As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I

Epictet, stoic philosopher of the 1st century C.E., was the slave of Epaphroditus, an imperial secretary of Nero and Domitian. Despite his condition, he was able to attend the classes of Musônio Rufo. Later, after his release, he founded a school in Rome, which did not last long, since Domitian expe...

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Päätekijä: Aldo Dinucci
Aineistotyyppi: Online
Kieli:portugali
Julkaistu: Coimbra University Press 2021
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author Aldo Dinucci
author_browse Aldo Dinucci
author_facet Aldo Dinucci
author_sort Aldo Dinucci
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description Epictet, stoic philosopher of the 1st century C.E., was the slave of Epaphroditus, an imperial secretary of Nero and Domitian. Despite his condition, he was able to attend the classes of Musônio Rufo. Later, after his release, he founded a school in Rome, which did not last long, since Domitian expelled the philosophers from the city in 89 C.E. Epictet then went to Nicopolis, where he founded another stoic school, with many students, among them important figures of the Roman Empire. Like Socrates, Epictet wrote nothing. His philosophy came to us through the notes of his disciple Lucio Flavio Arriano Xenophon, who recorded the teachings of Epictet in eight books, four of which were lost, which composed the Diatribes of Epictet. The work is prefaced by a letter from Arriano to a certain Lucius Gelius, in which Arriano affirms that the Diatribes are nothing more than transcriptions of the lessons of Epictet. That is the reason why the work has been attributed since antiquity to Epictet.
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-413872022-01-31T10:06:51Z As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I Aldo Dinucci Rome Epictetus Philosophy Stoicism Epictet, stoic philosopher of the 1st century C.E., was the slave of Epaphroditus, an imperial secretary of Nero and Domitian. Despite his condition, he was able to attend the classes of Musônio Rufo. Later, after his release, he founded a school in Rome, which did not last long, since Domitian expelled the philosophers from the city in 89 C.E. Epictet then went to Nicopolis, where he founded another stoic school, with many students, among them important figures of the Roman Empire. Like Socrates, Epictet wrote nothing. His philosophy came to us through the notes of his disciple Lucio Flavio Arriano Xenophon, who recorded the teachings of Epictet in eight books, four of which were lost, which composed the Diatribes of Epictet. The work is prefaced by a letter from Arriano to a certain Lucius Gelius, in which Arriano affirms that the Diatribes are nothing more than transcriptions of the lessons of Epictet. That is the reason why the work has been attributed since antiquity to Epictet. 2021-02-11T08:33:10Z 2021-02-11T08:33:10Z 2020-05-28 16:16:46 2020 book 45619 9789892619255 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/41387 por Classica Digitalia: Autores Gregos e Latinos: textos image/jpeg Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International https://doi.org/10.14195/978-989-26-1926-2 Coimbra University Press 10.14195/978-989-26-1926-2 10.14195/978-989-26-1926-2 71c193a7-6c08-4e85-ae72-a002208589fd 9789892619255 212 open access
spellingShingle Rome
Epictetus
Philosophy
Stoicism
Aldo Dinucci
As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I
title As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I
title_full As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I
title_fullStr As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I
title_full_unstemmed As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I
title_short As Diatribes de Epicteto, livro I
title_sort as diatribes de epicteto livro i
topic Rome
Epictetus
Philosophy
Stoicism
topic_facet Rome
Epictetus
Philosophy
Stoicism
url 45619
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