{"title":"Cicero’s Philosophical Works","authors":"","doi":"10.1093/obo/9780195389661-0361","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Cicero (106–43 bce) was a Roman statesman, orator, and philosopher. As well as speeches, letters, and rhetorical treatises, Cicero wrote numerous philosophical works. These can be divided into two periods—those written before the civil war between Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great (pre-49 bce), and those written during and after it (46 bce onward). Those written before are in dialogue form and the central topics are political: the ideal orator (De Oratore), the best citizen and the best state (De Re Publica), the best laws (De Legibus). Those following are predominately part of an ambitious project to bring philosophy to Rome in a systematic fashion; they are also mainly in dialogue form. Cicero composed an exhortation to philosophy (Hortensius), followed by books on epistemology (Academica, Lucullus) and works on broadly ethical concerns—the nature of good and evil (De Finibus); honor and glory (De Gloria); old age and friendship (De Senectute, De Amicitia); the soul, death, and suffering (Tusculans); consolation (Consolatio); the nature of the gods, divination, and providence (De Natura Deorum, De Divinatione, De Fato). Cicero’s final philosophical work is the De Officiis, presented as a letter to his son. Philosophy also figures prominently throughout Cicero’s letters, speeches, and rhetorical works. Indeed, it should be noted that Cicero felt his rhetorical works Orator and Brutus should be included in his philosophical corpus (Div. 2.4). There are two schools of thought on the novelty and value of Cicero’s philosophical works: (1) he is essentially just repackaging Greek material in Latin, offering renditions of existing ideas that are invaluable for saving much of the lost tradition of Hellenistic philosophy; (2) he is doing something more than that, developing distinctive philosophical contributions of his own. Most recent studies stress the innovative elements of Cicero’s philosophical thinking. Cicero’s own philosophical convictions are varied. Stoicism figures largely, as does his sympathy with Plato, Aristotle, and the Academic and Peripatetic traditions that follow them. He is strongly anti-Epicurean in both periods of his philosophical activity. Most scholars maintain that he is a pragmatic and flexible Academic skeptic, who weighs both sides of every argument and gives his assent to whatever he finds most compelling given the particular circumstances. Ostensibly a lack of political opportunity motivated Cicero to write philosophy. In the prefaces to his philosophical works he insists that it is not an escape from politics, but an intervention in it by other means.","PeriodicalId":82164,"journal":{"name":"Nigeria and the classics","volume":"41 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Nigeria and the classics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195389661-0361","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cicero (106–43 bce) was a Roman statesman, orator, and philosopher. As well as speeches, letters, and rhetorical treatises, Cicero wrote numerous philosophical works. These can be divided into two periods—those written before the civil war between Julius Caesar and Pompey the Great (pre-49 bce), and those written during and after it (46 bce onward). Those written before are in dialogue form and the central topics are political: the ideal orator (De Oratore), the best citizen and the best state (De Re Publica), the best laws (De Legibus). Those following are predominately part of an ambitious project to bring philosophy to Rome in a systematic fashion; they are also mainly in dialogue form. Cicero composed an exhortation to philosophy (Hortensius), followed by books on epistemology (Academica, Lucullus) and works on broadly ethical concerns—the nature of good and evil (De Finibus); honor and glory (De Gloria); old age and friendship (De Senectute, De Amicitia); the soul, death, and suffering (Tusculans); consolation (Consolatio); the nature of the gods, divination, and providence (De Natura Deorum, De Divinatione, De Fato). Cicero’s final philosophical work is the De Officiis, presented as a letter to his son. Philosophy also figures prominently throughout Cicero’s letters, speeches, and rhetorical works. Indeed, it should be noted that Cicero felt his rhetorical works Orator and Brutus should be included in his philosophical corpus (Div. 2.4). There are two schools of thought on the novelty and value of Cicero’s philosophical works: (1) he is essentially just repackaging Greek material in Latin, offering renditions of existing ideas that are invaluable for saving much of the lost tradition of Hellenistic philosophy; (2) he is doing something more than that, developing distinctive philosophical contributions of his own. Most recent studies stress the innovative elements of Cicero’s philosophical thinking. Cicero’s own philosophical convictions are varied. Stoicism figures largely, as does his sympathy with Plato, Aristotle, and the Academic and Peripatetic traditions that follow them. He is strongly anti-Epicurean in both periods of his philosophical activity. Most scholars maintain that he is a pragmatic and flexible Academic skeptic, who weighs both sides of every argument and gives his assent to whatever he finds most compelling given the particular circumstances. Ostensibly a lack of political opportunity motivated Cicero to write philosophy. In the prefaces to his philosophical works he insists that it is not an escape from politics, but an intervention in it by other means.
西塞罗(公元前106-43年)是罗马政治家、演说家和哲学家。除了演讲、信件和修辞论文外,西塞罗还写了许多哲学著作。这些可以分为两个时期——写于恺撒大帝和庞培大帝内战之前(公元前49年以前)的时期,以及写于内战期间和之后(公元前46年以后)的时期。之前写的都是对话形式,中心话题是政治:理想的演说家(De Oratore),最好的公民和最好的国家(De Re Publica),最好的法律(De Legibus)。下面这些主要是一个雄心勃勃的计划的一部分,以系统的方式将哲学带到罗马;它们也以对话形式为主。西塞罗写了一本哲学劝诫书(Hortensius),接着写了认识论的书(Academica, Lucullus),以及关于广泛伦理问题的著作——善与恶的本质(De Finibus);荣誉和荣耀(De Gloria);老年与友谊(De Senectute, De Amicitia);灵魂、死亡和痛苦(图斯图兰人);安慰(Consolatio);神、占卜和天意的本质(De Natura Deorum, De divinationone, De Fato)。西塞罗最后的哲学著作是《论官职》,是写给他儿子的一封信。哲学在西塞罗的书信、演讲和修辞作品中也占有重要地位。事实上,应该指出的是,西塞罗认为他的修辞作品《演说家》和《布鲁图斯》应该被包括在他的哲学语料库中(第2.4节)。关于西塞罗哲学著作的新颖性和价值,有两种观点:(1)他本质上只是用拉丁语重新包装了希腊材料,提供了对现有思想的演绎,这些思想对于拯救许多失落的希腊哲学传统是无价的;(2)他所做的远不止于此,他正在形成自己独特的哲学贡献。最近的研究大多强调西塞罗哲学思想的创新元素。西塞罗自己的哲学信仰是多种多样的。斯多葛主义的影响很大,他对柏拉图、亚里士多德的同情,以及他们之后的学术和游学传统也是如此。他在两个哲学活动时期都强烈反对伊壁鸠鲁主义。大多数学者认为他是一个务实和灵活的学术怀疑论者,他权衡每一个论点的双方,并在特定情况下同意他认为最令人信服的任何东西。表面上看,缺乏政治机会促使西塞罗写哲学。在他的哲学著作的序言中,他坚持认为这不是对政治的逃避,而是通过其他方式对政治的干预。