How to Give: An Ancient Guide to Giving and Receiving

How to Give: An Ancient Guide to Giving and Receiving

by Seneca

Narrated by James Cameron Stewart

Unabridged — 2 hours, 38 minutes

How to Give: An Ancient Guide to Giving and Receiving

How to Give: An Ancient Guide to Giving and Receiving

by Seneca

Narrated by James Cameron Stewart

Unabridged — 2 hours, 38 minutes

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Overview

Timeless wisdom on generosity and gratitude from the great Stoic philosopher Seneca



To give and receive well may be the most human thing you can do-but it is also the closest you can come to divinity. So argues the great Roman Stoic thinker Seneca in his longest and most searching moral treatise, "On Benefits" (De Beneficiis). James Romm's splendid new translation of essential selections from this work conveys the heart of Seneca's argument that generosity and gratitude are among the most important of all virtues.



For Seneca, the impulse to give to others lies at the very foundation of society; without it, we are helpless creatures, worse than wild beasts. But generosity did not arise randomly or by chance. Seneca sees it as part of our desire to emulate the gods, whose creation of the earth and heavens stands as the greatest gift of all. Seneca's soaring prose captures his wonder at that gift, and expresses a profound sense of gratitude that will inspire today's audiences.



Complete with an enlightening introduction, How to Give is a timeless guide to the profound significance of true generosity.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"Engaging. . . . [Seneca] has seldom seemed wiser."—-Steven Donoghue, Open Letters

"[Romm] is very helpful in his introduction . . . [and his] short summations show a clear mastery of his material."—-Ray Morris, Classics for All

"Thoughtful advice. . . . How to Give is as much about receiving as it is about giving."—-John J. Miller, National Review

"This new translation of Seneca the Younger's De Beneficiis has insights for both givers and receivers, confirming that the questions surrounding philanthropy—and how to receive as well as to give graciously—are of enduring importance."—-Austin Detwiler, Philanthropy Daily

Kirkus Reviews

2020-06-16
Bard College classicist Romm continues his ongoing project to reintroduce the Roman philosopher Seneca to modern readers.

Seneca’s reputation has long been tarnished by his association with the emperor Nero, who made him fabulously rich and then, jealous and mad, contrived to force him to commit suicide. Thinking it would stave off that unhappy end, Seneca offered to give up his wealth, to no avail. He had clearly been thinking about the whole business of giving and receiving, as Romm’s bilingual assemblage of documents, including the essay “De Beneficiis” (“On Benefits”), makes clear. Writes Seneca, “Here’s the mark of great and good hearts: To seek good deeds for their own sake, not for the profits that flow from them, and to look for good people even after meeting bad ones.” There’s a lot to unpack there, but the driving idea is that a gift given in expectation of some favor or return isn’t a gift at all. Continues Seneca, “No one writes down good deeds on a ledger or calls them in by day and hour like a greedy collection agent. A good person never thinks of them, unless reminded by the one making return; to do otherwise is to make them into a loan.” Then there’s another sort of demerit, namely the shame attendant in choosing the wrong person—an ingrate who doesn’t properly acknowledge and appreciate the effort—to receive one’s gift. Gifts must be chosen wisely; you don’t give “books to a simpleton, or nets to a scholar.” In a helpful running commentary that accompanies his vigorous translation, Romm glosses Seneca to mean that the best gifts are given anonymously and received gratefully. And as to the real return? Well, there’s definitely a payoff: “A good conscience.”

For the stoically inclined, a fine vade mecum come donation time.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172734809
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 11/10/2020
Series: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers
Edition description: Unabridged
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