
    "Meditations" Book XII: Passage XXI - StoicTrader
    STOICTRADER.NET
    "Meditations" Book XII: Passage XXI - StoicTrader
    "Meditations" Book XII: Passage XXI - StoicTrader
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Meditations
    AMAZON.COM
    Meditations
    Meditations
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 1 y
  • Epicurus
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 52 w
  • Stoics are ignostic. God is a metaphor acording to us. Everything for the collective good guided by the one ultimate authority of the universe. To be in line with nature. GOOD ORDERLY DIRECTION
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 51 w
  • Yes, most of them.
    • Like
    • Reply
    • Share
    • 51 w