The Stoics' doctrine of pathological feelings
Grant Sterling's message of 1/31/2022 to the International Stoic Forum in answer to Nigel Glassborow.
Nigel:
The Stoic doctrine, repeated countless times throughout the
history of the movement is:
1) Judgments about good and evil generate feelings. (Let's
just use this neutral term for now.)
2) Externals are neither good nor evil. Never, ever.
3) If you judge an external to be good or evil, then your judgment
is contrary to reason. Always, without exception.
4) A feeling generated by a judgement contrary to reason is always
excessive and contrary to reason. {Since the feeling was generated by
a false belief that there is something good or evil out there, and there
isn't anything good or evil out there, then the appropriate level of
feeling in that case is zero. So any feeling, in this case, is excessive.}
5) Internals are good or evil. True judgements about internals
generate
feelings which are not excessive or contrary to reason. Those feelings
are the eupathea, none of which are negative (grief, anger, sorrow, etc.)
The Stoics were famous for rejecting the multi-part soul of Plato
and Aristotle, and holding that feelings arise from the rational
part of the soul--that is, the part of the soul that reasons and makes
judgments. (Although, unfortunately, most of them result from
reasoning badly and making false judgments.) The idea that feelings
have their origin outside and prior to the act of judgment is a key
element of the Aristotelian-Platonic picture that the Stoics rejected.
You cannot take Zeno's definition, which Plato and Aristotle would have
happily embraced, and pull it away from the critical areas in which the
Stoics took that definition in a radically different direction from Plato
and Aristotle.
Sincerely,
GCS
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