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Marcus Aurelius on Human Interconnection

"What injures the hive injures the bee." — Marcus Aurelius, in a few words, sketches a Stoic vision of community.

Marcus Aurelius on Human Interconnection

Unknown — "Marble calyx-krater with reliefs of maidens and dancing maenads" (1st century CE), public domain

The bee and the hive.

Marcus Aurelius, in Meditations (Book VI, 54), writes: «ὃ βλάπτει τὸ σμῆνος βλάπτει καὶ τὴν μέλισσαν» — "What injures the hive injures the bee." He uses this image to argue that harming the community harms oneself.

The Stoic city.

He means this literally and spiritually: the Roman citizen is never an island. The Stoics prized duty, seeing each action as a thread in a vast social web. Marcus wrote these lines surrounded by imperial intrigue, reminding himself not to act against the body politic.

A philosopher on the throne.

Marcus Aurelius ruled an empire wracked by plague and war. Yet in his private philosophical diary, he grappled with the same questions as any of us: how to live alongside others, and why community is survival.

For the Roman emperor-philosopher, individualism was an illusion. He saw each citizen as part of a greater social body, and that acting against others damages the self.

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