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The Art of Living: The Classical Manual on Virtue, Happiness, and Effectiveness | [Epictetus (translated by Sharon Lebell)]
Play The Art of Living: The Classical Manual on Virtue, Happiness, and Effectiveness

The Art of Living: The Classical Manual on Virtue, Happiness, and Effectiveness

  • ABRIDGED
  • by Epictetus (translated by Sharon Lebell)
  • Narrated by Richard Bolles
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  • Regular Price :$8.95

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  • Average Customer Rating
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  • LENGTH
    1 hr and 30 mins
  • RELEASE DATE
    12-15-99
  • AUDIO FORMATS
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    2 3 4 Enhanced Audio
 

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Publisher's Summary

Epictetus, one of the greatest of the ancient thinkers, believed that the primary mission of philosophy is to help ordinary people meet the challenges of daily life and deal with losses, disappointments, and grief. His prescription for the good life: master desires, perform one's duties, and learn to think clearly about oneself and the larger community. This recording includes an interview with philosopher Jacob Needleman on the significance of Epictetus' work.

Recording (P)1997 by Audio Literature; Copyright ©1995 by Sharon Lebell

What Members Say

Average Customer Rating

4.5 (103 ratings)
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4.8 (23 ratings)
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4.4 (25 ratings)
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Performance
  •  
    Regina Wexford, PA, United States 04-29-04
    Regina Wexford, PA, United States 04-29-04 Member Since 2003
    HELPFUL VOTES
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    "Wonderful advice"

    Epictetus provides wonderful words of wisdom that would benefit everyone. He teaches you how to attain happiness through your thoughts..thoughts about others, thoughts about yourself, thoughts about the world we live in. One of his main themes is not to worry over things out of your control. I think we would need fewer therapists if everyone could adopt these principles. The message here is worthy enough and short enough to be kept on your player and listened to once a week. I'm convinced it will produce immeasurable spiritual and psychological benefits.
    The narrator wasn't the greatest or I would have given it 5 stars.

    8 of 10 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Joseph Marcus Cambridge, MA USA 06-25-09
    Joseph Marcus Cambridge, MA USA 06-25-09 Member Since 2009

    Joseph Marcus

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    "Atrocious reading of a vapid mistranslation"

    Epictetus's (ca. 55 - ca. 135) profoundly influential "Enchiridion" ("Handbook"/"Manual"), which needs to be understood and fully appreciated in the context of his much longer "Discourses" and the Stoic milieu that produced it, is mangled by "co-author" Sharon Lebell into the most superficial, vapid, and anachronistic "self-help" drivel imaginable: just imagine a "Reader's Digest" or even "Highlights for Children" regurgitation of a bad CliffsNotes precis; better yet, peruse the informative negative reviews of the paper book, at Amazon.com.

    It hardly helps that narrator Richard Bolles could pass as "Mr. Quaalude"; do NOT listen to this audiobook while driving! Unless you enjoy mediocre, pseudo-spiritual self-help books, I recommend purchasing the Robert Dobbin (2008) or Robin Hand (1995) translation of Epictetus's "Discourses," both of which also include the "Handbook" upon which Lebell's translation is loosely based. If you're interested solely in the original "Art of Living" sourcebook, though, read Keith Seddon's very accessible yet scholarly rigorous "Epictetus' Handbook and the Tablet of Cebes: Guides to Stoic Living" (2008). It's just a shame that neither this Seddon's book nor Dobbin's (2008) "Discourses and Selected Writings" yet exist in Audiobook format.

    12 of 17 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Mark Burbank, CA, United States 07-13-08
    Mark Burbank, CA, United States 07-13-08 Member Since 2007
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    "Right on the Stoic Mark"

    I am a big fan of the Stoics, and this
    little audio file captures the spirit
    of their philosophy. The audio file does
    a good job of bringing the stoic tradition
    into the 21st century, and making it meaningful
    to a listener in 2008.

    Bravo! I would like to see similiar treatments
    on Seneca-Marcus Aurelieus (sp?)-and Cicero.


    3 of 5 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Greg Lansing, MI, USA 01-21-09
    Greg Lansing, MI, USA 01-21-09 Member Since 2006
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    "Thought provoking"

    It's only an hour and a half long, so I've listened to it a couple of times. Epictetus cuts right to the chase. Very approachable and applicable to this century.

    1 of 3 people found this review helpful
  •  
    John Sacramento, CA, United States 05-21-12
    John Sacramento, CA, United States 05-21-12 Member Since 2007
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    "This is for me a valuable work of Stoic philosophy"
    If you could sum up The Art of Living in three words, what would they be?

    Lucid; Valuable; Provocative


    Who was your favorite character and why?

    As this is a work of philosophy it really has no characters and scenes as such.


    If you could give The Art of Living a new subtitle, what would it be?

    An introduction to the Stoic Philosophy of Epicitetus


    0 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Lauren United States 03-31-11
    Lauren United States 03-31-11 Member Since 2010
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    "Great a little short but......."

    It is a great length for your commute or meditation. It will not tell you how to get rich or conker the world. You will how ever be enlightened about how to be happy on a non-superficial level.

    0 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Greg Ann Arbor, MI, USA 08-24-03
    Greg Ann Arbor, MI, USA 08-24-03
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    "Great narrator and even better material"

    Get it ... Epictetus would be proud.

    1 of 8 people found this review helpful
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