Light from the Porch: Stoicism and English Renaissance LiteratureDidier-Erudition, 1984 - 301 páginas |
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Página 15
... evil , and about something either present or future . The Stoics therefore considered that there are four main passions : distress ( aegritudo ) corresponds to present evil , fear ( metus ) to future evil , delight ( laetitia ) to ...
... evil , and about something either present or future . The Stoics therefore considered that there are four main passions : distress ( aegritudo ) corresponds to present evil , fear ( metus ) to future evil , delight ( laetitia ) to ...
Página 26
... evil , because , as the Stoics contend , " to those who seek all good from themselves nothing can seem evil that the laws of nature inevitably impose " ( II.4 ) . More significant for us are the three sixteenth - century translations of ...
... evil , because , as the Stoics contend , " to those who seek all good from themselves nothing can seem evil that the laws of nature inevitably impose " ( II.4 ) . More significant for us are the three sixteenth - century translations of ...
Página 185
... evil and therefore not an injury either , we shall much more easily bear all other things " .1 He develops the idea that " disaster is virtue's opportunity " in the De Providentia ( IV.6 ) . As death is not an evil Sophonisba ...
... evil and therefore not an injury either , we shall much more easily bear all other things " .1 He develops the idea that " disaster is virtue's opportunity " in the De Providentia ( IV.6 ) . As death is not an evil Sophonisba ...
Contenido
Stoicism and the Renaissance Christian | 1 |
AntiStoicism | 51 |
Anthony Stafford | 109 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Antiochus Antonio Antonio's Revenge attitude borrows Brutus Bussy D'Ambois Caesar Calvin Cambridge Cato characters Charron Christian Cicero classical Clermont constancy Constantia Cornwallis death destiny Diogenes Laertius Discourses Disp divine doctrine dramatic edition Elizabethan English Epictetus Epist Essay Essayes ethics evil fate Feliche Ford's fortitude George Chapman God's gods Hall's Hamlet happiness hath haue Heaven upon Earth honour human Ibid Jacobean John Ford John Marston King Latin Lipsius liue London man's Manuductio Marcus Aurelius Massinger Massinger's Massinissa mind Montaigne moral nature Neostoicism never opinion Oxford Pandulpho paradoxes Paris passions patience Perkin Warbeck Philip Massinger philosophical play Plutarch Poems Pompey Providentia quotations quoted reader reason Renaissance Roman Actor Samuel Daniel satire says seems Seneca Sermons Shakespeare Sophonisba soul Stafford Stoic Stoic philosophy stoical Stoicism Studies suicide things Thomas thou Tragedy translation Treatise true Tusc Vair vertue virtue virtuous vnto vols vpon wisdom wise words