Apatheia
Whereas Aristotle had claimed that virtue was to be found in the golden mean between an excess and a deficiency of emotion (metriopatheia), the Stoics thought that living virtuously provided freedom from the passions, resulting in apatheia.[1] It meant eradicating the tendency to react emotionally or egotistically to external events, the things that cannot be controlled. For Stoics, it was the optimally rational response to the world, for things cannot be controlled if they are caused by the will of others or by Nature; only one's own will can be controlled. That did not mean a loss of feeling, or total disengagement from the world. The Stoic who performs correct (virtuous) judgments and actions as part of the world order experiences contentment (eudaimonia) and good feelings (eupatheia).
Apatheia
Is a state of mind
Which is static and cold,
And it shines
Gracefully
As the world keeps turning.
It's one more moment
Of clarity and emptiness,
A moment in which
Nothing matters but silence.
You come across
One more falling star
And observe it
Without being able to smile.
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