Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Cicero

View through CrossRef
Epicurus confronted Cicero with a singular situation: a philosopher whom he thought had managed, despite professing erroneous doctrines, to live a philosophical life and thus overcome the incoherence of his doctrines. Schooled in Epicureanism in his youth and surrounded by Epicurean friends, Cicero nonetheless retained a strong aversion to Epicurean doctrines. Too many of the basic assumptions of Epicurus’s philosophy ran at cross-purposes with the deepest currents of his personality. Accepting Epicureanism would have required him to admit that society and ethics were grounded in the unstable vagaries of individuals’ desires for pleasure. So too, the Epicurean tendency to build everything upon self-interest appeared to deprive traditional Roman axiology of any true foundation. What is more, for him who had placed such importance on the concept of free will as a self-generated cause, the connection fashioned by Epicureans between voluntary action and the swerve of atoms governed by chance failed to provide a plausible rational explanation and, he thought, would inevitably act to dilute individual responsibility. Epicureanism, which counted immediate sense perceptions as necessarily true; rejected a philosophical language inaccessible to the masses; made its gods distant and indifferent yet all-too-visible; built an ethics so easy to grasp—and caricature; claimed to illuminate everything with a shining light; advertised its distrust for social and political hierarchies—all this was ultimately too distant, both intellectually and emotionally, from the conception of the world that was Cicero’s own.
Title: Cicero
Description:
Epicurus confronted Cicero with a singular situation: a philosopher whom he thought had managed, despite professing erroneous doctrines, to live a philosophical life and thus overcome the incoherence of his doctrines.
Schooled in Epicureanism in his youth and surrounded by Epicurean friends, Cicero nonetheless retained a strong aversion to Epicurean doctrines.
Too many of the basic assumptions of Epicurus’s philosophy ran at cross-purposes with the deepest currents of his personality.
Accepting Epicureanism would have required him to admit that society and ethics were grounded in the unstable vagaries of individuals’ desires for pleasure.
So too, the Epicurean tendency to build everything upon self-interest appeared to deprive traditional Roman axiology of any true foundation.
What is more, for him who had placed such importance on the concept of free will as a self-generated cause, the connection fashioned by Epicureans between voluntary action and the swerve of atoms governed by chance failed to provide a plausible rational explanation and, he thought, would inevitably act to dilute individual responsibility.
Epicureanism, which counted immediate sense perceptions as necessarily true; rejected a philosophical language inaccessible to the masses; made its gods distant and indifferent yet all-too-visible; built an ethics so easy to grasp—and caricature; claimed to illuminate everything with a shining light; advertised its distrust for social and political hierarchies—all this was ultimately too distant, both intellectually and emotionally, from the conception of the world that was Cicero’s own.

Related Results

The “Cicero”/“Cicero” Puzzling Case
The “Cicero”/“Cicero” Puzzling Case
AbstractThis paper aims to solve the following twofold problem. Suppose that a rational speaker, Ralph, mistakenly takes (for some reason) the Roman orator Cicero and the World War...
Cicero, Greek Learning, and the Making of a Roman Classic
Cicero, Greek Learning, and the Making of a Roman Classic
The Roman statesman, orator, and author Marcus Tullius Cicero is the embodiment of a classic. His works have been read continuously from antiquity to the present, his style is cons...
Marcus tullIus Cicero’s works in the textbook on eloquence “The Mohyla Speaker” (1636)
Marcus tullIus Cicero’s works in the textbook on eloquence “The Mohyla Speaker” (1636)
The article analyses which works of Marcus Tullius Cicero are mentioned and (or) quoted in the textbook on the rhetoric of the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy “Orator Mohileanus” (1636) by Jos...
Portrait of the orator as a great man: Cicero on Cicero
Portrait of the orator as a great man: Cicero on Cicero
Abstract IN the previous three chapters I have looked at the three different kinds of speeches that Cicero delivered about empire and offered interpretations which r...
Cicero and the Law
Cicero and the Law
Abstract As an advocate, Cicero had intellectual preoccupations which he shared with his being a philosopher. In his theorising on advocacy, Cicero drew on his pract...
Cicero on Epicurean Pleasures
Cicero on Epicurean Pleasures
Abstract Cicero’s version and critique of Epicurus’ ethics in the De Finibus offer in some respects the fullest consecutive account extant from antiquity. Their prop...
Linking the natural man to the res publica in the works of Marcus Tullius Cicero
Linking the natural man to the res publica in the works of Marcus Tullius Cicero
AbstractThere is no consensus on the importance of Cicero's doctrine of the state (res publica) among the prominent figures and scholars of political theory. In our view, the main ...

Back to Top