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Showing posts with the label happiness

You Are Not Separate: Cheng Hao, the Stoics, and the Art of Living Well

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  14 min read What if the numbness you feel about your work, your relationships, or the world isn't a personality problem? What if it's a philosophical one? This post explores how the Song dynasty philosopher Cheng Hao 程顥 and the ancient Stoics converge on a radical idea: your personal flourishing is structurally continuous with the flourishing of everything around you, and understanding this is where a meaningful life begins. The Living Fabric of Ren (Humaneness) in Cheng Hao's Thought Who Was Cheng Hao? Cheng Hao 程顥 (1032–1085), courtesy name Bochun and known as Master Mingdao, was one of the founding figures of Neo-Confucianism during the Northern Song dynasty. He studied under Zhou Dunyi 周敦頤 (1017–1077) alongside his brother Cheng Yi 程頤 (1033–1107), and together they are remembered as two of the Six Masters of Northern Song. Where Cheng Yi took a rationalist path, emphasising the investigation of li 理 (principle) through intellectual effort, Cheng Hao's approach w...

Happiness Is Not a Mood. It's a Practice

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  9 min read What if the best traditions in history agree that your idea of happiness is wrong: not morally, but architecturally? This post draws on Chinese and Greek philosophical wisdom to show why comfort quietly erodes purpose, and what it looks like to build happiness that actually lasts. Most of us think of happiness as something we fall into. Remove enough friction, add enough comfort, and it shows up. But most of the deepest philosophical traditions push back hard on this. They suggest that a life built around ease doesn't produce happiness. It slowly dismantles it. Two traditions in particular make this case with unusual force: the ancient Chinese text  Chun Qiu Zuo Zhuan  ( Spring and Autumn Annals with Zuo's Commentary , 《春秋左傳》) and Aristotle's  Nicomachean Ethics .  They come from different worlds, speak different languages, and address different problems. Yet on this point, they line up. Genuine happiness isn't a state you settle into. It's somethin...

The High Cost of "More": Why Mozi and the Stoics Are the Ultimate Minimalist Mentors

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  8 min read You've worked hard, you own nice things, and you still feel like you're losing.  What if the problem isn't that you don't have enough, but that "enough" has quietly become impossible to define? This post draws on the ancient philosophy of Mozi and the Roman Stoics to help digitally fatigued, success-tired adults break free from the trap of endless consumption, with grounded insights and practical steps you can use today. We're living in an era of "just in case" purchases and "treat yourself" culture. It's the constant ping of a delivery app, the third streaming service you barely watch, and the pressure to spend more on a wedding than a deposit on a house. We're drowning in things, yet we've never felt more stretched for cash or time. This isn't just a 21st-century problem. About 2,500 years ago, a Chinese philosopher named Mozi looked at the lavish parties and wasteful rituals of his time and decided enough...