Cicero
Title: Cicero
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 3692 | Pages: 13 (approximately 235 words/page)
Cicero
Category: /Literature/English
Details: Words: 3692 | Pages: 13 (approximately 235 words/page)
Cicero, was truly a man of the state. His writings also show us he was equally a man of
philosophical temperament and affluence. Yet at times these two forces within Cicero clash
and contradict with the early stoic teachings. Cicero gradually adopted the stoic
lifestyle but not altogether entirely, and this is somewhat due to the fact of what it was
like to be a roman of the time. The morals of everyday Rome conflicted
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day ambitions.
His glory seeking made him less respectful as a philosopher, a damage inflicted by
Roman sentiment.
Cicero took beliefs, attitudes, doctrines and logic to form his own inner philosophical
temperament. Regarded as stoic because he sympathized with that philosophy, Cicero
modified earl stoicism to form a hybrid with roman tradition. By adding tradition,
patriotism, and roman virtue, Cicero reshaped the landscape of stoa's philosophy. In
essence Cicero was a Roman philosopher.
Bibliography
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