Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. The Academica was the second of five books written by Cicero in his attempt to popularise Greek philosophy in Ancient Rome, and it is the only one of the five books that exclusively focused on promoting Academic Skepticism, the school of Hellenistic philosophy to which Cicero belonged.

  2. Academicorum reliquiae cum Lucullo. M. Tullius Cicero. O. Plasberg. Leipzig. Teubner. 1922. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License . An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make.

  3. Academici Libri (Academica) Buch 1,17: Platonis autem auctoritate, qui varius et multiplex et copiosus fuit, una et consentiens duobus vocabulis philosophiae forma instituta est Academicorum et Peripateticorum, qui rebus congruentes nominibus differebant.

    Lateinischer Text:
    Deutsche Übersetzung:
    Academici Libri (Academica)
    Buch 1,17
    Platonis autem auctoritate, qui varius et ...
    Unter Platons Einfluss, der überaus ...
    Nam cum Speusippum sororis fillum Plato ...
    Denn als Platon Speusipp, den Sohn seiner ...
    Sed utrique Platonis ubertate completi ...
    Jedoch stellten beide, durch Platons ...
  4. Ci. 'Immo vero et ista et totam veterem Academiam, a qua absum tam diu, renovari a te nisi molestum est velim', et simul 'adsidamus' inquam 'si videtur. Va. 'Sane istuc quidem' inquit, 'sum enim admodum infirmus. sed videamus idemne Attico placeat fieri a me quod te velle video.'

  5. Introduction to Academica. expounded by Catulus; Hortensius countered with the dogmatism of Antiochus (Old Academy), and Cicero put the case of Philo (Middle Academy), that ‘probability’ is consistent with Platonism.

  6. Introduction to Academica. Manuscripts.—Scholars range the mss. of Academica I. in two families, derived from two archetypes of the twelfth century or older.

  7. 8. Feb. 2005 · THE ACADEMICA OF CICERO. [i] INTRODUCTION. I. Cicero as a Student of Philosophy and Man of Letters: 90—45 B.C. It would seem that Cicero's love for literature was inherited from his father, who, being of infirm health, lived constantly at Arpinum, and spent the greater part of his time in study. [1]