Paperback, 156 pages

Turkish language

Published Jan. 7, 2019 by Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları.

ISBN:
978-605-295-402-7
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Kendime Düşünceler

Marcus Aurelius (MS 121-MS 180): MS 121 yılında Roma’da doğdu. Fronto, Apollonius Chalcedonius gibi döneminin önde gelen hatip ve filozoflarından özel dersler aldı. MS 161-180 yılları arasında Roma İmparatoru olarak hüküm sürdü. “Stoacı İmparator”, “Filozof İmparator” gibi sıfatlarla anılan Marcus Aurelius, barışçı bir insan olmasına rağmen hükümdarlığının çoğunu seferlerde geçirdi. MS 169 yılı sonlarında Germen kavimlerine karşı düzenlenen bir sefer esnasında yazmaya başladığı Kendime Düşünceler, Stoacılık, özellikle de Roma Stoası açısından büyük bir öneme sahiptir. Sağlam bir eşitlik ve özgürlük inancına sahip olan Marcus Aurelius, imparatorluğu boyunca doğayı bilip anlayarak yaşamaya çalışmış, her şeyin ortasına insanı koymuştur. Günlük olarak kaleme alınmış bir özdeyişler ve düşünceler derlemesi denebilecek Kendime Düşünceler eserinde kendinden önceki caesarları ve filozofları eleştirmekle kalmayıp, kendi kendini de sorguya çekerek bir vicdan muhasebesi de yapar. Sonraki kuşaklara, kilise düşünürlerine, Rönesans’a da temel olan Kendime Düşünceler, Stoa felsefesinin anlaşılması açısından günümüzde de çok değerli bir kaynaktır.

48 editions

A Good Start for Budding Stoics

While the language is certainly rather old and spends quite a lot of time not speaking in the literal sense, I still managed to enjoy this read. I've been fascinated with the stoics since I took my first philosophy class and I figured this would be a good place to start. It may have taken me a while to get through, but I didn't really do much personal reading when school was in session so that shouldn't be any indication of the quality: there's a reason this book is still being published and translated thousands of years later.

Insightful and still very relevant

Marcus Aurelius is a name I've often encountered - his words quoted at the beginning of novels or mentioned in passing by 'intellectual' characters - so, on spotting this reissued translation of his Meditations on NetGalley, I couldn't help but to request the book. Unsurprisingly for a work that's over eighteen centuries old, there are many translations in existence so I feel lucky that this very readable Martin Hammond translation was the one to find me. I accept the irony of a book reviewer who got a free ARC saying this, but I believe it is worth paying for this particular Aurelius-Hammond partnership. Yes, you can also get free Marcus Aurelius Meditations ebooks, but their reviews are dire!

This Penguin Classics edition begins with a lengthy essay by Diskin Clay that gives a lot of reasonably interesting background information about Aureliys, his life and times. It's admittedly nowhere near …

A book that transcends time

It's difficult to review a book that has been read by many thousands or millions of people over the past two thousand years or so, including world leaders, philosophers and other academics, athletes, and everyday people who just want to live their best lives possible. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius, Emperor of Rome (161-180), was never intended to be read by anyone other than its author. It is a collection of Aurelius' thoughts as they occurred to him, presumably over the course of his life. This book has no plot, no story arc, and no relatable characters, per se. Instead, it's a record of his daily journal that has been translated, interpreted, and transcribed repeatedly down through the ages. The individual entries have been compiled into 12 books, which are loosely arranged in chronological order; although there is some debate about that.

This book is remarkable for two important …

Review of 'Meditations' on 'Goodreads'

3.5
Lots of good quotes in this book, here are some of my favorites:

"I do what is mine to do; the rest doesn't disturb me."

"Wait for it patiently - annihilation or metamorphosis."

"Close to fogetting it all, close to being forgotten."

"None of us have much time. And yet you act as if things were eternal - the day you fear and long for them..."

"Bear in mind that everything that exists is already fraying at the edges, and in transition, subject to fragmentation and to rot."

"That to be remembered is worthless. Like fame. Like everything."

"Think about your life: childhood, boyhood, youth, old age. Every transformation a kind of dying. Was that so terrible?"

"Fear of death is fear of what we may experience. Nothing at all, or something quite new, but if we experience nothing, we can experience nothing bad. And if our experience changes, …

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