Meditations

by

Marcus Aurelius

A Greek term, logos has many meanings, referring to everything from words, discussion, and philosophical discourse to the metaphysical source of all things in the universe. The latter sense is found most often in Meditations. Marcus Aurelius uses logos to refer both to the divine that infuses and directs all things in nature and to the “fragment” of God, the rational mind, that is found in every person. It’s one’s logos that gets trained by philosophy and serves as the basis of common ground between human beings. It’s also the animating part of a person that, separated from their substance, gets absorbed into the universal logos upon their death.

Logos Quotes in Meditations

The Meditations quotes below are all either spoken by Logos or refer to Logos. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
).
Book 5 Quotes

27. "To live with the gods." And to do that is to show them that your soul accepts what it is given and does what the spirit requires—the spirit God gave each of us to lead and guide us, a fragment of himself. Which is our mind, our logos.

Related Characters: Marcus Aurelius (speaker)
Page Number: 62
Explanation and Analysis:
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Logos Term Timeline in Meditations

The timeline below shows where the term Logos appears in Meditations. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Book 1: Debts and Lessons
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
Relationships and The City Theme Icon
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
...train his character and to study rhetoric. Apollonius taught him to pay attention to the logos and to remain steady no matter what happens; Sextus taught him how to live according... (full context)
Book 4
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
Mortality and Dying Well Theme Icon
...souls in the air eventually diffuse into fire and are absorbed into the source, the logos. (full context)
Book 5
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
...the gods means accepting what we’re given and doing what the spirit requires—our mind, or logos, a fragment of God. (full context)
Book 6
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
1. Nature is governed by the logos, which does no evil and harms nothing. (full context)
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
36a. Everything derives from the “universal mind” (the logos)—everything from a lion’s jaws to thorns to mud. All of these things come from “the... (full context)
Book 7
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
...interconnected and harmonious—one world made up of everything, one divinity present in everything, a shared logos. (full context)
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
Relationships and The City Theme Icon
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
...nature is leading. Everything has a role; lower things exist for higher ones (those with logos), and higher things for one another. We were made to work together. We were also... (full context)
Book 9
Relationships and The City Theme Icon
Nature and the Gods Theme Icon
8. All creatures with the logos share the same rational soul. It’s like how all creatures see by the same light... (full context)
Book 10
Philosophy, The Mind, and Living Well Theme Icon
31. Life is just training for your logos, and it’s enough to live life well, by observing things accurately. (full context)