Search results for " Roman Republic"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Review of M. Beretta, La rivoluzione culturale di Lucrezio. Filosofia e scienza nell'antica Roma (Rome: Carocci, 2015)

2018

By reviewing Marco Beretta's recent book on Lucretius' "cultural revolution" and its intellectual foundations, the present article re-assesses several key issues of the current debate about the literary, philosophical, and scientific value of De Rerum Natura.

Epicureanismhistory of ancient science and philosophyreception studiesRoman cultureLucretiulate Roman republicbiographical criticismSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura Latina
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Philosophical thought of the School of the Sextii

2014

Around the first half century B.C. the first Roman school of philosophy arose, which was called School of Sextii. The known members of the School were: Quintus Sextius the Elder, founding father of the School, Sextius Niger, Quintus' son, who became scholarch of the School after his father's death, Sotion, Papirius Fabianus (both teachers of Seneca the Younger), Crassicius Pasicles, a grammarian, and Celsius Cornelius, an expert doctor. The School followed the footsteps of the Hellenistic schools, and similar to these, the pursuit of happiness was its purpose. The school of the Sextii had taken to heart that part of the philosophy called physical, characterizing itself mainly as a philosoph…

Roman Philosophy Ancient Sextii school Quintus Sextius Sextius Niger Seneca the Younger Papirius Fabianus Sotion Courage Roman school Early Roman Empire Roman Republic post-Hellenistic school philosophical-medical school virtuesSettore M-FIL/07 - Storia Della Filosofia AnticaFilosofia Romana Impero Romano Seneca il Giovane Papirio Fabiano Sozione Quinto Sestio Sestio Nigro Scuola dei Sesti Filosofia Imperiale ultimo periodo repubblica Romana scuole post-ellenistiche scuola medico-filosofica coraggio virtù
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Vox Naturae: The Myth of Animal Nature in the Latin Roman Republic

2016

The paper examines the representation of animals as embodiment of nature in the culture of the late Roman republic. By discussing a selection of passages from Sallust, Cicero and Lucretius in conjunction with other Greek and Latin sources, the paper shows that the typically Western myth of 'animal nature' - the cultural belief that animal mirror a perennial state of nature, as opposed to human society - played a very important role in the ethical debate of the first century BC and took in this period a form which was bound to influence the centuries to come.

Stoicismlate Roman republicRoman literature and philosophyCiceroVarroSettore L-FIL-LET/04 - Lingua E Letteratura LatinaEpicureanismcultural representation of animalanthropology of the ancient world.Lucretiucultural representation of animals; late Roman republic; Sallust; Cicero; Lucretius; Varro; Roman literature and philosophy; Stoicism; Epicureanism; New Academy; anthropology of the ancient world.SallustNew Academy
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