1st Edition

Roman Philosophers

By Mark Morford Copyright 2002
    306 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    The philosophers of the Roman world were asking questions whose answers had practical effects on people's lives in antiquity, and which still influence our thinking to this day. In spite of being neglected in the modern era, this important age of philosophical thought is now undergoing a revival of interest.
    Mark Morford's lively survey makes these recent scholarly developments accessible to a wide audience, examining the writings and ideas of both famous and lesser known figures - from Cato the Censor in 155 BCE to Marcus Aurelius in 180 CE. Based around extensive and fully translated quotations from the philosophical texts of the era, full consideration is given throughout to historical, political and cultural context.

    Chapter 1 Philosophia Togata; Chapter 2 The Arrival of the Greek Philosophers in Rome; Chapter 3 Cicero and his Contemporaries; Chapter 4 Lucretius and the Epicureans; Chapter 5 Philosophers and Poets in the Augustan Age; Chapter 6 Seneca and his Contemporaries; Chapter 7 Stoicism Under Nero and the Flavians; Chapter 8 From Epictetus to Marcus Aurelius;

    Biography

    Mark Morford