Nauka etyczna Lukrecjusza

In this book, I have tried to show first of all that the Epicurean ethical science is clearly represented in all six books of Lucretius’ De rerum natura. Using as a criterion the lexical-semantic references to the content of Epicurean ethical philosophy that can be found in the text of the poem, I h...

पूर्ण विवरण

में बचाया:
ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखक: Grzelak-Krzymianowska, Adriana
स्वरूप: Online
भाषा:पोलिश
प्रकाशित: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego 2026
विषय:
ऑनलाइन पहुंच:ONIX_20260612T144849_9788382204322_44
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विवरण
सारांश:In this book, I have tried to show first of all that the Epicurean ethical science is clearly represented in all six books of Lucretius’ De rerum natura. Using as a criterion the lexical-semantic references to the content of Epicurean ethical philosophy that can be found in the text of the poem, I have singled out those parts of poem that address moral issues. This approach allowed me to determine the proportions in which the ethical teaching contained in the work De rerum natura remains in relation to the “non-ethical” considerations of its author. Next, I showed the form that ethical reflection takes in Lucretius’ poem, indicating the characteristic solutions used by the poet in constructing his argumentation and the substantive relations between the ethical considerations present in the work and the lecture of physics. The analysis made it possible for me to conclude that poem De rerum natura, although it seems to concern mainly physics, also systematically, although not always explicitly, includes the Epicurean ethics lecture introduced by the poet. This fact allows me to consider the work De rerum natura as an almost complete compendium of Epicurean philosophy. For the reader, however, this work, despite its form of lecture, is not only a source of specific knowledge, but above all, it is a prothetic poem filled with the author’s personal reflection, that is, a poem that encourages and motivates us to explore the Epicurean doctrine, which is served by the art of persuasion, strongly present in the poem and taking various forms.