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  2. Stoic A member of an originally Greek school of philosophy, founded by Zeno of Citium about 308 BC, believing that God determined everything for the best and that virtue is sufficient for happiness. Its later Roman form advocated the calm acceptance of all occurrences as the unavoidable result of divine will or of the natural order.

  3. The difference between Impassive and Stoic. When used as adjectives, impassive means having, or revealing, no emotion, whereas stoic means of or relating to the stoics or their ideas.

  4. Jan 3, 2018 · When I’ve posted the question “What’s the difference between stoicism and Stoicism?” the most common response is some variation of: One is capitalized and the other isnt. This isn’t a trivial distinction, though, because the two words have come to mean quite different things.

  5. Jan 14, 2023 · Key points. Stoicism (upper-case S), the ancient philosophy of Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and Epicetus, is very different from stoicism (lower-case s). Modern researchers have studied the effects...

  6. Impassive and stoic are both words used to describe a lack of emotional response, but they differ in their origin, attitude, connotation, usage, and emphasis. Stoic comes from a philosophical tradition and implies inner strength and resilience, while impassive suggests a lack of emotion or reaction.

  7. Jan 20, 2023 · This is apparent in the way the Stoics treat a number of philosophical questions and in the many connections visible between the different parts of their theory: conclusions in one part of Stoic philosophy tend to reinforce and ratify those in another.

  8. Mar 17, 2022 · Stoicism is very different from other philosophies in this respect: it adds another category into the mix, that of indifferents. This post explores this peculiar moral category (and its subsets – preferred and dispreferred indifferents) to show how it complements the other two.