Epicurus on possessions and freedom

December 6, 2009

This is nice

“A free life cannot acquire many possessions, because this is not easy to do without servility to mobs or monarchs.”
– Epicurus, greek philosopher, 341-271 bce.

I enjoyed that besides the bliss of having a simple life with few things, and the worries and enslavement that comes with having too many things – there is also the problematic process of achieving all these possessions. First thing that springs to mind is wrong type of work with wrong types of people and at crosses with your deeper values in life.

Or in general just too much work and too little life and spare-time hobbies.

You could translate the “mobs” to social press and the “monarchs” to bosses, both to which servility is sometimes practical and often necessary – but nevertheless little by little eats your self-esteem and general well-being.

Hidden in there is also the point that freedom from striving towards new possessions is also a freedom from the means to get there. Let go of the race, and you’ll find that the race might actually be the problem.

2 Responses to “Epicurus on possessions and freedom”

  1. greekliving Says:

    it is just so refreshing knowing that many people appreciate the same things that you do, don’t you think?
    epicurus was a free mind, a rational mind beyond his time who could see beyond the diving cosmogony and the fatality that filled people with fear and ignorance.
    he treasured unconditional friendship like no other and he opened people’s eyes to the truths that, while not obvious, are there for us to see and believe. in many ways than one, he was a trend setter of his age.

    keep up the excellent work and keep discovering the truths of the ancient philosophers that calm our souls, fill us with knowledge and set us free.


  2. Oh yes. I really love the greek culture – the writings, the temples, the theaters, and the free and positive thinking. And it’s a great relief to discover support among both ancient philosophers and fellow bloggers.

    Thanks for the comment – and stay in touch!
    R.


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