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The Philosophy of Enough: Seneca, Stoicism and the Art of Contentment
Entry Editorial
May 24, 2026
The Philosophy of Enough: Seneca, Stoicism and the Art of Contentment
A Letter Written 2,000 Years Ago That Still Stings Lucius Annaeus Seneca was one of the wealthiest men in the Roman Empire. He was also one of its most articulate critics of wealth. In his Letters to Lucilius, written in the twilight of his life (before Nero ordered his death), Seneca wrote with an urgency that feels almost modern: "It is not the man who has too little who is poor, but the man who hankers after more." He wrote this from a villa. The irony wasn't lost on him. The Problem with More Stoicism — the philosophical school Seneca belonged to — wasn't anti-pleasure. It was anti-attachment to pleasure. The Stoics drew a crucial distinction between enjoying what you have and needing it to be okay. This is the concept of apatheia — not apathy in the modern sense, but a kind of emotional equanimity. Things happen. Good things, bad things. The Stoic aim was to remain the same person through both. > "He is a wise man who does not grieve for the things which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has." Enough as a Practice In a world engineered for dissatisfaction — where every product promises a slightly better life just beyond your current reach — the concept of "enough" is almost radical. Seneca suggested a practice: periodically live as if you had nothing. Eat simply. Dress plainly. Not as punishment, but as an experiment in discovering that you were fine all along. The Stoics called this voluntary discomfort — and modern research on hedonic adaptation suggests they were onto something real. We return to roughly the same baseline of happiness regardless of external circumstances. The upgrade never sticks. What Contentment Actually Looks Like Contentment isn't the absence of desire. It's the presence of perspective. It's knowing — genuinely knowing — that the life you have right now contains more than enough raw material for a meaningful existence. Seneca wrote his most profound letters knowing he would die soon. There's something clarifying about that.