enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cicero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cicero

    Cicero was therefore educated in the teachings of the ancient Greek philosophers, poets and historians; as he obtained much of his understanding of the theory and practice of rhetoric from the Greek poet Archias. [29] Cicero used his knowledge of Greek to translate many of the theoretical concepts of Greek philosophy into Latin, thus ...

  3. Writings of Cicero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Writings_of_Cicero

    The writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero constitute one of the most renowned collections of historical and philosophical work in all of classical antiquity. Cicero was a Roman politician, lawyer, orator, political theorist, philosopher, and constitutionalist who lived during the years of 106–43 BC.

  4. Personal life of Cicero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_life_of_Cicero

    Cicero, like most of his contemporaries, was also educated in the teachings of the ancient Greek rhetoricians, and most prominent teachers of oratory of the time were themselves Greek. [10] Cicero used his knowledge of Greek to translate many of the theoretical concepts of Greek philosophy into Latin, thus translating Greek philosophical works ...

  5. Politeia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politeia

    Cicero translated politeia as res publica (see also: De re publica), from which the modern word republic comes. Note that the meanings the ancient Romans attached to res publica were also multiple and only partially overlapping with the Greek politeia , and further that few of the multiple meanings of politeia or res publica are much of an ...

  6. De re publica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_re_publica

    Republic - a translation neglecting the first word of the Latin title (De), which is the equivalent of On or Of; other translations of the title include On the republic or Treatise on the republic. Although "republic" can appear a neutral translation of "res publica", it is infected by the many interpretations given to the word republic ...

  7. De Natura Deorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_natura_deorum

    De Natura Deorum belongs to the group of philosophical works which Cicero wrote in the two years preceding his death in 43 BC. [1] He states near the beginning of De Natura Deorum that he wrote them both as a relief from the political inactivity to which he was reduced by the supremacy of Julius Caesar, and as a distraction from the grief caused by the death of his daughter Tullia.

  8. On Passions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Passions

    On Passions (Greek: Περὶ παθῶν; Peri pathōn), also translated as On Emotions or On Affections, is a work by the Greek Stoic philosopher Chrysippus dating from the 3rd-century BCE. The book has not survived intact, but around seventy fragments from the work survive in a polemic written against it in the 2nd-century CE by the ...

  9. Humanitas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanitas

    According to historian Peter Gay, the eighteenth-century French philosophes of the Enlightenment found Cicero's eclectic, Stoic-tinged paganism congenial: [8] The ideal of humanitas was first brought to Rome by the philosophic circle around Scipio and further developed by Cicero. For Cicero, humanitas was a style of thought, not a formal ...