Cicero's religious belief, so far as we can gather it, was rather negative than positive. In the speculative treatise 'On the Nature of the Gods,' he examines all the current creeds of the day, but leaves his own quite undefined. The treatise takes the form of an imaginary conversation. This is supposed to have taken place at the house of Aurelius Cotta, then Pontifex Maximus—an office which answered nearly to that of Minister of religion. The other speakers are Balbus, Velleius, and Cicero himself, — who acts, however, rather in the character of moderator than of disputant. The debate is still, as in the more strictly philosophical dialogues, between the different schools.
On the Nature of the Gods
Kom i gang med denne bog i dag for 0 kr.
- Få fuld adgang til alle bøger i appen i prøveperioden
- Ingen forpligtelser, opsiges når som helst

Forpligtelser : Gyldendals Filosofibibliotek

2000 Final Quotations

Civil War in the Roman Republic : A time of great civil, military and political strife that mirrors our own | 106 to 44BCE

The Graeco-Roman Era :

600 Quotes from Political Philosophy

3500 Final Quotes

700 Quotations from Ancient Philosophy

400 Quotations from Ancient Roman Philosophers

100 Quotes by Cicero

Tusculan Disputations

Harvard Classics Volume 9 : Letters And Treatises Of Cicero And Pliny

The Orations, Volume 2
