Letter I · On Saving Time
Seneca
Seneca's wisdom starkly contrasts with the casual disregard for time that was common in Roman society, a culture that valued tangible wealth and property above all else. In advising Lucilius, Seneca reveals an acute awareness of time as a finite resource, a view uncommon in an era that largely saw time as an infinite continuum. The modern world echoes this oversight—often valuing possessions over time, despite time being the only asset that, once spent, is irrevocably gone.