Sobre nosotros
Welcome to Orlando Stoics! We are a very active group, with over 3,800 members and five meetings a week. Some meetings are held online, while others are in-person. All classes are free.
What is Stoicism? It's an ancient Greek school of philosophy founded in Athens about 300 BC. The first teacher was Zeno of Citium. The school taught that virtue (the highest good) is based on knowledge, and that wise people live in harmony with nature. The school also taught tolerance and self-control. Famous Stoics were Seneca the Younger, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius. We also study modern Stoics.
Why Stoicism? In our world of instant gratification, constant stimulation, and endless distractions, Stoicism offers a novel perspective on life. Interested in developing an unconquerable mind? Stoicism has the answers. We also link ideas to Buddhism, Taoism, Hinduism, Existentialism, Minimalism, and other "lived philosophy" systems. We love in-depth discussions!
If you join our group, feel free to adjust the email and notification settings to suit your preferences. Since we have new meetings every week, those emails might be too much for your inbox. Feel free to turn them off (go to our meetup page, click "You're a Member", and then click group notifications). You can still check our meetup page for upcoming events whenever you want.
The goals of our group:
1. We read the ancient books, plus the modern books on Stoicism.
2. We discuss Stoicism in the media, pop culture, and arts & literature.
3. We compare recurring themes in Stoicism to history, religion, and psychology.
There have always been people attracted to Stoicism. It was a significant influence on Shakespeare, JD Salinger, Tom Wolfe, and Nelson Mandela. It has also attracted political and military leaders, such as Frederick the Great, President Bill Clinton, and Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, who stated that he has read Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations over 100 times.
We hope you will join us. The group is open to the public and has no subscription fee. Stoicism can help you cope with life's stresses, while retaining your ethics & character.
We hope to see you soon!
Eventos próximos
37

Innovation and Consequence: Three Architects of Modern Credit
·En líneaEn líneaThis week we shift from monetary structure to the architecture of credit itself. Who gets to borrow, on what terms, and through what instruments? When financial innovation extends capital to borrowers the establishment had written off, who benefits, who bears the risk, and what happens when the innovation outgrows its original purpose?
Each of the three figures we will discuss did the same thing in radically different settings. They extended a medium of exchange to people the existing system had excluded. Money, credit, and securities are not neutral tools. They are mechanisms of inclusion, and historically they have reached only certain kinds of borrowers: the propertied, the rated, the collateralized, the well-connected. Yunus, Ranieri, and Milken each found a population the system would not lend to and built an instrument to reach them. The promise was always the same: broader access, lower cost, more participants in the economy. The complication, in each case, was what happened once the new instrument scaled.
We begin with Muhammad Yunus, the Bangladeshi economist who pioneered microfinance through the founding of Grameen Bank. In 1976, near Chittagong University, Yunus began experimenting with tiny loans to villagers traditional banks dismissed as too poor to serve. His insight was radical in its simplicity. Poverty is not the product of incompetence but of a credit system designed to exclude the poor. Grameen's group-lending model, built around mostly female borrowers, achieved very high repayment rates and inspired imitators worldwide. Yunus and the bank received the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize. Yet microfinance has not delivered everything it promised. Some studies find limited evidence of lasting poverty reduction, and high-interest lenders in certain countries have pushed borrowers deeper into debt. The question Yunus leaves with us is whether the economy can be redesigned to serve people, or whether it quietly returns to serving itself.
We then turn to Lewis Ranieri, the Brooklyn-born college dropout who joined Salomon Brothers' mailroom in 1968 and rose to Vice Chairman. In the late 1970s, on a then-overlooked mortgage trading desk, Ranieri helped invent the mortgage-backed security and coined the word "securitization." Before his work, a bank that issued a mortgage had to hold it for thirty years, which tied up capital and limited lending. Ranieri's idea was to pool thousands of mortgages and sell their cash flows as bonds to investors around the world. He fought a decade-long battle in Washington to make these securities legal and tradeable, and by the mid-1980s the market had grown into the hundreds of billions. The innovation expanded homeownership and lowered borrowing costs. It also separated those who made loans from those who held the risk, which critics argue eroded underwriting discipline and helped set the stage for 2008. Ranieri has long argued that the concept was not the problem. Its misuse was. The deeper question is whether any powerful instrument can be trusted to remain in honest hands once it has shown what it can do.
Finally we come to Michael Milken, who built the modern high-yield bond market at Drexel Burnham Lambert. Milken's insight, developed at Berkeley and refined at Wharton, was that the bond market systematically undervalued non-investment-grade debt. Rating agencies treated companies without an investment-grade stamp as untouchable, even when their default-adjusted yields were attractive. Through the 1970s and 1980s, Milken built a network of issuers and buyers that opened the bond market to smaller firms, distressed companies, and a new generation of corporate raiders. Junk bonds financed the leveraged buyout boom and transformed corporate America. In 1989, Milken was indicted on securities fraud and racketeering charges. He later devoted himself to philanthropy and the Milken Institute and received a presidential pardon in 2020.
The discussion will focus on what these three architects share and where they diverge. Each identified a group of people the financial system had pushed aside. Each built a mechanism to bring them in. Each watched his innovation be celebrated and then implicated in later abuses. Was the problem the innovation itself, or how others wielded it? And what does the recurring cycle of expansion, crisis, and reform tell us about the structure of modern finance?
Links
Muhammad Yunus
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Yunus
Grameen Bank – Founder https://grameenbank.org.bd/about/founder
Yunus Centre https://www.muhammadyunus.org/
Nobel Peace Prize 2006 https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/peace/2006/yunus/facts/Lewis Ranieri
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Ranieri
Bloomberg – Your Mortgage Was His Bond https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2004-11-28/lewis-s-dot-ranieri-your-mortgage-was-his-bond
Liar's Poker (Michael Lewis) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liar%27s_Poker
Investopedia – Mortgage-Backed Security https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/mbs.aspMichael Milken
Britannica Biography https://www.britannica.com/money/Michael-R-Milken
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Milken
Milken Institute https://milkeninstitute.org/Timezones 6:00 AM, Pacific (USA)
7:00 AM, Mountain (USA)
8:00 AM, Central (USA)
9:00 AM, Eastern (USA)About Our Group We welcome open minded, respectful conversation on Stoicism and its relevance to daily life, personal growth, and modern thought.
Our discussions connect ancient philosophy with contemporary science, psychology, economics, and culture with the shared aim of cultivating wisdom together. The meeting begins at 9:00 AM Eastern, with dialogue starting promptly at 9:15 AM.
4 asistentes
ONLINE / SPANISH: EPICTETO DISERTACIONES POR ARRIANO
·En líneaEn líneaEsta reunión es cada miércoles a las 7 p.m. EST
CALENDARIO
EPICTETO DISERTACIONES POR ARRIANO4/22/2026 XVI SOBRE LA PROVIDENCIA
4/29/2026 XVII QUE LA LÓGICA ES NECESARIA
5/6/2026 XVIII QUE NO HAY QUE ENFURECERSE CON QUIENES SE EQUIVOCAN
5/13/2026 XIX QUÉ ACTITUD HAY QUE MANTENER FRENTE A LOS TIRANOS
5/20/2026 XX DE CÓMO LA RAZÓN ES ESPECULATIVA SOBRE SÍ MISMA
5/27/2026 XXI A LOS QUE QUIEREN SER ADMIRADOS
6/3/2026 XXII SOBRE LAS PRESUNCIONES
6/10/2026 XXIII EN RESPUESTA A EPICURO
6/17/2026 XXIV CÓMO HAY QUE LUCHAR CONTRA LAS CIRCUNSTANCIAS DIFÍCILES
6/24/2026 XXV SOBRE LO MISMO
7/1/2026 XXVI CUÁL HA DE SER LA NORMA DE VIDA
7/8/2026 XXVII DE CUÁNTAS MANERAS SE PRESENTAN LAS REPRESENTACIONES Y QUÉ AYUDAS HAY QUE TENER A MANO FRENTE A ELLAS
7/15/2026 XXVIII QUE NO HAY QUE IRRITARSE CON LOS HOMBRES Y QUÉ COSAS SON PEQUEÑAS Y CUÁLES GRANDES ENTRE LOS HOMBRES
7/22/2026 XXIX SOBRE EL APLOMO
7/29/2026 XXX QUÉ HAY QUE TENER A MANO EN LAS DIFICULTADESZONAS HORARIAS
Hora de encuentro (EE. UU.):
19:00 h, hora del este
18:00 h, hora central
17:00 h, hora de las montañas
16:00 h, hora del PacíficoPara nuestros amigos internacionales:
Conviertan la hora con la herramienta gratuita
https://www.worldtimebuddy.com/ENLACE ZOOM
HAGA CLIC PARA COMENZAR LA REUNIÓN - https://us06web.zoom.us/j/7156108004
Si no tienes una computadora con cámara, también puedes marcar usando un teléfono. Elige uno de estos números y agrega el ID 7156108004#
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
+1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)
+1 253 215 8782 US
+1 301 715 8592 USNuestro grupo disfruta de conversaciones abiertas y respetuosas sobre el estoicismo y su relación con la ciencia, la cultura, la filosofía, otros sistemas de creencias e incluso la cultura popular (libros y películas). A veces "acordamos estar en desacuerdo", pero el objetivo a largo plazo es mejorar nuestras mentes a través de debates grupales.
En general, el estoicismo nos enseña cómo manejar personas y eventos difíciles, cómo evitar la ira y la preocupación y, sobre todo, a utilizar la moderación en todos los aspectos de nuestra vida.
Esta reunión es gratuita y abierta al público.
1 asistente
IN-PERSON: Reason Not to Worry (Stoic Saturdays)
Panera Bread, 2415 N Orange Ave, Orlando, FL, USThis is our IN-PERSON Stoic discussion and reading (no Zoom link available). We meet every 2 weeks on Saturdays.
READING
# Reasons Not to Worry: How to Be Stoic in Chaotic Times
In this thoughtful and approachable book, journalist Brigid Delaney spends a year exploring how Stoic philosophy can be applied to modern life. Blending personal experience with humor and reflection, she turns to ancient thinkers like Seneca, Epictetus, and Marcus Aurelius to help answer some of life’s most persistent questions—how to find peace, handle uncertainty, and focus on what truly matters.
Rather than presenting Stoicism as abstract theory, Delaney tests its ideas in real time. She compares her own tendencies—impatience, anxiety, and a fast-paced modern lifestyle—with the Stoic emphasis on reason, acceptance, and control. Through this process, she examines how ancient wisdom can be used to navigate everyday challenges, from stress and insecurity to grief and decision-making.
The result is a practical and often humorous exploration of how to live more deliberately. By learning to let go of what cannot be controlled, reflect on what is important, and approach life with greater awareness, Delaney shows how Stoicism can help restore a sense of balance and perspective—even in uncertain or chaotic times.Book Club Format
- Link to purchase the book: Amazon.com
- Read the current chapter of the book before the next meeting
- Write down your thoughts, questions, and concerns, or highlight certain sections of the book you would like to read aloud.
- We will go around the room, and everyone will have a chance to discuss the chapter and ask questions.
- Meaningful application and final discussion.
Outlines will be provided. We recommend that you read the chapter before showing up. We will read the chapters, at least summaries of each, and go over the core ideas together.
SCHEDULE
04-25-2026: Chapter 1 - How to Be Mortal
05-09-2026: Chapter 2 - How to Work Out What Matters
05-23-2026: Chapter 3 - How to Cope with Disaster
06-06-2026: Chapter 4 - How to Be Relaxed
06-20-2026: Chapter 5 - How to Be Good
07-04-2026: Chapter 6 - How to Be Untroubled
07-18-2026: Chapter 7 - How to Be Calm
08-01-2026: Chapter 8 - How to Be Moderate
08-15-2026: Chapter 9 - How to Be on Social Media
08-29-2026: Chapter 10 - How to Be Happy with What You’ve Got
09-12-2026: Chapter 11 - How to Beat FOMO and Comparisons
09-26-2026: Chapter 12 - How to Beat Anxiety
10-10-2026: Chapter 13 - How to Grieve
10-24-2026: Chapter 14 - How to Die + EpilogueVENUE
The location is Panera Bread, 2415 N Orange Ave, Orlando, FL 32804. It's on the FIRST FLOOR of the AdventHealth medical building.
Parking is free. As you drive north on Orange Avenue, you will see the AdventHealth building on the right. Turn right, go 2 blocks, and then turn right again into the parking garage (free parking). Most parking spaces are open; avoid the reserved spaces.
You can park on the first floor and walk outside, or park on the third floor of the garage and use the air-conditioned bridge to walk to the building.
TIME
The meeting is from Noon to 2 PM. No worries if you're late... It's better to be late than not show up. Also, we take a break halfway in the meeting for refreshment and a bathroom break.
ZOOM LINK
Since the meeting is in-person only, no Zoom link is available.
GUESTS
If you want to invite a guest, please ask them to RSVP separately. We have a limited number of seats in the room.
COURTESY
This group enjoys open-minded, respectful conversations. We don't talk over each other. If we differ in our opinions, then "we agree to disagree". The long-term goal is to improve our minds via group discussions. Our group does NOT discuss religion or politics.
9 asistentes
Eventos pasados
1694

