Born a slave. Became free. Taught that freedom is not a circumstance but a discipline of the mind.
Epictetus was born enslaved in Hierapolis. His master Epaphroditos, himself a freedman of Nero, allowed him to study with Musonius Rufus. After gaining his freedom, he was banished from Rome with all other philosophers by Domitian and established a school in Nicopolis, on the western coast of Greece. He wrote nothing. His student Arrian recorded his lectures as the Discourses and distilled them into the short Handbook (Enchiridion). His central teaching is the distinction between what is up to us (our judgments, desires, choices) and what is not (everything else). Master that distinction and you are free, no matter your circumstances.
“It’s not what happens to you, but how you react to it that matters.”
“First say to yourself what you would be; and then do what you have to do.”
A short manual of Stoic ethics compiled by Arrian from Epictetus' lectures. It begins with the most famous sentence in Stoic philosophy: some things are up to us, and some things are not.
Four surviving books (of an original eight) recording Epictetus' lectures and conversations with students. More expansive and personal than the Handbook, full of practical examples and sharp questioning.
Born into slavery in Hierapolis, a city in Phrygia known for its hot springs. His very name means 'acquired.' His master, Epaphroditus, was a freedman of Nero, once a slave himself.
While still enslaved, Epictetus was allowed to attend lectures by the Stoic teacher Musonius Rufus. Philosophy grabbed hold of him and never let go. He was eventually freed, though the circumstances are unclear.
When Domitian expelled philosophers from Rome in 93 CE, Epictetus moved to Nicopolis in northwestern Greece and founded his own school. He taught there for the rest of his life, living simply and owning almost nothing.
Epictetus never wrote anything down. His student Arrian attended lectures and took notes, preserving them as the Discourses and the shorter Handbook. Without Arrian, Epictetus would be a footnote.
Epictetus taught Zeno's core distinction between what is up to us and what is not.
Musonius was Epictetus' teacher in Rome. The lessons about freedom that Epictetus learned there shaped everything he later taught.
Marcus Aurelius never met Epictetus, but studied the Discourses closely. He quotes and paraphrases him throughout the Meditations.