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Letters of recommendation : Cicero-FrontoCotton, Hannah January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
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Praecepta e decreta na Epístola 94 de Sêneca / Praecepta and decreta in Seneca's Letter 94Silveira, Fabiana Lopes da, 1989- 26 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Isabella Tardin Cardoso / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-26T09:29:58Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
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Previous issue date: 2014 / Resumo: As Epístolas Morais a Lucílio, ainda que sejam consideradas por muitos estudiosos umas das mais importantes obras de Sêneca, costumam ser criticadas tanto por, alegadamente, se resumirem a um conjunto de exortações de cunho moral (preceitos), sem maior fundamento doutrinário, quanto por, segundo em geral se supõe, não apresentarem sistematicidade. No entanto, um olhar mais atento à carta 94 e à seguinte, a 95, nos permite notar que o próprio Sêneca chega a tematizar a questão do papel dos preceitos, i.e. do valor da parte da filosofia denominada preceptiva (de ordem prática, regida por praecepta), frente à dogmática (parte da filosofia de ordem teórica, regida por decreta). Para tanto, nessas cartas, o filósofo adota uma forma de argumentação consideravelmente organizada, além de fazer uso regular de certas imagens referentes a decreta e praecepta. Levando isso em conta, e tendo estudado tais aspectos na Ep. 95, nossa investigação da Ep. 94 se dedica à hipótese de que o texto do filósofo apresenta certa sistematicidade, ao menos no que tange à sua argumentação sobre os referidos métodos de ensino filosófico. Uma tradução completa e anotada da Ep. 94 acompanha o nosso estudo / Abstract: Though considered one of the most significant of Seneca's works, scholars sometimes critize the Letters to Lucilius as being nothing but a gathering of moral exhortations (precepts) with no considerable doctrinal basis, or for allegedly not presenting any systematics. However, a more careful reading of the Letter 94 (and the one that follows it, the Letter 95), lets us come to notice that Seneca himself approaches the role of precepts in moral development. The importance of that part of philosophy called praeceptiua as opposed to the dogmatic one is the main subject of these epistles. There, the philosopher develops his arguments quite orderly and makes regular use of imagery in order to refer to both decreta and praecepta. Taking that into account, and having studied the Letter 95 before, this investigation of the Letter 94 focuses on the hypothesis that the philosopher presents systematics of some kind, at least when it comes to his arguments about the methods of philosophical teaching just mentioned. The epistle is translated in full and provided with footnotes / Mestrado / Linguistica / Mestra em Linguística
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Cicero : 'haruspex' vicissitudinum mutationisque rei publicae : a study of Cicero's merit as political analystSchneider, Maridien 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2000. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study is to explore Marcus Tullius Cicero's awareness and
interpretation of contemporary political events as reflected in his private correspondence
during the last years of both the Roman republic and his own life. Cicero's
correspondence gives a detailed view of current political events in Rome and constitutes,
with Caesar's own narrative, our major contemporary evidence for the circumstances of
the civil war of 49 BC.
The dissertation takes as Leitmotiv Cicero's own judgement of the state as 'sacrificial
victim' to the ambitions of individual politicians, with as metaphor his examination of a
'dying' body politic in the manner of a haruspex inspecting the entrails of a sacrificial
animal. It poses the question whether Cicero understood the message of political decline
signalled by the 'entrails' of the 'carcass' of the res publica, and whether this ability in its
turn enabled him to anticipate future political development in Rome.
In what follows, the theoretical input of Cicero's predecessors, their perceptions of
constitutional development, and of Roman politics in particular, as well as Cicero's own
perception of their political theories will be considered in order to determine the extent of
Cicero's awareness of a larger pattern of political events, and how consistent he was in
his analyses of such patterns, that is, to what extent Cicero may be considered seriously
as a political analyst. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die oogmerk van die verhandeling is om vas te stel of Marcus Tullius Cicero met reg
daaop kan aanspraak maak dat hy eietydse politieke gebeure sinvol kon interpreteer as die
manifestering van 'n nuwe politieke stroming wat die voorkoms van die toekomstige
Romeinse politieke toneel sou bepaal.
Cicero se waarneming en begrip van eietydse politieke gebeure in die laaste paar jaar van
die Romeinse Republiek en sy eie lewe word tekenend weerspieël in sy persoonlike
briefwisseling uit die tydperk 51 tot 43 v.C. As historiese dokument bied hierdie
korrespondensie, as primêre bronmateriaal, naas die behoue kontemporêre beriggewing
van Julius Caesar, die enigste ander kontemporêre getuienis vir die uitbreek en nadraai
van die burgeroorlog van 49 v.C.
Die sentrale tema van die verhandeling is Cicero se persepsie van die Romeinse staat as
die 'slagoffer' van magsugtige politieke rolspelers. Cicero se rol as waarnemer en
politieke analis word uitgebeeld deur die metafoor van 'n haruspex (profeet) wat die
'ingewande' van die 'karkas' van die gestorwe Romeinse Republiek ondersoek. Die
kernvraag wat gestel word is, of Cicero inderdaad daartoe in staat was om die boodskap
van politieke verandering raak te lees, die implikasies daarvan te begryp en daarvolgens
'n beredeneerde toekomsprojeksie van die Romeinse politieke toneel te maak.
Om te bepaal of Cicero meriete verdien as 'n politieke analis, word die volgende kriteria
as toetsstene gebruik: die teoretiese insette van Cicero se voorgangers en sy beheersing
van sodanige politieke teoretisering, die mate waarin hy konsekwent en objektief kon
oordeel, en die mate waarin hy teorie en die praktiese werklikheid van die Romeinse
politieke situasie kon integreer.
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Letters to the emperor : epistolarity and power relations from Cicero to SymmachusCreese, Maggi January 2007 (has links)
Traditionally Latin prose letters have been classified in one of two ways: often they are seen as historical documents to be mined for political, historical and social information; otherwise they are viewed as literature, to be read with a consideration of the role of rhetoric and persuasion. These letters are only rarely approached as letters, and classical scholars have only just begun to discover the benefits of applying epistolary theory to these texts. My thesis examines epistolary exchange within the context of Roman power relations, offering a new interpretation of the correspondences between the most powerful political figure in a given period and one from among the senatorial class. Cicero, Pliny the Younger, Fronto and Symmachus each conducted an epistolary exchange with a powerful figure with whom he hoped to gain influence, and despite the significant differences between them in terms of political and social circumstances, each uses his letters in similar ways to that end. I approach these texts, never before treated together in a comparative study, with a consideration of epistolarity, ‘the use of the letter’s formal properties to create meaning’, a concept developed by J. G. Altman (1982). These properties are identified and examined by means of detailed stylistic analysis of the Latin text. The act of writing a letter is an act of self-definition; the sender constructs a self defined necessarily in relation to a particular addressee. Thus the letter also affords a sender the opportunity to define the You, to whom he addresses himself. In the context of power relations in Roman politics, the letter then becomes a flexible tool of self-fashioning, by which a senator may attempt to influence the emperor.
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