What the Stoics Would Eat Today

“Take only what you need, eat only what is necessary.”
– Epictetus (paraphrased)

Let’s set the scene.

Imagine a Stoic — say, Marcus Aurelius — walking into your local supermarket.

Would he reach for a ribeye steak wrapped in plastic?

Or a bag of cheap processed snacks?

Probably not.

He’d look at the choices.

Weigh them against his values.

Then he’d choose what nourishes, not what indulges.

The Stoic Diet: Rooted in Restraint

Ancient Stoics lived simply.

Their meals were humble — grains, legumes, figs, olives.

Food wasn’t for pleasure or prestige.

It was for sustaining the body so the mind could do its work.

In a modern world obsessed with excess, adopting a vegan lifestyle isn’t just ethical — it’s Stoic.

  • It practices temperance: eating without excess.
  • It demonstrates justice: avoiding harm where it’s avoidable.
  • It respects nature: choosing sustainability over destruction.

Would the Stoics Be Vegan Today?

They didn’t have factory farms.

They didn’t have climate reports.

They didn’t have enough evidence to know the extent of animal exploitation.

But we do.

And if Stoicism is about living rationally and justly, there’s a strong case that a modern Stoic, armed with today’s knowledge, would reject animal exploitation — not out of emotion, but principle.

Don’t Eat Like a King — Eat Like a Philosopher

The Stoics weren’t monks.

They didn’t starve themselves.

But they ate with intention.

And that’s what veganism — at its core — is about:

  • Making conscious choices
  • Living in alignment with values
  • Refusing to outsource harm to others just for taste or habit

So, what would the Stoics eat today?

Whole plant foods.

Local, seasonal produce.

What’s needed — no more, no less.

And they’d do it not for trends, but for truth.

Photo by Mikhail Nilov