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Quote·Ancient Rome·Imperial Rome (1st century AD)

Musonius Rufus on Women and Virtue

"Women have received from the gods the same ability to reason as men." Musonius Rufus, the stubborn Stoic, threw this down in a world run by men.

Musonius Rufus on Women and Virtue

Jacques Louis David — "The Death of Socrates" (1787), public domain

A Stoic bombshell.

Musonius Rufus, fragment 4 (as preserved by Stobaeus), says: «Ταὐτὰ γὰρ ἔδωκεν αἱ γυναῖκες ἔχειν τὰ λογιστικὰ οἱ Θεοί, ἅπερ καὶ τοῖς ἀνδράσιν.» — «Women have received from the gods the same ability to reason as men.» Philosophy wasn’t just for toga-clad senators.

Virtue knows no gender.

Musonius taught that courage, wisdom, and justice weren’t male monopolies. If reason is the tool of virtue, and women have reason, then — by Stoic logic — women belong in philosophy as much as men. In his own time, that made him a troublemaker.

Philosopher in exile.

Musonius was exiled multiple times for refusing to flatter emperors. He taught men and women alike, sometimes in open defiance of custom. His stubbornness made him a pariah — and a beacon for those who refused to be told what could or couldn’t be thought.

Musonius didn’t just argue equality — he lived it. His insistence that women should train in philosophy was radical, even by modern standards.

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