Of Fortune

E160132

"Of Fortune" is a philosophical essay by Francis Bacon that reflects on the nature of luck, success, and human agency in shaping one’s circumstances.

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Of Fortune canonical 1

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Predicate Object
instanceOf essay
philosophical essay
aimsTo advise readers on managing fortune
associatedWith Baconian essays
author Francis Bacon
circulation print
concerns political prudence
practical ethics
self-governance
countryOfOrigin England
discusses how prudence can manage fortune
limits of human control over events
public life and private fortune
relationship between character and success
role of chance in human affairs
genre moral essay
philosophy
hasAuthorOccupation essayist
philosopher
statesman
hasNotableConcept fortune can be guided but not commanded
fortune favors the bold (in Bacon’s formulation)
mixture of virtue and opportunity in success
hasPerspective pragmatic view of fortune
influencedBy Renaissance humanism
Stoicism
classical moral philosophy
intendedAudience educated readers
statesmen and courtiers
language English
literaryForm prose
literaryStyle aphoristic
concise
mainTheme fortune
human agency
luck
practical wisdom
success
partOf Francis Bacon's essays (commonly known as Essays or Counsels, Civil and Moral)
surface form: Essays (Francis Bacon)
philosophicalTradition early modern philosophy
empiricism
workPeriod early 17th century

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Essays hasPart Of Fortune