
Ward Farnsworth
Law professor and former dean at the University of Texas School of Law. Author of books on clear thinking, language, and philosophy, known for simplifying complex ideas.
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Feb 12, 2025 • 1h 2min
Ward Farnsworth: How To Say Things That Last Forever | How I Write
Ward Farnsworth, a law professor and former dean at the University of Texas, expertly demystifies eloquence in communication. He explores the power of simple language, showcasing how Saxon words resonate more deeply. Farnsworth analyzes iconic speeches, revealing how rhetorical techniques like repetition and epistrophe enhance emotional impact. With insights from figures like Lincoln and Churchill, he provides actionable advice for mastering rhetoric in writing and speech, urging listeners to embrace clarity and artistry.

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Sep 18, 2018 • 3min
Approach Your Troubles Like Doctor
It’s famously said that you should learn from the mistakes of others because you can’t live long enough to make them all yourself. In that way, the books we read and the information we digest gives us an advantage to those who choose to learn by painful trial and error.
In studying the Stoics, we’re able to adopt a mentality battle tested by some of history’s most successful warriors, artists, businessmen, and politicians. We can use the same operating system that helped centuries of people solve the complex problems of daily life.
Ward Farnsworth is the Dean of the University of Texas Law School. He’s also a lifetime student of the Stoics and author of The Practicing Stoic: A Philosophical User's Manual. He expanded on this idea in a recent interview:
“Stoicism tries to get its students to approach the troubles of other people like a good doctor would. Veteran doctors are very compassionate, and they give their all to their patients. But they don’t get emotional about it. They might have done so when they were first getting started, but experience tends to turn them into natural stoics in their professional lives. That’s one way to think about Stoicism: it’s an effort to gain, by the study of philosophy, some of the traits and immunities that would otherwise be the natural result of long experience. The study of stoicism is kind of a surrogate for the passage of time.”
That is why you put in the work, that’s why you listen to this podcast and subscribe to these emails. You have the same goal. To bring yourself to the state others take a lifetime to get to. When you read these emails, try to not just read them, but adopt their lessons into your everyday life. In that way, you’re inheriting the wisdom of generations past. And becoming wiser and stronger for it.
For more, read our full interview with Ward on DailyStoic.com and check out his newest book The Practicing Stoic: A Philosophical User's Manual. The book distills the main ideas of the Stoics under twelve easy-to-reference headings.
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