Philía and War in the Epictetan Philosophy of History

  • Francisco Miguel Ortiz Delgado
Keywords: Philosophy of history, Epictetus, Stoicism, Ethics, Love-friendship, War

Abstract

The present article studies the epictetean philosophical use of some passages of the Greek and Roman history. The concepts of love-friendship (philía) and personal convenience (sumphéron) second the philosopher to explain why happiness (eudaimonía) has not been reached by the human being in all history. All historical war or strife (pólemos), such as the Trojan, the Medics and the Peloponnesian wars, is provoked by epistemological-moral mistakes derived from the ignorance of which is the correct place to put the sumphéron; such correct place is only the personal “rational capacity” (proháiresis). This causal explanation of the incorrect and vicious human actions, of which history is full and which destroy the existent philía between nations and provoke pólemos, constitutes an authentic epictetean philosophy of history. Nevertheless, those vicious actions have a justification in a superior Cosmological level because they are pre-determined and ordered by the God-Providence. This leads us to the possibility of observing that the stoic philosophy of history, particularly the epictetean, is analogous to some modern speculative systems of history like the ones developed by Vico or Hegel.

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Published
2018-12-01
How to Cite
Ortiz Delgado, F. M. (2018). Philía and War in the Epictetan Philosophy of History. Cuadernos De filosofía, (71), 19-32. https://doi.org/10.34096/cf.n71.7300
Section
Artículos