The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius

· Routledge
4.7
308 reviews
Ebook
212
Pages

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4.7
308 reviews
G T
April 7, 2024
V.5 You may if you please behave yourself like a man of gravity and good faith, endure hardship, and despise pleasure; want but a few things, and complain of nothing; you may be gentle and magnanimous if you please, and have nothing of luxury or trifling in your disposition.
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Seko Vimbelo
October 11, 2021
I love the values or virtues that this book installs in my mind. I love how it attacks my greed, my dependence on people's acceptance and praise, my hostility towards people, my ill-morals, etc. It just is helping me to have a different and better outlook to life.
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Gregg Gowen
April 29, 2020
Marcus Aurelius in his latter years felt that's all he did was bring the sword at the end of the Germanic campaign wonderful work meditation shows how he wanted to be happy not been well murdered by his own son and how he wanted to bring democracy to Rome as opposed to it having an emperor or a Caesar guidelines in this book a man everything he needs to know when it comes to being a good man
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