Light from the Porch: Stoicism and English Renaissance LiteratureDidier-Erudition, 1984 - 301 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 79
Seite 15
... passion is one because all passions are contrary to reason . But the passions can be classed according to the object of each judgement : we can be mistaken about an apparent good or about an apparent evil , and about something either ...
... passion is one because all passions are contrary to reason . But the passions can be classed according to the object of each judgement : we can be mistaken about an apparent good or about an apparent evil , and about something either ...
Seite 83
... passions were often concerned with two specifically Stoic doctrines : passion is an erroneous judgement , passion must be eradicated.3 The connection between passion and error , or " opinion " , was widely recognized but it was not ...
... passions were often concerned with two specifically Stoic doctrines : passion is an erroneous judgement , passion must be eradicated.3 The connection between passion and error , or " opinion " , was widely recognized but it was not ...
Seite 134
... passions , but this is not clear . Ratio , who is the friend of Peripateticus , is no enemy of the passions but a lenient magistrate ; as soon as he sees the Stoic's indictment he finds it harsh and unfair . He is incredulous when ...
... passions , but this is not clear . Ratio , who is the friend of Peripateticus , is no enemy of the passions but a lenient magistrate ; as soon as he sees the Stoic's indictment he finds it harsh and unfair . He is incredulous when ...
Inhalt
Stoicism and the Renaissance Christian | 1 |
AntiStoicism | 51 |
Anthony Stafford | 109 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Antiochus Antonio Antonio's Revenge attitude borrows Brutus Bussy D'Ambois Caesar Calvin Cambridge Cato characters Charron Christian Cicero classical Clermont constancy Constantia Cornwallis death destiny Diogenes Laertius Discourses Disp divine doctrine dramatic edition Elizabethan English Epictetus Epist Essay Essayes ethics evil fate Feliche Ford's fortitude George Chapman God's gods Hall's Hamlet happiness hath haue Heaven upon Earth honour human Ibid Jacobean John Ford John Marston King Latin Lipsius liue London man's Manuductio Marcus Aurelius Massinger Massinger's Massinissa mind Montaigne moral nature Neostoicism never opinion Oxford Pandulpho paradoxes Paris passions patience Perkin Warbeck Philip Massinger philosophical play Plutarch Poems Pompey Providentia quotations quoted reader reason Renaissance Roman Actor Samuel Daniel satire says seems Seneca Sermons Shakespeare Sophonisba soul Stafford Stoic Stoic philosophy stoical Stoicism Studies suicide things Thomas thou Tragedy translation Treatise true Tusc Vair vertue virtue virtuous vnto vols vpon wisdom wise words