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2012 | 31 | 207-219

Article title

Z rozważań Seneki o Bogu

Content

Title variants

EN
Seneca’s God

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
Lucius Annaeus Seneca, called the Younger or Philosopher, is the most important figure of the Roman Imperial Period. This Stoic philosopher made a lasting contribution to Stoicism. Seneca lived during difficult times and he was engaged in politics during the reign of his disciple, Cesar Nero. Seneca agrees with earlier Stoics, that God is corporeal and is a part of the world. Seneca discusses virtue as the ideal of “becoming like God” and thinks, that the virtuous man is an equal to the God. So he claims, that we have to learn virtues. However in this case we have the help of God, who gives us the intellect when we are born. Seneca reminds, that the life is not easy and only the indications of the philosophy concerning virtue preserve from the unjust fortune.

Keywords

God   Seneca   Stoicism   virtue  

Year

Volume

31

Pages

207-219

Physical description

Contributors

  • UKSW Warszawa

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-85907f09-964f-48fc-8fed-e9a43194cb89
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