Résumé en une phrase
Meditations is a notebook of Stoic reminders about attention, duty, mortality, and self-command.
Résumé rapide
Meditations collects personal reflections written by Marcus Aurelius to train his own judgment. Rather than offering a system in formal order, the book returns again and again to a few central Stoic ideas: control what belongs to you, meet events without complaint, and remember the scale of time and nature.
Résumés visuels
Résumés visuels
Concept Map
The main Stoic ideas Marcus keeps returning to.
Argument Map
How the recurring Stoic claims support one another.
Idées clés
Practice Before Performance
The text is useful because it sounds like self-correction, not polished doctrine.
Control Is Narrow
Marcus repeatedly limits concern to judgment, action, and response.
Perspective Restores Proportion
Thinking cosmically reduces vanity, panic, and resentment.
Résumés de chapitres
Résumés de chapitres
Chapter 1
Read chapterChapter 1 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 1 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 2
Read chapterChapter 2 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 2 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 3
Read chapterChapter 3 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 3 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 4
Read chapterChapter 4 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 4 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 5
Read chapterChapter 5 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 5 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 6
Read chapterChapter 6 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 6 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 7
Read chapterChapter 7 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 7 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 8
Read chapterChapter 8 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 8 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 9
Read chapterChapter 9 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 9 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 10
Read chapterChapter 10 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 10 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 11
Read chapterChapter 11 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 11 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Chapter 12
Read chapterChapter 12 Meditations moves the reflective argument into chapter 12 and sets up the next piece of the book's larger argument or story.
Notes de lecture
Notes de lecture
Why the Repetition Matters
Marcus repeats himself because Stoicism is rehearsal. The book models returning to first principles under pressure.
How to Read the Short Entries
Treat the fragments as prompts for reflection rather than as arguments that need smooth transitions.
Citations marquantes
Citations marquantes
“You have power over your mind - not outside events.”
“Waste no more time arguing what a good man should be. Be one.”
Guide d'étude
Guide d'étude
Inner Discipline
Most entries ask how to steady perception before acting.
Why does Marcus so often invoke death and scale?
The reminders shrink ego and make right action feel more immediate.
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Source et édition
The original text of this work is in the public domain. This page includes a concise summary, reading notes, selected quotes, and visual learning materials for educational purposes.