On the Chief Good
{"WorkMasterId":5418,"WpPageId":260956,"ParentWpPageId":193728,"Slug":"on-the-chief-good","Url":"https://chrisdeasy.com/theos/humanities/philosophy/philosophers/chrysippus-of-soli/on-the-chief-good/","RelativeUrl":"theos/humanities/philosophy/philosophers/chrysippus-of-soli/on-the-chief-good/","HasFullText":false,"RawHtmlLength":68770,"CleanHtmlLength":15516,"Kicker":"Philosophy Work","Title":"On the Chief Good","Deck":"Chrysippus explains the Stoic end as living consistently with nature and locates happiness in virtue rather than externals.","BackLink":{"Text":"Back to Chrysippus of Soli","Url":"https://chrisdeasy.com/theos/humanities/philosophy/philosophers/chrysippus-of-soli/"},"AuthorCard":{"Label":"Author","Title":"Chrysippus of Soli","Url":"https://chrisdeasy.com/theos/humanities/philosophy/philosophers/chrysippus-of-soli/","MediaHref":"","ImageSrc":"https://chrisdeasy.com/wp-content/uploads/chrysippus-of-soli-01-uffizi-herma-portrait.jpg","ImageAlt":"Uffizi herma portrait identified as Chrysippus","FilterTerra":"Eastern Mediterranean","ClickText":"Chrysippus of Soli","ClickHref":"https://chrisdeasy.com/theos/humanities/philosophy/philosophers/chrysippus-of-soli/","Copies":["279 BCE – 206 BCE","Soli, Cilicia","Stoic philosopher from Soli whose lost system of logic, physics, ethics, fate, providence, language, and knowledge made him the main architect of early Stoicism after Zeno and Cleanthes."]},"ContextCards":[{"Label":"Period","Key":"Period:1","Title":"Ancient History","DateText":"3000 BCE – 499 CE","Url":"https://chrisdeasy.com/theos/humanities/philosophy/eras-of-thought/philosophers-of-ancient-history/"},{"Label":"Era","Key":"Era:3","Title":"Classical Antiquity","DateText":"500 BCE – 499 CE","Url":"https://chrisdeasy.com/theos/humanities/philosophy/eras-of-thought/philosophers-of-ancient-history/philosophers-of-classical-antiquity/"},{"Label":"Composition","Title":"242 BCE","Url":"","DateText":""}],"DateNote":"Displayed year is a proxy ordering date within Chrysippus mature career, not a precise composition date; the work is lost and known from ancient title lists, testimonia, and fragment cataloging.","GeoCards":[{"Label":"Region","Key":"Region:1"},{"Label":"Terra Avita","Key":"TerraAvita:2"},{"Label":"Terra Avita Region","Key":"TerraAvitaRegion:9"},{"Label":"Modern Country","Key":"Country:TUR:2"}],"OriginalTitle":"Peri telous","Language":"Greek (lost; fragmentary testimony)","DisciplineCards":[{"Label":"Primary Discipline","Key":"Discipline:ethics"},{"Label":"Secondary Discipline","Key":"Discipline:metaphysics"}],"Tradition":"Early Stoicism, Hellenistic logic, dialectic, physics, ethics, fate, providence, and theology","FullText":null,"CoreThesis":["Chrysippus explains the Stoic end as living consistently with nature and locates happiness in virtue rather than externals."],"Classification":{"AlternateTitles":"On the End; On the Final Good","KeyConcepts":"chief good; telos; living according to nature; happiness; virtue; indifferents; Stoic ethics","Methodology":"Lost Chrysippean treatise reconstructed from ancient title lists, doxography, later polemic, and fragment cataloging; 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