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    A Stoic must believe the world is providentially run — Carmelics
    Home/Divine Attributes
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    Supports→A Stoic must not be discontented with anything that happens in the world

    A Stoic must believe the world is providentially run

    Divine AttributesNatural Theology
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    Divine AttributesNatural Theology

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    4 topics

    Virtue Ethics2 linkedTruth & Knowledge

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    A Stoic must not be discontented with anything that happens in the worldBeing discontented with what happens in the world contradicts believing the worl...One who finds fault with things as they are implicitly commits to the world bein...

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    The world is providentially run92%Grumbling at the way things are implies the world is not providentiall...84%There must be an intelligible entity that accounts for the world's ord...71%There is every reason to expect that a perfectly good and loving God w...70%

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    AI-extracted
    SEP: marcus-aurelius
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    To understand what the thought, ‘providence or atoms’, is doing here we have to connect it with the discontent that is the topic of the passage. Marcus is admonishing himself for his discontent with things as they stand, saying to himself, ‘if you are finding fault with things as they are, then you must think that they are not due to providence. But if they’re not due to providence, then they’re the result of random causes.’ In this passage, ‘atoms’ functions as the implicit commitment of one wh

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