Stoacıların Paradoksları Paradoxa Stoicorum by Marcus Tullius Cicero
This short work sets out and defends a series of Stoic paradoxes, arguing against common opinion that virtue alone is the true good and vice the only evil; that virtue is sufficient for happiness and that all virtues are essentially one; that genuine freedom and wealth belong to the wise regardless of external circumstances; and that it is better to suffer wrongdoing than to commit it. Presented in a concise, rhetorical style, the text uses examples and argument to make Stoic moral principles clear and persuasive to readers.
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- Published
- -45
- Nationality
- Roman
- Length
- Unknown
- Pages
- Unknown
- Original Language
- Latin
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- Alternate Titles
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- Paradoxa Stoicorum
- Paradoxes of the Stoics
- Stoacıların Paradoksları
- Stoicorum Paradoxa
- The Six Stoic Paradoxes
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