Ar marcus is praised in the ancient biography for putting on games where hundred lions are killed. And he also has doubts about really core tenets of stoic philosophy. There's a passage where he's longing for an after life. He doesn't think he's going to have a personal after life, but he really ther wishes he would. I thought the final books ten 11, 12 were more meditations on death and the and he's really thinking about his own death as imminent approaching. What's it going to be like? Is his soul going to live on? Is it going to just disperse? Is he going to disappear into infinite nothingness?"
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the man who, according to Machiavelli, was the last of the Five Good Emperors. Marcus Aurelius, 121 to 180 AD, has long been known as a model of the philosopher king, a Stoic who, while on military campaigns, compiled ideas on how best to live his life, and how best to rule. These ideas became known as his Meditations, and they have been treasured by many as an insight into the mind of a Roman emperor, and an example of how to avoid the corruption of power in turbulent times.
The image above shows part of a bronze equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius.
With
Simon Goldhill
Professor of Greek Literature and Culture and Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge
Angie Hobbs
Professor of the Public Understanding of Philosophy at the University of Sheffield
And
Catharine Edwards
Professor of Classics and Ancient History at Birkbeck, University of London
Producer: Simon Tillotson