Marcus Aurelius (121-180 CE) was Roman Emperor from 161 until his death in 180 CE, and one of the most important philosophers in the Stoic tradition. He was born in Rome into a prominent family and was adopted by the emperor Antoninus Pius, who trained him carefully for rule. He received an excellent education in rhetoric and philosophy, and was particularly drawn to Stoic philosophy, which he studied seriously from his teenage years. He came to power in 161 CE and ruled for nearly two decades, spending much of his reign on military campaigns defending the empire's northern frontier against Germanic tribes. He died in 180 CE, probably of plague, at his military camp. His personal philosophical notebook, known as the Meditations, was almost certainly never intended for publication: it is a private record of his ongoing effort to live according to Stoic principles, written largely in Greek during his years on campaign. It survived by chance. It is one of the most widely read philosophical texts in the world and has been continuously in print since the Renaissance.
Marcus Aurelius matters because the Meditations demonstrate something remarkable: a man with absolute power over millions of people holding himself to rigorous moral account, questioning his own assumptions, reminding himself of his obligations, and trying to live well in conditions of enormous difficulty. He did not write for an audience. He wrote to himself. This gives the Meditations an honesty and directness unusual in philosophical writing. His core questions remain urgent: how do you maintain equanimity when circumstances are beyond your control? How do you distinguish what is genuinely in your power from what is not? How do you remain focused on what matters when you are distracted by the trivial? How do you face difficulty, loss, and mortality without being destroyed by them? The Stoic answers he developed have proven so durable that they have shaped modern cognitive behavioural therapy, the self-help tradition, and contemporary thinking about resilience and wellbeing. He is also important as someone who tried to apply philosophical principles to the actual exercise of power, with imperfect but genuine results.
Gregory Hays's translation of the Meditations (2002, Modern Library) is the most accessible modern translation and includes a short, excellent introduction.
Frank McLynn's Marcus Aurelius: Warrior, Philosopher, Emperor (2009, Bodley Head) is readable for a general audience.
Ryan Holiday's The Obstacle Is the Way (2014, Profile Books) is an accessible application of Stoic principles to contemporary life, drawing heavily on Marcus.
The Meditations themselves, in any good translation, are short enough to read in a few hours and are written in a plain, direct style.
Pierre Hadot's Philosophy as a Way of Life (1995, Blackwell) is the most important scholarly account of ancient philosophy as practical discipline.
Donald Robertson's How to Think Like a Roman Emperor (2019, St Martin's Press) traces the connections between Stoic practice and cognitive behavioural therapy in a readable way.
Stoicism means suppressing your emotions and feeling nothing.
Stoics distinguished between passions, strong emotional reactions driven by false beliefs about what is good or bad, and what they called good emotions, which arise from accurate perception of one's situation. Marcus felt grief, frustration, and love. Stoicism is not about eliminating emotion but about not being controlled by emotions that arise from mistaken beliefs. A Stoic is not cold or indifferent: they are someone whose emotional life is grounded in clear thinking rather than in confusion about what genuinely matters.
Marcus Aurelius was a hypocrite because he owned slaves and persecuted Christians.
Marcus Aurelius lived within the moral world of second-century Rome, which included slavery and which he did not fundamentally challenge. The persecution of Christians during his reign, though real, was less extreme than under some other emperors and was driven partly by the Roman view that Christian refusal to participate in civic religion was politically dangerous. Evaluating historical figures requires understanding their context. The standard for judging Marcus is not whether he overcame all the moral blindnesses of his time, which no one does, but whether his philosophy was genuinely practised and genuinely valuable. The Meditations provide evidence of both.
The Stoic idea that only virtue matters means Stoics don't care about poverty or injustice.
Marcus and other Stoics were deeply concerned with justice as one of the four cardinal virtues, alongside wisdom, courage, and self-discipline. The claim that virtue is the only genuine good does not mean external conditions are irrelevant: Stoics acknowledged that health, resources, and good social conditions were genuinely preferable to their opposites. The point was that these external conditions did not determine whether you lived well, which depended on your character. Marcus used his power extensively to reform Roman law, improve conditions for slaves and the poor, and promote just governance.
The Meditations were written as a philosophical treatise for others to read.
The Meditations were almost certainly a private journal, never intended for publication. They were written in Greek, not Latin, probably during Marcus's campaigns on the northern frontier. They contain no systematic argument, repeat the same points many times, and address Marcus himself directly. Their value is precisely in this personal, non-performative quality: they show a powerful man holding himself to philosophical account when no one was watching. They survived by chance and were first published more than a thousand years after Marcus's death.
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A Stoic and Socratic Guide to Life (2002, Oxford University Press) provides the philosophical context. Pierre Hadot's The Inner Citadel (1998, Harvard University Press) is the most thorough scholarly analysis of the Meditations.
Anthony Birley's biography Marcus Aurelius (1966, Eyre and Spottiswoode) is the definitive historical account.
Julia Annas's The Morality of Happiness (1993, Oxford University Press) is the most rigorous philosophical treatment of ancient eudaimonist ethics including Stoicism.
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