In the strictest sense of the word, Plato was not a Stoic: the Stoic 'school' originated with Zeno of Citium, at Athens, ca. 300 B.C., several decades after Plato's death. Zeno and the later Stoics were undoubtedly influenced themes and ideas raised in Plato's writings (as well as Aristotle's), but this is far as the connection goes.
Plato, Aristotle, Stoic,
Zeno of Citium was the founder of the Stoic school of philosophy in Athens. He taught Plato and Aristotle and Protagoras.
Plato and Xenophon wrote stories of him and his philosophy - he had written nothing himself - and these writings were the basis of other philosophical developments, particularly the Stoic philosopher Epictetus who later posed him as the ideal Stoic.
In his book The Republic, Plato described a utopian and ideal state which would be ruled by a wise philosopher king. Marcus Aurelius would be the emperor who would fit this ideal. He was one of the five good emperors and he was a stoic philosopher.
Euphrates the Stoic died in 118.
He is so stoic, he refused to cry at the funeral. He is a stoic, you would never know that picture was taken at a wedding!
He put on a stoic expression, but inside, he was afraid. Her stoic mein heartened the rest of the soldiers once the enemy found them.
It's plato or sacraties. I don't really know.
Neoplatonism was founded by Plotinus, a Greek philosopher in the 3rd century AD. He developed his philosophy based on the teachings of Plato, aiming to reconcile Platonic ideas with elements of Aristotelian and Stoic philosophies.
apathic/stoic apathic/stoic
"His answer to torture was stoic silence.", said the hangman.
Stoic .