Stoicon, Stoic Week, and Stoicon-Xs in 2018

Every year since 2012,  the Modern Stoicism team, in conjunction with many other people and organizations, facilitates Stoic Week and puts on a major international conference, Stoicon.  We’ll have more information and details appearing in the upcoming weeks to come, but for the present, there’s already some news to announce about what we’ll be offering this year for Stoic Week and Stoicon.  We also have some appeals and suggestions about Stoic Week and smaller Stoicon-X events and conferences.  Please consider becoming a patron of Modern Stoicism, if you want to support our work.

Stoicon 2018 – London

Stoicon is the world’s largest gathering of people interested in and (in many cases) identifying with Stoic philosophy and practices.  This year, it is being organized by John Sellars to take place in London.  Information about tickets and registration will be forthcoming within the space of the next several weeks, but the date has long been set for Saturday, September 29. 
The conference will take place in the University of London’s Senate House, in Bloomsbury, with the generous support of the Institute of Philosophy and the Institute of Classical Studies of the University of London.
Our keynote speaker will be:

  • Professor A. A. Long, one of the leading scholars of Stoicism in the English-speaking world during the last fifty years

Other speakers include:

  • Professor Catharine Edwards, Roman historian and noted expert of Seneca
  • Antonia Macaro, author of More than Happiness: Buddhist and Stoic Wisdom for a Sceptical Age
  • Kai Whiting, who works on Stoicism and sustainability, and has written for the Stoicism Today blog
  • Dr Liz Gloyn, Classicist and author of a recent book on Seneca, The Ethics of the Family in Seneca
  • Dr Piotr Stankiewicz, from the University of Warsaw and a member of the Modern Stoicism team

A series of workshops will also be offered in break-out sessions. Workshop leaders will include Donald Robertson, Tim Le Bon, Chris Gill & Gabrielle Galluzzo, Greg Sadler & Andi Sciacca, Walter Matweychuk, and Greg Lopez.
There are a number of Hotels near the venue where one can book accommodation if required. The Imperial Hotels group run a number of large hotels, including The Tavistock Hotel and The Royal National Hotel. A range of smaller hotels are located on Bedford Place, including The Penn Club.  So if you are planning on attending this international gathering, keep an eye out for tickets (coming soon), and start looking into travel and accomodations

Stoic Week 2018

Stoic Week 2018 will take place this year Monday October 1st– Sunday October 7th. So you can now definitively mark your calendars, if you plan to observe Stoic Week this year (and, of course, you should!).
As always, we will provide a handbook, an online class, and a number of other resources so that individuals, groups, and institutions can try living like a Stoic for that week, on their own, through a virtual community, or with others in small groups.
Like Stoicon, Stoic Week has been going on since 2012 – you can read the story of it here.  Each year has seen a growing number of individual participants as well as participating institutions and organizations.  Stoic Week involves a number of different but complementary  goods.
First, by following the course and handbook, participants do really get an opportunity to learn about Stoicism and try it in practice.  Many participants  who are already well versed in Stoicism – myself included – take the week, the exercises and reflections, as a opportunity for a well-needed “tune-up” of one’s Stoic discipline.
Second, it offers a great opportunity to connect up with, and share stories, insights, experiences, and questions with other people equally interested in Stoicism.  For some, this takes place through local communities, such as Stoic meetups, university or community groups, or events scheduled to celebrate Stoic week.  For others, the online class provides this personal engagement.
Third, for those who want to host a Stoicism-related event, talk, or even a Stoicon-X conference, Stoic Week offers a great time to draw attention, boost participation and interest, and get some free publicity for whatever it is you’re putting together.  Whether it be get-togethers to work through the Stoic Week class together, workshops, lectures, special sessions of a meetup, or any other event, we are happy to include yours in our listings of worldwide scheduled events,
Fourth, one main activity of the Modern Stoicism organization is gathering data to determine whether studying and practicing Stoicism can be scientifically demonstrated to improve the lives of those who do so.  The Stoic Week class offers us an opportunity to do precisely that.  You can read about that research here.

Stoicon-X Events

Stoicon-X events are smaller regional conferences or events, featuring speakers and workshops for those who want to learn more about Stoicism and its contemporary applications.  Like the main conference, these are a great place to meet and have conversations with fellow modern Stoics. The idea behind Stoicon-X is that, for those people who can’t make it to the main Stoicon conference, there could be smaller, locally organized events they could participate in.
For those who might be interested in planning and hosting a Stoicon-X, we have developed a set of very useful and thorough guidelines – you can download them here.  Stoicon-X events don’t have to be all that large  – they can feature just a few talks, workshops, or other activites – the key is that they are well-organized for their participants.
Right now, we don’t have any information about upcoming Stoicon-X conferences for 2018.  If you are planning or hosting one, please contact me , and I will make sure that your Stoicon-X gets into our comprehensive listings of events for this year.
If you want to support Modern Stoicism’s work please consider becoming a patron:

18 thoughts on Stoicon, Stoic Week, and Stoicon-Xs in 2018

  1. David says:

    Given that I won’t be able to get to London, it would be great if the events were live-streamed or available via web video soon after the event. I’d pay money for that kind of access.

  2. David says:

    Glad to see the inclusion of Antonia Macaro to talk about the parallels between Stoicism and Buddhism. In future, it would also be great to see material from outside experts who can address topics that aren’t strictly tied to Stoicism but have a useful bearing on its application and perhaps even its future.
    In the age of YouTube, this need not require live speakers.
    For example, here’s some fascinating perspective on the future of science and the human mind and character, from Nobel laureate and MIT physicist Frank Wilczek:
    “The other thing that’s in its infancy, I think, is the understanding of the mind. I think we at present have only primitive ideas about how this messy little ball of jelly … manages to make coherent ideas, to the extent it does. And we also don’t understand what the basic drives are and how they interact with each other, really. I mean, psychology is really at the stage that physics was in at the ancient Greeks, I think. You know, primitive pre-ideas, pre-scientific ideas. And that’s going to change. And people will have much greater insight into why they’re doing what they’re doing and what they should be doing to make themselves happy. Maybe everyone will become saints. I don’t know exactly where it leads. But definitely, people will have greater insight and psychology will go to a new level. These are things I see happening for sure in coming decades. And it’s awesome.”
    The comments occur at 2:44 in the following video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pO1hqgRUAEE

  3. […] or want to start your own, check out The Stoic Fellowship. We’ll also help you throw your own Stoicon-x if you want a homegrown Stoic conference near you! Or, if you like supporting Stoic things, sign up […]

  4. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we will publish a series of […]

  5. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we will publish a series of […]

  6. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we will publish a series of […]

  7. […] Dal 2012 si tiene ogni anno lo Stoicon, nella cui cornice (se ho ben capito) si svolge la Settimana Stoica organizzata dal gruppo Modern Stoicism. Vi partecipano, con conferenze e workshop, fior fior di studiosi e appassionati di questa arte del ben vivere. Nel 2018 la Settimana Stoica si terrà dall’1 al 7 ottobre a Londra. Qui i dettagli. […]

  8. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  9. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  10. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  11. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  12. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  13. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  14. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  15. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  16. […] up to Stoic Week this year – which runs from Monday, October 1 to Sunday, October 7 – we are publishing a series […]

  17. […] or want to start your own, check out The Stoic Fellowship. We’ll also help you throw your own Stoicon-x if you want a homegrown Stoic conference near you! Or, if you like supporting Stoic things, sign up […]

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