#seneca — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #seneca, aggregated by home.social.
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Photo of the Day 14th May 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/05/14/photo-of-the-day-14th-may-2026/
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Photo of the Day 14th May 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/05/14/photo-of-the-day-14th-may-2026/
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Photo of the Day 14th May 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/05/14/photo-of-the-day-14th-may-2026/
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Photo of the Day 14th May 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/05/14/photo-of-the-day-14th-may-2026/
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Photo of the Day 14th May 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/05/14/photo-of-the-day-14th-may-2026/
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"Lass uns selbst ein beherzte Tat unternehmen - damit den Rang derjenigen erreichen, denen am häufigsten nachgeeifert wird." #Seneca, Moralische Briefe, 98.13b
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𝑳𝒊𝒕𝒆𝒓𝒂𝒓𝒚 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒔 𝑬𝒑𝒊𝒔𝒐𝒅𝒆: 𝑹𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒏 𝑷𝒍𝒐𝒘, 𝑺𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒆𝒊𝒈𝒏 𝑻𝒓𝒆𝒆: 𝑺𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒄𝒂 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒁𝒉𝒖𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒛𝒊
Can Stoicism answer our dilemma?
Compare Seneca’s On the Shortness of Life with the Zhuangzi in this reflection on Stoicism vs. Daoism. Learn how Cincinnatus’s Roman Plow creates a utilitarian trap. Oh, and how The Expendables does, too.
https://waywordsstudio.com/podcasts/waywords_podcast/roman-plow-sovereign-tree-seneca-zhuangzi/#podcast #literature #books #seneca #zhuangzi #daoism #taoism #stoicism #cincinnatus #cicero
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𝑳𝒊𝒕𝒆𝒓𝒂𝒓𝒚 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒔 𝑬𝒑𝒊𝒔𝒐𝒅𝒆: 𝑹𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒏 𝑷𝒍𝒐𝒘, 𝑺𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒆𝒊𝒈𝒏 𝑻𝒓𝒆𝒆: 𝑺𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒄𝒂 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒁𝒉𝒖𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒛𝒊
Can Stoicism answer our dilemma?
Compare Seneca’s On the Shortness of Life with the Zhuangzi in this reflection on Stoicism vs. Daoism. Learn how Cincinnatus’s Roman Plow creates a utilitarian trap. Oh, and how The Expendables does, too.
https://waywordsstudio.com/podcasts/waywords_podcast/roman-plow-sovereign-tree-seneca-zhuangzi/#podcast #literature #books #seneca #zhuangzi #daoism #taoism #stoicism #cincinnatus #cicero
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𝑳𝒊𝒕𝒆𝒓𝒂𝒓𝒚 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒔 𝑬𝒑𝒊𝒔𝒐𝒅𝒆: 𝑹𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒏 𝑷𝒍𝒐𝒘, 𝑺𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒆𝒊𝒈𝒏 𝑻𝒓𝒆𝒆: 𝑺𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒄𝒂 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒁𝒉𝒖𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒛𝒊
Can Stoicism answer our dilemma?
Compare Seneca’s On the Shortness of Life with the Zhuangzi in this reflection on Stoicism vs. Daoism. Learn how Cincinnatus’s Roman Plow creates a utilitarian trap. Oh, and how The Expendables does, too.
https://waywordsstudio.com/podcasts/waywords_podcast/roman-plow-sovereign-tree-seneca-zhuangzi/#podcast #literature #books #seneca #zhuangzi #daoism #taoism #stoicism #cincinnatus #cicero
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𝑳𝒊𝒕𝒆𝒓𝒂𝒓𝒚 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒔 𝑬𝒑𝒊𝒔𝒐𝒅𝒆: 𝑹𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒏 𝑷𝒍𝒐𝒘, 𝑺𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒆𝒊𝒈𝒏 𝑻𝒓𝒆𝒆: 𝑺𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒄𝒂 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒁𝒉𝒖𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒛𝒊
Can Stoicism answer our dilemma?
Compare Seneca’s On the Shortness of Life with the Zhuangzi in this reflection on Stoicism vs. Daoism. Learn how Cincinnatus’s Roman Plow creates a utilitarian trap. Oh, and how The Expendables does, too.
https://waywordsstudio.com/podcasts/waywords_podcast/roman-plow-sovereign-tree-seneca-zhuangzi/#podcast #literature #books #seneca #zhuangzi #daoism #taoism #stoicism #cincinnatus #cicero
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𝑳𝒊𝒕𝒆𝒓𝒂𝒓𝒚 𝑵𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒔 𝑬𝒑𝒊𝒔𝒐𝒅𝒆: 𝑹𝒐𝒎𝒂𝒏 𝑷𝒍𝒐𝒘, 𝑺𝒐𝒗𝒆𝒓𝒆𝒊𝒈𝒏 𝑻𝒓𝒆𝒆: 𝑺𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒄𝒂 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒁𝒉𝒖𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒛𝒊
Can Stoicism answer our dilemma?
Compare Seneca’s On the Shortness of Life with the Zhuangzi in this reflection on Stoicism vs. Daoism. Learn how Cincinnatus’s Roman Plow creates a utilitarian trap. Oh, and how The Expendables does, too.
https://waywordsstudio.com/podcasts/waywords_podcast/roman-plow-sovereign-tree-seneca-zhuangzi/#podcast #literature #books #seneca #zhuangzi #daoism #taoism #stoicism #cincinnatus #cicero
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People are frugal in guarding their personal property; but as soon as it comes to squandering time they are most wasteful of the one thing in which it is right to be stingy.
— Seneca
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Do #Stoic teachers like #MarcusAurelius, #Seneca and #Epictetus inform your #ClimateAction? Do you hold yourself to moral teachings beyond just doing what is legal?
https://co2mmit.substack.com/p/climate-action-stoic-twist -
Do #Stoic teachers like #MarcusAurelius, #Seneca and #Epictetus inform your #ClimateAction? Do you hold yourself to moral teachings beyond just doing what is legal?
https://co2mmit.substack.com/p/climate-action-stoic-twist -
Do #Stoic teachers like #MarcusAurelius, #Seneca and #Epictetus inform your #ClimateAction? Do you hold yourself to moral teachings beyond just doing what is legal?
https://co2mmit.substack.com/p/climate-action-stoic-twist -
Do #Stoic teachers like #MarcusAurelius, #Seneca and #Epictetus inform your #ClimateAction? Do you hold yourself to moral teachings beyond just doing what is legal?
https://co2mmit.substack.com/p/climate-action-stoic-twist -
He who fears death will never do anything worthy of a man who is alive.
— Seneca
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Let them hate me, so long as they fear me.
[Óderint, dum métuant.]Accius (170-c. 86 BC) Roman tragic poet, literary scholar [Lucius Accius, Lucius Attius]
Atreus (fragment 168) [tr. Kline (2010)]More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/lucius-accius/20033/
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #accius #cicero #seneca #suetonius #caligula #compliance #danger #despot #fear #hatred #leadership #lifeanddeath #threat #tyrant #terrorism #coersion #obedience #compulsion #power
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Let them hate me, so long as they fear me.
[Óderint, dum métuant.]Accius (170-c. 86 BC) Roman tragic poet, literary scholar [Lucius Accius, Lucius Attius]
Atreus (fragment 168) [tr. Kline (2010)]More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/lucius-accius/20033/
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #accius #cicero #seneca #suetonius #caligula #compliance #danger #despot #fear #hatred #leadership #lifeanddeath #threat #tyrant #terrorism #coersion #obedience #compulsion #power
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Let them hate me, so long as they fear me.
[Óderint, dum métuant.]Accius (170-c. 86 BC) Roman tragic poet, literary scholar [Lucius Accius, Lucius Attius]
Atreus (fragment 168) [tr. Kline (2010)]More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/lucius-accius/20033/
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #accius #cicero #seneca #suetonius #caligula #compliance #danger #despot #fear #hatred #leadership #lifeanddeath #threat #tyrant #terrorism #coersion #obedience #compulsion #power
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Let them hate me, so long as they fear me.
[Óderint, dum métuant.]Accius (170-c. 86 BC) Roman tragic poet, literary scholar [Lucius Accius, Lucius Attius]
Atreus (fragment 168) [tr. Kline (2010)]More about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/lucius-accius/20033/
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #accius #cicero #seneca #suetonius #caligula #compliance #danger #despot #fear #hatred #leadership #lifeanddeath #threat #tyrant #terrorism #coersion #obedience #compulsion #power
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#Sunnuntai on hyvä päivä miettiä #stoa'laisuutta. #Seneca ei purrut minuun: vaikutti itseään täynnä olevalta ylimieliseltä ääliöltä. Kokeillako jotakuta toista? #filosofia #HyväElämä
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A Stoic’s Key to Peace of Mind: Seneca on the Antidote to Anxiety
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/03/30/seneca-anxiety/
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The Book Lives Three Times: How Seneca Got Reading Wrong by Getting It Right
You finish writing a book and the manuscript sits there, cooling on the screen like bread pulled from an oven. It is done. It is no longer yours. This is the part no one tells you about authorship: the moment the final sentence locks into place, the book begins its first death, because it has stopped being a living negotiation between you and the language and has become, instead, a fixed object. A thing. The writer’s relationship to the finished text is not unlike the relationship a parent has to an adult child who has just walked out the front door with a suitcase. You made this. You cannot unmake it. You are, from this point forward, irrelevant to its survival.
Something strange surfaces in that departure. While you were writing, the book had a voice, and the voice was yours. I mean the silent one, the one that has nothing to do with ordering coffee or arguing with the insurance company, the interior narrator that reads your own thoughts back to you and lives in the cavity between your ears. It has no sound but is louder than anything in the room. Every sentence you wrote was tested against that voice. You heard the book before you read it. The prose rhythm, the paragraph pacing, the places where a sentence needed to land hard or dissolve into the next thought, all of it was conducted by a voice that has no waveform and no frequency but is, for the writer, the most real sound in the world. When the book is finished, that voice goes quiet. The conductor steps off the podium. What remains on the page is the score, but the performance that produced it is already gone.
Then someone picks up the book and reads it in silence, and a different voice appears.
This is the life of the book that is easiest to overlook, because it happens inside the reader’s skull and leaves no evidence. A person sits with your text and their inner voice takes possession of it, and that voice cannot be yours. The reader’s internal narrator carries its own cadence and speed, colored by decades of that person’s accumulated experience with language. Where you heard a sentence as clipped and staccato, the reader may hear it as languid. Where you intended a pause, the reader may barrel through. The reader is performing the text in the only theater that matters, and the performance is entirely their own. Two people can read the same novel in the same afternoon in the same room and hear completely different books, because the voice in one head is never the voice in another. Silent reading is a private staging of the text, unrehearsed, undirected, and unrepeatable.
This is the second life of the book: the one where it exists as pure text and the reader becomes, without knowing it, both audience and performer. The writer is absent. The writer’s voice is gone. What replaces it is whatever voice the reader has cultivated across a lifetime of reading, one that speeds up when the prose is familiar and slows when it is strange, that whispers through some passages and declaims through others, and that the reader has never once thought to question because it has been there since they first learned to decode symbols on a page. This is a genuine performance, as real as any staged production, and it happens billions of times a day in absolute silence.
Then something else happens. Someone else reads the book aloud.
I have listened to narrators perform my work, and the experience is dislocating in ways I did not anticipate. A narrator translates and performs simultaneously, but what a narrator actually does runs deeper than either word suggests. A narrator re-authors the text in real time, filtering every sentence through a different nervous system and a whole separate body of accumulated memory, lungs that breathe in places where you, the writer, never paused. The commas you placed with surgical precision become suggestions. The rhythms you hammered into the prose get bent, sometimes broken, sometimes improved, by a voice that carries its own gravitational field. What emerges from the narrator’s mouth is a separate book that happens to share your words.
The part that haunts you comes afterward: the narrator’s voice replaces yours. Once you have heard your book performed by another person, you cannot unhear it. You go back to the text and try to read it in your own inner voice, the one that built the thing sentence by sentence, and the narrator is already there, squatting in your skull, delivering lines with inflections you never intended. Your book has been colonized. The voice you lived with for months or years of drafting has been overwritten by a voice that arrived after the work was done and claimed it with the confidence of someone who has always lived there. I say this without resentment, only as a witness to the irreversibility of certain experiences. You cannot un-know a melody once it has been attached to lyrics you wrote in silence.
For the listener, the colonization is even more complete, because the listener never had the writer’s voice to begin with. The listener’s first encounter with the text arrives through the narrator’s body and breath, through decisions about emphasis and tempo and the thousand micro-choices that constitute a spoken performance. The narrator’s voice becomes the voice of the book, permanently, the way a film score becomes inseparable from the images it accompanies. Ask anyone who has listened to a well-narrated audiobook to then read the same text in print, and they will tell you: the narrator is still there, still speaking inside their head, overlaying the reader’s own internal voice with a ghost performance that refuses to vacate.
This is the third life of the book: the one where it enters the listener through a voice the writer did not choose and could not have predicted, and becomes something neither the writer nor the narrator intended.
People ask me why I do not narrate my own books. I narrate the Human Meme podcast, so the question is reasonable: if you already sit in front of a microphone and talk for a living, why hand the book to a stranger? I did narrate one, The Wound Remains Faithful, and the experience taught me something about the economics of creative time that I have not forgotten. A book that took months to write takes roughly six hours of studio time to perform as audio. Six hours of recording, plus editing, plus the physical recovery that sustained vocal performance demands. When I look at a free day and ask myself whether I want to spend it re-performing a book I have already written or writing an entirely new one, the new book wins every time. The podcast is different. The podcast is composed in the speaking. The voice and the writing happen simultaneously, and the performance is the first draft. A book has already been performed once, silently, in the writing, and asking me to perform it again aloud is asking me to walk a trail I have already walked when there is an uncut forest next to it.
But the deeper reason is theatrical, and it connects to everything I have been arguing in this essay. If I narrate my own book, the three lives collapse into two. My voice in the writing and my voice in the narration are too close to each other. The gap between them, the productive gap where the book gets re-authored by a second intelligence, closes. The book becomes a one-man show, and much of my life has already been a one-man show: writing, editing, publishing, designing, promoting, all of it carried by one pair of hands. The audiobook is the place where I can finally open the door and let someone else onto the stage. There is a generosity in that, and a relief, and also a creative dividend, because what comes back from the narrator is always more interesting than what I would have produced alone. A second mind in the room changes the room. I know this from decades of directing actors. The playwright who insists on playing every part has misunderstood the purpose of theater.
Seneca understood something about this multiplication, though he never had to endure the experience of hearing a Roman actor perform his prose in a recording studio. In De Brevitate Vitae, he argues that the philosopher lives longest among all people, because through reading, one annexes every preceding age to one’s own. We can, he writes, dispute with Socrates, doubt with Carneades, find peace with Epicurus, and overcome human nature with the Stoics. The years that came before us are not lost. They are available, and through concentrated study, they become ours. A single life becomes many lives. The calendar is a liar.
But Seneca was also suspicious of exactly the kind of expansive reading his own argument seems to invite. In his second letter to Lucilius, he reverses field with the confidence of a man who has caught himself in a contradiction and decided to own it. Do not read everything, he warns. Do not flit from book to book the way a restless traveler moves from city to city, arriving everywhere and settling nowhere. Linger with a few great thinkers. Digest them. Let their ideas become part of your tissue. The person who reads everything absorbs nothing. The person who reads deeply absorbs the author whole.
Seneca’s two positions only appear to contradict each other. Together they form a single, stranger argument: the multiplication of lives he describes in De Brevitate Vitae depends on depth, never on volume. You do not live Socrates’ life by skimming the dialogues. You live it by sitting inside a single passage until Socrates’ way of thinking becomes indistinguishable from your own. The annexation of another life requires the same commitment you would bring to an actual relationship. You have to show up. You have to stay.
Now extend this to the listener, and extend it further to the writer who came up through the theater.
I am a playwright. I have spent decades thinking about what happens when language leaves the page and enters a body that is not the author’s body. In the theater, this transaction is visible. You sit in a darkened house and watch actors inhabit your words in real time, and the text becomes dimensional in a way that no private reading can replicate, because the actor’s physical presence adds information that the page cannot carry: gesture, stance, the way a pause lands differently when an actual human being is standing in an actual room holding the silence. Live theater is synchronous. The audience and the performer share the same moment. The electricity of that shared present tense is what makes theater irreplaceable, and it is also what limits it. A room, bodies, everyone in the same place at the same time.
An audiobook is the redacted version of that staged play.
“Redacted” in the sense of concentrated, the way a reduction in cooking intensifies a flavor by removing the water. An audiobook strips away the visual dimension of performance, the set, the lights, the blocking, the costumes, and leaves only the voice. And the voice, it turns out, is where most of the meaning lived all along. This is something the old radio dramatists understood instinctively: when you remove the visual, the listener’s imagination does not shut down. It accelerates. The listener becomes scenic designer, casting director, and lighting technician in a single act of involuntary creation, building a visual world around the voice that is more personal, more fitted to the listener’s own psyche, than anything a stage crew could construct.
When I write a book now, I hear it as a playwright hears a script. The prose is dialogue spoken by a narrator who does not yet have a name or a face, and the stage is the inside of a stranger’s head. The performance will not happen in a theater on West 44th Street in front of four hundred people at 8:00 on a Thursday evening. It will happen in a car on Interstate 80, or in a kitchen at 6:00 in the morning, or in a hospital waiting room at a time the listener would rather not remember. The audience has been scattered across time zones and years, each person encountering the performance alone, at a moment determined by the private circumstances of their own life rather than by a curtain time. This is asynchronous theater. The playwright writes for a stage that exists everywhere and nowhere, and the result is a more intimate form of drama, because the performance happens inside the listener rather than in front of them.
The old radio plays understood this intimacy. When Orson Welles broadcast The War of the Worlds in 1938, the panic it caused demonstrated something important about the isolated voice. A voice entering the ear without visual accompaniment occupies a different neurological category than a voice attached to a body on a stage. The brain processes an isolated voice as closer and more authoritative, for the simple reason that there is nothing else competing for attention. The listener cannot glance at the set and remember that this is fiction. The listener has only the voice, and the voice is inside them, and the distance between “hearing a performance” and “experiencing an event” collapses to nothing.
This is what thrills me about the audiobook as a form. It is theater without walls. It is a play that runs continuously, starting and stopping at the listener’s discretion, performed for an audience of one in a venue that exists nowhere and everywhere. The book I wrote in silence, hearing it in the voice that lives between my ears, has traveled through the narrator’s larynx and into the listener’s private theater, and at each stage it has been remade by a different human intelligence. The text is the constant. The voice, the pacing, the meaning, all change with each body the book passes through.
Seneca would have approved of this, I think, with one caveat. He would have insisted that the listener not move on too quickly. Stay with this book. Let it work on you. Do not queue up the next title the moment the final chapter ends. The modern compulsion to consume, to track reading goals and annual book counts and to-be-read piles measured in linear feet, is the restless tourism Seneca warned Lucilius against. You do not multiply your life by multiplying your inputs. You multiply your life by refusing to leave a text until it has become part of you, until you can think in its rhythms without trying, until the author’s concerns have become your concerns and you can no longer remember a time when they were not.
The book lives three times. Once in the writing, where the author’s silent voice conducts every sentence. Once in the reading, where a stranger’s inner voice performs the text in a private theater no one else will ever enter. And once in the listening, where a narrator’s physical voice colonizes both the author’s memory and the listener’s imagination, creating something none of them intended and none of them can fully control.
Three lives. Three genuine performances. And the price of admission to any of them is the willingness to stay.
#audiobook #book #listener #narrator #performance #playwright #Podcast #producer #publishing #reader #seneca #tech #watcher #write #writing -
Upended, then smashed
That career of yours leads over a clif. To leave such an exhalted life, you have to fall. And once prosperity begins to push us over, we cannot even resist. We could wish to fall only once, or at least to fall from an upright position, but we are not allowed. Fortune deos not only overturn us: It upends us, and then smashes us.
~ Senecaslip:4a1569.
#Quotes #Seneca #Stoicism -
bit of a long shot here, perhaps, but I'm looking for Haudenosaunee tattoo artists in Ontario (though, I would be willing to travel into Quebec if needed) who might be interested in a simple wampum-based tattoo on a white settler. If that's you, or you know someone who might be interested, please pass my name and contact along /reach out! thank you!
#TattooArtists #Tattoos #TreatyPeople #Haudenosaunee #HaudenosauneeArt #Mohawk #Oneida #Onondaga #Cayuga #Seneca #Tuscarora
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:stargif: 𝑵𝒆𝒓𝒐́𝒏: 𝒑𝒐𝒅𝒆𝒓, 𝒊𝒏𝒄𝒆𝒏𝒅𝒊𝒐 𝒚 𝒆𝒔𝒑𝒆𝒄𝒕𝒂́𝒄𝒖𝒍𝒐 𝒆𝒏 𝒍𝒂 𝑹𝒐𝒎𝒂 𝒊𝒎𝒑𝒆𝒓𝒊𝒂𝒍:stargif:
Roma, año 41 d.C.
La Guardia Pretoriana asesina a Calígula y coloca en el trono a Claudio.
No es el Senado quien decide.
Es la espada.
La República ya es una fachada elegante para un sistema donde el poder real se impone con violencia.En ese mundo nace, en el 37 d.C., Lucio Domicio Enobarbo.
Su madre, Agripina la Menor, nieta de Augusto e hija de Germánico, no lo cría como a un niño: lo construye como proyecto político.
Se casa con Claudio, logra que adopte a su hijo y desplaza a Británico.
Cuando Claudio muere —probablemente envenenado— el joven, con apenas 16 años, se convierte en Nerón.Los primeros años no anuncian catástrofe.
Bajo la influencia de Séneca y del prefecto Sexto Afranio Burro, el gobierno muestra moderación fiscal, cierta clemencia judicial y estabilidad administrativa.
Pero el equilibrio depende de tutores.
Cuando esa contención desaparece, queda el poder absoluto en manos de un joven inseguro y necesitado de aprobación.La relación con Agripina se deteriora.
Las fuentes antiguas, sobre todo Tácito y Suetonio, transmiten rumores de incesto y manipulación.
No sabemos cuánto hay de propaganda, pero sí sabemos cómo terminó: en el año 59 Nerón intenta matarla con un barco diseñado para hundirse.
Ella sobrevive.
Finalmente envía soldados a ejecutarla.
La escena final —“herid el vientre que engendró a tal monstruo”— pertenece más a la literatura que al acta judicial, pero el matricidio fue real.Después vendrán las esposas.
Claudia Octavia, hija de Claudio, es repudiada y ejecutada.
Popea Sabina se convierte en emperatriz y muere en circunstancias violentas; la tradición afirma que Nerón la mató de una patada estando embarazada, aunque algunos historiadores modernos dudan de los detalles exactos.
Más tarde aparece Esporo, un joven al que manda castrar y con quien celebra una ceremonia pública de matrimonio.
No es simple extravagancia: es la exhibición de que el emperador está por encima de toda norma.En el 64 estalla el gran incendio de Roma.
El mito lo pinta tocando la lira mientras la ciudad arde.
Sin embargo, Tácito reconoce que se encontraba en Antium y regresó para organizar ayuda, abrir jardines imperiales y coordinar refugios.
La arqueología sitúa el origen del fuego en la zona comercial cercana al Circo Máximo, un lugar lleno de materiales inflamables.
No hay pruebas concluyentes de un plan deliberado.Lo que sí es indiscutible es que después levantó la Domus Aurea, un complejo palaciego inmenso, con lagos artificiales y un comedor giratorio.
Fue una afirmación obscena de poder en una ciudad devastada.
También impulsó reformas urbanísticas: limitó alturas, prohibió muros medianeros continuos y promovió materiales más resistentes al fuego.
Roma se reconstruyó, pero el resentimiento creció.Para desviar la ira popular, culpó a la pequeña comunidad cristiana.
Las ejecuciones fueron crueles y ejemplarizantes.
No era aún una persecución sistemática del Imperio, sino una maniobra política en medio del caos.Su vida cotidiana estaba marcada por excesos.
Banquetes interminables, vino endulzado con compuestos de plomo —lo que algunos asocian con posibles síntomas de saturnismo—, necesidad constante de espectáculo.
Nerón quería ser artista.
Cantaba, actuaba, competía en Grecia.
Obligaba a la élite a aplaudir.
Para la mentalidad tradicional romana, aquello era degradante.
Para él, era su identidad más auténtica.En el 68, las legiones se rebelan.
El Senado lo declara enemigo público.
La Guardia Pretoriana lo abandona.
Huye a una villa suburbana y, incapaz de suicidarse solo, pide ayuda a su secretario Epafrodito.
Muere pronunciando: “Qualis artifex pereo” —“Qué artista muere conmigo”—.
Tenía treinta años.¿Fue un monstruo?
Ordenó ejecuciones, practicó la represión y ejerció el poder sin límites.
Eso es real.
Pero también fue el producto extremo de un sistema que concentraba autoridad absoluta bajo una máscara republicana.
La dinastía Julio-Claudia no cayó solo por su carácter; cayó por la tensión estructural entre tradición y autocracia.Nerón no fue solo el incendiario de Roma.
Fue el síntoma visible de una maquinaria política que ya estaba oxidada por dentro.▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣▣
#neron #imperioromano #historiaromana #agripinalamenor #dinastiajulioclaudia #incendioderoma #domusaurea #seneca #tacito #suetonio #romaimperial #historiareal #poderabsoluto #colapsopolitico #ecosdelpasado
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Hype for the Future 116E: Route 20, Fremont to Norwalk
Introduction Between the Cities of Fremont and Norwalk along United States Route 20 are additional communities such as Clyde, Bellevue, and Willard. Regardless of the particular community within Sandusky, Huron, or neighboring counties in the associated area, the region is largely determined by proximity to Lake Erie and presence in the Great Lakes watershed. Amenities The City of Clyde, located approximately eight (8) miles east of Fremont along Route 20, is home to the General McPherson […]https://novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026/02/24/hype-for-the-future-116e-route-20-fremont-to-norwalk/
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Seneca on Grief and the Key to Resilience in the Face of Loss: An Extraordinary Letter to His Mother
https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/02/21/seneca-consolation-to-helvia/
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Photo of the Day 18th February 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/02/18/photo-of-the-day-18th-february-2026/
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Photo of the Day 18th February 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/02/18/photo-of-the-day-18th-february-2026/
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Photo of the Day 18th February 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/02/18/photo-of-the-day-18th-february-2026/
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Photo of the Day 18th February 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/02/18/photo-of-the-day-18th-february-2026/
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Photo of the Day 18th February 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/02/18/photo-of-the-day-18th-february-2026/
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El esfuerzo constante vence al talento ocasional.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/oi62UrBDgFs
#shorts #ultimahora #youtube #Instagram #viral #tiktok #twitter #facebook #españa #reels
#MarcoAurelio #Seneca
#motivacion #disciplina #constancia #crecimientopersonalGuarda este Reel y vuelve cuando falten ganas
Comenta “CONSTANCIA” si sigues aunque cueste
Comparte este video con quien necesita perseverar hoyLeer Completo En: https://jaml.es/el-esfuerzo-constante-vence-al-talento-ocasional/
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Tu historia inspira cuando es auténtica.
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/ok9-9jDOfBU
#shorts #ultimahora #youtube #Instagram #viral #tiktok #twitter #facebook #españa #reels
#MarcoAurelio #Seneca
#motivacion #desarrollopersonal #mentalidad #exito #crecimientopersonalSi esto resonó contigo, guárdalo ahora
Compártelo con alguien que lo necesite hoy
Sígueme para más mensajes que despiertan concienciaLeer Completo En: https://jaml.es/tu-historia-inspira-cuando-es-autentica/
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Hype for the Future 104J: Finger Lakes National Forest
Overview Though the State of New York is often better known in the “Upstate” contexts for the wilderness of Adirondack and Catskill Parks, the Finger Lakes region contains the only national forest within the entirety of the State, located exclusively between Seneca Lake to the west and Cayuga Lake to the east within Seneca (north) and Schuyler (south) Counties.https://novatopflex.wordpress.com/2026/02/12/hype-for-the-future-104j-finger-lakes-national-forest/
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Photo of the Day 8th February 2026.
[…]https://mancavgeek.co.uk/2026/02/08/photo-of-the-day-8th-february-2026/
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Now that I finally have some time over the next year, i'm replacing my wasdkeyboard with a custom built keyboard from the ground up. Came across this absolutely fascinating rundown on keyboards, but specifically the biggest key of them all, the SPACEBAR and how stabilizing it led a machinist down the rabbit hole, which I'm seemingly now looking out of.
https://youtu.be/N3FEv1qw4_w?si=8mDznbbIleThiMvHMore info on the Seneca https://www.norbauer.co/pages/the-seneca
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Tu progreso es más importante que tu perfección.
#shorts #ultimahora #youtube #Instagram #viral #tiktok #twitter #facebook #españa #reels #Nietzsche #Epicteto #Seneca #EckhartTolle #ByronKaties #motivacion #crecimiento #mentalidad #abundancia #inspiracion
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No necesitas más dinero, necesitas más disciplina.
#shorts #ultimahora #youtube #Instagram #viral #tiktok #twitter #facebook #españa #reels #Nietzsche #Epicteto #Seneca #EckhartTolle #ByronKaties #motivacion #crecimiento #mentalidad #abundancia #inspiracion
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Sé rico en activos, no en apariencias.
#shorts #ultimahora #youtube #Instagram #viral #tiktok #twitter #facebook #españa #reels #Nietzsche #Epicteto #Seneca #ByronKaties #EckhartTolle #motivacion #crecimiento #mentalidad #abundancia #inspiracion
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Ser rico no es gastar mucho, es necesitar poco.
#shorts #ultimahora #youtube #Instagram #viral #tiktok #twitter #facebook #españa #reels #Nietzsche #Epicteto #Seneca #ByronKaties #EckhartTolle #motivacion #crecimiento #mentalidad #abundancia #inspiracion
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Spirituality & Religious Studies @spiritualityreligiousstudies.wordpress.com@spiritualityreligiousstudies.wordpress.com ·Apotheosis
This is also called divinization or deification. It’s from the Latin deificato, meaning “making divine.” This is the glorification of a subject to divine levels & commonly, the treatment of a human being, any other living thing, or an abstract idea in the likeness of a deity.
The original sense of apotheosis relates to religion & is the subject of many works of art. Figuratively “apotheosis” may be used in almost any context for “the deification, glorification, or exaltation of a principle, practice, etc.” So normally attached to an abstraction of some sort.
In religion, apotheosis was a feature of many religions in the ancient world. Some that are active today. It requires a belief that there’s a possibility of newly created God’s, so a polytheistic belief system.
The Abrahamic religions of Christianity, Islam, & Judaism don’t allow this. Though many recognize minor sacred categories such as saints. They’re created by a process called canonization. In Christian theology, there’s a concept of the faithful becoming god-like, called divinization or in Eastern Christianity theosis.
In Hinduism, there’s some range for new deities. A human may be deified by becoming regarded as an avatar of an established deity, usually a major one, or by being regarded as a new, independent deity (usually a minor one), or a mix of the 2.
In art, an apotheosis scene usually shows the subject in the Heavens or rising towards them. They’re often partnered by a number of angels, putti, personifications of virtues, or similar figures.
Especially from Baroque art onwards apotheosis scenes may show rulers, generals, or artists purely as an honorific symbol. In many cases, the “religious” context is classical Greco-Roman pagan religion, like The Apotheosis of Voltaire, which features Apollo. The Apotheosis of Washington (1865) sits high in the dome of the United States of America Capitol Building is another example. Personification of places or abstractions are also shown receiving an apotheosis. The classic composition was suited for artistic placement on ceilings or inside domes.
Before the Hellenistic period, imperial cults were known in ancient Egypt (pharaohs) & Mesopotamia (from Naran-Sin through Hammurabi). In the New Kingdom of Egypt, all deceased pharaohs were deified as the god Osiris, having been identified as Horus while on the throne. They were sometimes referred to as the “son” of other various deities.
The architect Imhotep was defied after his passing away. Though the process seems to have been gradual. This took over 1,000 years, by which time he had become associated with medicine. About a dozen non-royal ancient Egyptians became regarded as deities.
Ancient Greek & Roman religions have many characters who were born as humans but became gods. Like Disney’s Hercules. They’re usually made divine by 1 of the main deities, the 12 Olympians. In the Roman story of Cupid & Psyche, Zeus gave the ambrosia of the gods to the mortal Psyche. This transformed her into a goddess herself.
In the case of the Hellenistic queen Berenice II of Egypt was deified like other rulers of the Ptolemaic dynasty. The court dispersed a myth that her hair, that was cut off to fulfill a vow, had its own apotheosis before becoming the Coma Berenices, a group of stars that still bear her name.
In the Greek world, the 1st leader who granted himself diving honors was Philip II of Macedon. At the wedding to his 6th wife, Philip’s enthroned image was carried in procession among the Olympian gods. Such Hellenistic state leaders might be raised to a status equal to the gods before death, like Alexander the Great, or afterwards, like members of the Ptolemaic dynasty.
A heroic cult status that’s similar to apotheosis was also an honor given to a few reversed artists of the distant past, such as Homer.
Up to the end of the Roman Republic, the god Quirinus was the only 1 the Romans accepted as having undergone apotheosis, for his identification/syncretism with Romulus. Syncretism is the practice of meshing together different beliefs & various schools of thought. Eventually apotheosis in Ancient Rome was a process whereby a deceased ruler was recognized as divine by their successors. This was usually done by a decree of the Senate & popular consent.
The 1st of these cases was the posthumous deification of the last Roman dictator Julius Caesar in 42 BC by his adopted son, the triumvir Caesar Octavian. In addition to showing respect, the present ruler often deified a popular predecessor to legitimize himself & gain popularity himself & gain popularity with the people.
A vote in the Roman Senate, in the later Empire confirming an imperial decree, was the normal official process. But this sometimes followed a period with the unofficial use of deific language or imagery for the individual. This was often done rather discreetly within the imperial circle.
There was then a public ceremony, called a consecratio, including the release of an eagle which flew high. This represents the ascent of the deified person’s soul to Heaven. Imagery featuring the ascent, sometimes using a chariot, was common on coins & in other art.
The largest & most famous example in art in a relief on the base of the Column of Antoninus Pius, showing the emperor & his wife, Faustina the Elder, being carried up by a much larger winged figure, described as representing “Eternity,” as the personifications of “Roma” & the Campus Martius sit below, & eagles fly above. The imperial couple are represented as Jupiter & Juno (or Zeus & Hera).
The historian Dio Cassius, who said he was present, gives a detailed description of the large, & lavish, public consecratio of Perinax, emperor for 3 months in 193, ordered by Septimius Severus.
At the height of the imperial cult during the Roman Empire, sometimes the emperor’s deceased loved ones (heirs, empresses, or lovers) like Hadrian’s Antinous were deified as well.
Deified people were posthumously given the title ‘Divus’ for men & ‘Diva’ for women to their names to signify their divinity. Traditional Roman religion distinguished between a deus (god) & divus (a mortal who became divine or deified), though not consistently. Temple & columns were erected to provide a space for worship.
The imperial cult was mainly popular in the provinces. Especially in the Eastern Empire, where many cultures were well used to deified rulers, & less popular in Rome itself, & among traditionalists & intellectuals.
Some privately, & cautiously, ridiculed the apotheosis of inept & feeble emperors, as in the satire The Pumkinification of (the Divine) Claudius. This is usually attributed to Seneca.
Numerous mortals have been deified into the Taoist pantheon. Examples are Guan Yi, Iron-crutch Li, & Fan Kuai. Song dynasty general Yue Fei was deified during the Ming dynasty. He’s considered by some practitioners to be 1 of the 3 highest-ranking heavenly generals. The Ming dynasty epic Investiture of the Gods deals heavily with deification legends.
In the complicated, & variable, conceptions of deity in Buddhism, the achievement of Buddhahood may be regarded as an achievable goal for the faithful. Many significant deities are considered to have begun as normal people, from Gautama Buddha (the original Buddha & the creator of Buddhism) downwards. Most of these are seen as avatars or re-births of earlier figures.
Some significant Hindu deities, in particular Rama, were also born as humans. He’s seen as an avatar of Vishnu. In more modern times, Swaminarayan is an undoubted & well-documented historical figure, who’s regarded by some Hindus as an avatar of Vishnu, or as being a still more elevated deity. Bharat Mata (Mother India) began as a national personification devised by a group of Bengali intellectuals in the late 19th century. But now it receives some worship.
Various Hindu & Buddhist rulers in the past have been represented as deities, especially after death, from India to Indonesia. Jayavarman VII, King of the Khmer Empire the 1st Buddhist king of Cambodia, had his own features used for the many statues of Buddha/Avalokitevara he erected.
The extreme personality cult instituted by the founder of North Korea, Kim Il-Sung, has been to represent a deification. And continues to this day with the current leader. Even the nation is admittedly atheist.
In Christian theology, instead of the word “apotheosis,” they use the words “deification” or “divinization” or the Greek word “theosis.” Pre-Reformation, & mainstream theology, in both East & West, views Jesus Christ as the preexisting God who undertook mortal existence. Not as a mortal being who attained divinity. A view known as adoptionism. Adoptionism is an early Christian non-Trinitarian doctrine that holds that Jesus was born a mere human being. But Jesus was later adopted by God as His son, usually at Jesus’ baptism or resurrection, rather than being divine from eternity.
It holds that he has made it possible for human beings to be raised to the level of sharing the divine nature as II Peter 1:4 states that he became human to make humans “partakers of the divine nature.”
In John 10:34, Jesus referenced Psalm 82:6 when he stated: “Is it not written in your Law, I have said you are gods?” Other authors stated: “For this is why the Word became man, & the Son of God became the Son of man: so that Man, by entering into communion with the Word & thus receiving divine sonship, might be made God.” Accusations of self deification to some degree may have been placed on heretical such as the Waldensians.
The language of II Peter is taken up by St. Irenaeus, in his famous phrase, “if the Word has been made man, it is so that men may be made gods.” It becomes the standard in Greek theology. In the 14th century, St. Athanasius repeats Irenaeus almost word for word. In the 5th century, St. Cyril of Alexandria says that we shall become sons “by participation” (Greek methexis). Methexis is “group sharing,” where the audience actively participates in the performance.
Deification is the central idea in the spirituality of St. Maximus the Confessor. For whom the doctrine is the result of the Incarnation: “Deification, briefly, is the encompassion & fulfillment of all times and ages.”
The Roman Catholic Church doesn’t use the term “apotheosis” in its theology. This is equivalent to the Greek word theosis are Latin-derived words “divinization” & deification” used in the Latin tradition of the Catholic Church.
The concept has been given less prominence in Western theology than in that of the Eastern Catholic Churches. But is present in the Latin Church’s liturgical prayer.
Despite the theological differences, in the Catholic church art depictions of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary in art & the Ascension of Jesus in Christian art do share many similarities in composition to apotheosis subjects. As there are many images of saints being raised into Heaven.
Anthropolatry is the deification & worship of humans. It was practiced in ancient Japan towards their emperors. Followers of Socinianism were later accused of practicing anthropolatry.
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#1865 #193 #42BC #4thCentury #5thCentury #AbrahamicReligions #Adoptionism #AlexanderTheGreat #Ambrosia #AncientRome #Angels #Anthropolatry #Antinous #Apollo #Apotheosis #AscensionOfJesus #AssumptionOfTheVirginMary #Atheist #Avalokiteshvara #Avatar #Avatars #BaroqueArt #bengali #BereniceIIOfEgypt #BharatMata #Buddha #BuddhaGautama #Buddhahood #Buddhism #CaesarOctavian #Cambodia #CampusMartius #canonization #CatholicChurch #Christianity #ColumnOfAntoninusPius #ComaBerenices #Consecratio #Cupid #Deification #Deity #Deus #DioCassius #Disney #DIva #Divinization #Divus #EasternCatholicChurch #EasternChristianity #EasternEmpire #Egypt #Egyptians #Emperors #FanKuai #FaustinaTheElder #GrecoRoman #Greek #GuanYi #Hadrian #Hammurabi #Heaven #Hellenistic #Hera #Hercules #Hindu #Hinduism #Homer #Horus #IIPeter14 #Imhotep #ImperialCults #India #Indonesia #InvestitureOfTheGods #IronCrutchLi #Islam #Japan #JayavarmanVII #Jesus #John1034 #Judaism #JuliusCaesar #Juno #Jupiter #KhmerEmpire #KimIlSung #Krishna #Late19thCentury #Latin #LatinChurch #Mesopotamia #Methexis #MingDynasty #NaramSin #NewKingdom #NorthKorea #Olympians #Osiris #pagan #Pertinax #Pharaohs #PhilipIIOfMacedon #polytheistic #Psalm826 #Psyche #PtolemaicDynasty #Putti #Rama #Reformation #Roman #RomanCatholicChurch #RomanRepublic #RomanSenate #Romans #Romulus #Saints #Senate #Seneca #SeptimiusSeverus #Socinianism #StAthanasius #StCyrilOfAlexandria #StIrenaeus #StMaximusTheConfessor #Swaminarayan #Syncretism #Taoist #TaoistPantheon #Temple #ThePumpkinificationOfTheDivineClaudius #Theosis #Triumvir #USCapitolBuilding #Vishnu #Waldensians #YueFei #Zeus
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https://www.europesays.com/uk/436946/ Champion Immersive Tries To Get Back To The Winner’s Circle In Seneca Overnight #BradCox #ChurchillDowns #CoachingClubAmericanOaks #DogwoodStakes #EchoSound #FlorentGeroux #immersive #JoseOrtiz #LuanMachado #racing #Seneca #Sports #TestStakes #UK #UnitedKingdom
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Champion Immersive Seeks First Win Of Year In Churchill Downs’ Seneca
Godolphin’s champion filly Immersive returns to face six rivals entered in Saturday’s fifth running of the $175,000 Seneca…
#NewsBeep #News #Racing #BradCox #ChurchillDowns #CoachingClubAmericanOaks #FlorentGeroux #Immersive #racing #Seneca #Sports #UK #UnitedKingdom
https://www.newsbeep.com/uk/137537/