Hi everyone,

This week's speaker in the University of Sydney Philosophy Seminar Series is 
Tyler Paytas, (Australian Catholic University, Sydney)

The title of the talk is "Stoic Faith". Here is an abstract for the talk:

The human condition is inherently challenging. Our lives are coloured by toil, 
limitation, pain, illness, impermanence, and death. Added to these obstacles is 
an apparent lack of moral economy in the universe. These circumstances render 
us susceptible to mental disturbance in the form of despair, nihilism, anxiety, 
and grief. Ancient spiritual traditions aim to provide a bulwark against these 
afflictions by reframing the human condition in a manner that allows us to face 
it with equanimity and courage. In the Western context, two traditions have 
been particularly influential. Christianity teaches that while the human 
condition is fundamentally bad in several respects (e.g., suffering, sin, 
death), thanks to God’s grace, the faithful can look forward to an afterlife 
that is free from the woes of terrestrial existence. Stoicism proceeds by 
challenging common assumptions about value and well-being; pain, illness, and 
death are not bad for us because well-being depends solely on virtue. In this 
paper, I argue that accepting the Stoic account of well-being, which is the 
core Stoic doctrine, is ultimately a matter of faith, and that we have good 
reasons to cultivate this faith. I also argue that Stoic faith is more 
attainable and stable than conventional religious faith.

The seminar will take place at 3:30pm on Wednesday May 21 in the Philosophy 
Seminar Room (N494).

Enquiries about the seminar series can be directed to [email protected]

Ryan Cox
Associate Lecturer in Philosophy
Discipline of Philosophy
School of Humanities
University of Sydney
[email protected]
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