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Daily Inspiration Quote by Epictetus

"Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish? Nothing else"

About this Quote

Freedom, for Epictetus, isn’t a flag to wave or a permission slip from the state. It’s a stark diagnostic: if you can’t live as you wish, you’re not free, full stop. The punch of the line is its refusal to romanticize liberty. He compresses a whole Stoic ethics course into a blunt, almost prosecutorial definition that forces the reader to ask an uncomfortable question: who, exactly, is stopping you?

The subtext is the classic Stoic reversal. “As we wish” doesn’t mean indulging every appetite; it means aligning your will with what you can actually govern. Epictetus, born enslaved and later freed, knew that legal status and inner sovereignty don’t always match. A person can be politically free and psychologically owned by status anxiety, craving, or fear; another can be constrained by circumstance yet unbroken in judgment. The quote is doing that sly Stoic move of relocating the battleground from institutions to the self, not to excuse tyranny, but to deny it the last word.

Context matters: he’s writing in an empire where most people had little say over their external conditions. Stoicism offered a portable kind of dignity: control what’s yours (your judgments, choices, character), treat everything else as weather. The line works because it sounds like a slogan for autonomy, then tightens into a demand for discipline. If your “wish” is trained and coherent, freedom becomes durable; if it’s scattered and compulsive, liberty turns into another cage you carry around.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
Source
Verified source: Discourses (as reported by Arrian), Book 2, Chapter 1 (Epictetus, 1925)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
, How is that?, Thus: At this time[ 5 ] is freedom anything but the right to live as we wish? "Nothing else." (Book II, Chapter 1). This wording appears in Epictetus’ Discourses (recorded by his student Arrian), Book II, Chapter 1 (“That confidence does not conflict with caution”) in the standard English translation by W. A. Oldfather (Loeb Classical Library). The commonly-circulated quote (“Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish? Nothing else”) is a slightly normalized/paraphrased form of Oldfather’s sentence (dropping “At this time … anything but …”). The earliest ‘publication’ is ancient (2nd century CE) via Arrian’s written record of Epictetus’ lectures; however, establishing an exact ancient first-publication year is not possible with certainty from surviving evidence.
Other candidates (1)
What It Takes To Be Free (Darius Foroux, 2019) compilation96.4%
... Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish ? Nothing else . " Epictetus PART I AWARENESS " Expose...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Epictetus. (2026, February 17). Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish? Nothing else. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/is-freedom-anything-else-than-the-right-to-live-14206/

Chicago Style
Epictetus. "Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish? Nothing else." FixQuotes. February 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/is-freedom-anything-else-than-the-right-to-live-14206/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Is freedom anything else than the right to live as we wish? Nothing else." FixQuotes, 17 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/is-freedom-anything-else-than-the-right-to-live-14206/. Accessed 28 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Epictetus Add to List
Epictetus on Freedom and the Right to Live as We Wish
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Epictetus

Epictetus (55 AC - 135 AC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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