Shakespeare and Stoic Ethics, Band 1University of Wisconsin, 1965 - 886 Seiten |
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Seite 39
... things which are called indifferent , including life , beauty , riches , a good reputation . These things can not make a man more of a man ; they have nothing to do with his rational nature , and as such are to be neither sought nor ...
... things which are called indifferent , including life , beauty , riches , a good reputation . These things can not make a man more of a man ; they have nothing to do with his rational nature , and as such are to be neither sought nor ...
Seite 44
... things and the causes of everything , past , present and future . Now the union and sequence of these things is an inevitable and unavoidable fate , 37 knowledge , truth , and law of existing things . By the terms of this theory , God ...
... things and the causes of everything , past , present and future . Now the union and sequence of these things is an inevitable and unavoidable fate , 37 knowledge , truth , and law of existing things . By the terms of this theory , God ...
Seite 57
... things trace back to its single sen- tience ; and how it does all things by a single impulse ; and how all existing things are joint causes of all things that come into existence ; and how intertwined in the fabric is the thread and how ...
... things trace back to its single sen- tience ; and how it does all things by a single impulse ; and how all existing things are joint causes of all things that come into existence ; and how intertwined in the fabric is the thread and how ...
Inhalt
GREEK STOICISM | 29 |
ROMAN STOICISM | 53 |
STOICISM IN THE RENAISSANCE | 99 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
according action appearance and reality appetites Aristotle Boethius Brutus Cardan Cassius Christian Cicero cism concerned conscience Consolation to Helvia Cornwallis Craig death Diogenes Laertius Divine Providence doctrines doth drama Elizabethan Elizabethan Tragedy Epictetus epistemology Essays evil expedient Fate fear Fortune Fortune's freedom gods Greek Guillaume du Vair Hamlet hath Heaven vpon Earth human ideas indifferent individual intro Julius Caesar Justus Lipsius king Library New York Loeb Classical Library logic Machiavel Machiavelli Marcus Aurelius means Meditations mercy mind monism Montaigne moral passions philosophy play Plutarch political positive Praz precepts Prince principle problem prudenzia question rational reason reference Renaissance Roman Stoicism Roman Stoics Rudolf Kirk Seneca sense Shakespeare Shakespearian soul stage Stoi Stoic ethics Stoic influence Stoic thought Stoicism Stoicism of Seneca T. S. Eliot teleological things thou tion tradition Tranquillity trans translation true truth understanding universe Vair vertue virtú virtue Zeno