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The Moral Leader

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Title: The Moral Leader


1
The Moral Leader
  • Stockdale and Stoic Philosophy

2
The Prisoners Dilemma
  • We speak of this as a game we play to
    understand politics and international relations
  • For CDR James Stockdale, who studied
    international relations at Stanford, it ceased to
    be a game on 9 September 1965
  • Parachuting from his damaged A-4 over North
    Vietnam, he recalls thinking I am leaving the
    World of Technology, and entering the World of
    Epictetus

3
Why Study Stockdale
  • VADM Stockdale is justifiably famous for his
    heroic conduct while spending eight years as a
    POW in North Vietnam (four years in solitary
    confinement)
  • But we are not prisoners?
  • We are not training future officers primarily for
    such an ordeal
  • What can we learn from a prisoner?

4
The World of Epictetus
  • Vivere militare to live is to be a warrior
  • But Epictetus himself was (for a large portion of
    his life) a slave
  • Marcus Aurelius, a soldier and emperor
  • Cicero statesman, orator, defender of the
    Republic, proponent of natural law
  • Paul of Tarsus, a theologian and prisoner for
    Christ
  • Soin what sense for these, or for us, is life
    like being a warrior??

5
Epictetus on Life as a Warrior (I)
  • Do you not know that life is a soldiers
    service? One must keep guard, another go out to
    reconnoiter, another take the field. If you
    neglect your responsibilities when some severe
    order is laid upon you, do you not understand
    into what a pitiful state you bring the army?
    The Discourses

6
Epictetus on Life as a Warrior (II)
  • When the Ship is at anchor, if you go on shore
    to amuse yourself, your thought ought to be bent
    toward the ship and perpetually attentive, lest
    the captain should call, and then you must leave
    all these things, that you may not have to be
    carried on board the vessel, bound like a
    sheepIf the captain calls, run to the ship,
    leave all these things, and never look behind.
    Enchiridion VII

7
Stockdales take-away
  • Epictetus compared philosophy lectures to a
    hospital, where one learned the meaning of pain
  • Stockdale responded If Epictetuss lecture room
    was a hospital, my prison was a laboratory a
    laboratory of human behavior. I chose to test his
    postulates against the demanding real-life
    challenges of my laboratory.

8
Stoicisms Prison-analogy (I)
  • Life is not fair. Liberty is infringed, rights
    are not respected
  • The common good is sacrificed to greed,
    selfishness, incompetence and corruption which
    breed cynicism (and sometimes despair)
  • Virtue is forgotten duty is neglected
  • The laws seem unjust and ridiculous the rules
    that govern the world are inappropriate and
    arbitrary sole purpose is to make your lives
    miserable

9
Stoicisms Prison-analogy (II)
  • There is no clear connection between merit,
    performance, and reward
  • Good person may work hard, have exceptional
    abilities, do his/her duty, accomplish much, but
    be ignored, passed over, even humiliated or
    punished
  • Others may defy rules, shirk their duty, do as
    little as possible, be totally devoid of
    character, but yet be recognized and rewarded
    (Punks War, CDR Ward Mooch Carroll)

10
Stoicisms Prison-analogy (III)
  • Those who make the rules, hand out rewards and
    punishments, may seem more like enemies than
    friends, accusers rather than mentors, like
    jailors, rather than teachers
  • The world of Epictetus is a world in which
    there are arbitrary restrictions, no freedoms, no
    clear relationship between cause and effect, no
    clear rhyme or reason the way of things
  • Idiocy, punctuated by cruelty

11
Stockdales Challenge
  • Sowhat are you going to do about it?
  • Wallow in self pity?
  • Sell out? (Prison finks)
  • Isolate yourself? Sink into Cynicism?
  • Orstruggle to maintain your dignity and build a
    community of loyalty and devotion to duty?

12
The Doctrines of Epictetus
  • There are things that are in our power, subject
    to our control our attitudes, opinions, aims,
    desires our character
  • There are other things, important things, that
    affect us, but over which we have no control at
    all our body, our property, our reputation, how
    the world works, what others think
  • Stoic ataraxia the business of the warrior is
    to learn the difference, do our duty and accept
    with equanimity those things that are beyond our
    power

13
The Sayings of Epictetus (I)
  • Men are disturbed not by things, buy by the
    views which they take of thingsDemand not that
    events should happen as you wish, but wish them
    to happen as they do, and you will be well
    (VIII)
  • Sickness is an impediment to the body, but not to
    the will, unless the will itself pleases.
    Lameness is an impediment to the leg, but not to
    the will. Say this to yourself with regard to
    everything that happens. (IX)

14
The Sayings of Epictetus (II)
  • Remember that it is not he who gives abuse or
    blows who affronts, but the view we take of these
    things as insulting. When, therefore, anyone
    provokes you, be assured that it is your own
    opinion which provokes you. (XX)
  • Let death and exile, and all other things which
    appear terrible, be daily before your eyes, but
    death chiefly, and you will never entertain an
    abject thought, nor too eagerly covet anything.
    (XXI)

15
Survival Training
  • The Enchiridion was a handbook carried by Roman
    soldiers
  • Stockdale, in his West Point lecture, compares
    its teachings to Kant on duty (without regard for
    consequences)
  • Gen. Chuck Krulak (USMC, retired) identifies the
    integrity of the Roman soldier (his armor
    without, his character within) as the historical
    legacy of the profession of arms
  • What, finally, is this legacy that your
    professional ancestors have bequeathed to you?

16
Conclusion
  • Marcus Aurelius, in his Meditations, cites
    Socrates words as summarizing the warriors
    tradition
  • in truth, wherever a man has placed himself
    thinking it the best place for him, or has been
    placed by a commander, there in my opinion he
    ought to stay and to abide the hazard, taking
    nothing into the reckoning, either death or
    anything else, before the baseness of deserting
    his post Meditations VII 45
  • Not on my watch! It begins with me! Its up
    to me! The world may command or compel the
    outside only I command from within
  • In this course, we have been engaged in
    archaeology, working backward through time to
    uncover these foundations upon which your
    profession rests
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