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July 18th
EACH THE MASTER OF THEIR OWN DOMAIN
“My reasoned choice is as indifferent to the reasoned choice of my neighbor, as to his breath and
body. However much we’ve been made for cooperation, the ruling reason in each of us is master
of its own affairs. If this weren’t the case, the evil in someone else could become my harm, and
God didn’t mean for someone else to control my misfortune.”
—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 8.56
he foundation of a free country is that your freedom to swing your fist ends where someone else’s
nose begins. That is, someone else is free to do what they like until it interferes with your physical
body and space. This saying can work as a great personal philosophy as well.
But living that way will require two important assumptions. First, you ought to live your own life in
such a way that it doesn’t negatively impose on others. Second, you have to be open-minded and
accepting enough to let others do the same.
Can you do that? Even when you really, really disagree with the choices they’re making? Can you
understand that their life is their business and yours is your own? And that you’ve got plenty to wrestle
with yourself without bothering anyone else?