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November 17th
JUDGE NOT, LEST . . .
“When philosophy is wielded with arrogance and stubbornly, it is the cause for the ruin of many.
Let philosophy scrape off your own faults, rather than be a way to rail against the faults of
others.”
—SENECA, MORAL LETTERS, 103.4b–5a
emember, the proper direction of philosophy—of all the things we’re doing here—is focused
inward. To make ourselves better and to leave other people to that task for themselves and their own
journey. Our faults are in our control, and so we turn to philosophy to help scrape them off like barnacles
from the hull of a ship. Other people’s faults? Not so much. That’s for them to do.
Leave other people to their faults. Nothing in Stoic philosophy empowers you to judge them—only to
accept them. Especially when we have so many of our own.