Epictetus on Listening
"Nature gave us one tongue and two ears so that we may listen more and talk less." Epictetus, whose silence could shame an emperor.

Paul Gauguin — "Ia Orana Maria (Hail Mary)" (1891), public domain
One Tongue, Two Ears—for a Reason
Epictetus, as recorded by the historian Stobaeus (Florilegium 3.18.50), says: «Ἕνα ἡμῖν ἡ φύσις γλῶτταν ἔδωκεν, δύο δὲ ὦτα, ἵνα πλεονάκις ἀκούωμεν ἢ λαλοῦμεν» — "Nature gave us one tongue and two ears so that we may listen more and talk less." A classroom punchline, but no joke.
The Stoic Power of Silence
Epictetus believed real wisdom starts with shutting up. To him, so much suffering was the product of hasty words and not enough listening. Master silence and you master yourself—and maybe, just maybe, the room.
Epictetus: Outsmarting Masters and Emperors
His lessons shaped Roman senators, and his sarcasm was sharper than a sword. Epictetus, once a slave, learned that power lives in patience—and in keeping your mouth shut when it counts.
Epictetus turns biology into philosophy—a Stoic lesson for every argument, every meeting, every day.