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Power and Persuasion in Cicero's Philosophy

Power and Persuasion in Cicero's Philosophy

Power and Persuasion in Cicero's Philosophy

Nathan Gilbert, University of Durham
Margaret Graver, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire
Sean McConnell, University of Otago, New Zealand
December 2022
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    Extensively trained as a philosopher, Cicero was also a working politician with a keen awareness of the distance between pure intellectual endeavor and effective strategies of persuasion. This volume explores a series of interrelated problems in his works, from the use of emotion, self-correction, and even fiction in intellectual inquiry, to the motives of political agents and the morality of political arguments, to the means of justifying the use of force in international relations. It features close readings of works from all periods of Cicero's philosophical career, from the threshold of Rome's civil war to the year following the assassination of Julius Caesar. For a richer body of evidence, the volume also makes use of material from Cicero's personal letters and political speeches. Power and Persuasion in Cicero's Philosophy will be essential reading not only in Roman philosophy but also for the political and rhetorical culture of the Roman Republic.

    • Adopts a range of cross-generic and interdisciplinary approaches to Cicero's philosophy
    • Focuses on Cicero's persuasive techniques and strategies, which make him distinctive within the Greek and Roman intellectual tradition
    • Addresses the relationship between persuasive rhetoric, practical politics, and philosophy in Cicero's corpus

    Product details

    December 2022
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009184984
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Nathan Gilbert, Margaret Graver and Sean McConnell
    • Part I. Techniques and Tactics of Ciceronian Philosophy:
    • 1. Cicero on rhetoric and dialectic Raphael Woolf
    • 2. Cicero's Platonic dialogues James E. G. Zetzel
    • 3. Mos dialogorum: scepticism and fiction in Cicero's Academica Georgina White
    • 4. Nos in diem vivimus: Cicero's approach in the Tusculan Disputations Geert Roskam
    • 5. Cicero the philosopher at work: the genesis and execution of de officiis 3 Nathan Gilbert
    • Part II. Political Philosophy and Ethics:
    • 6. Luris consensu revisited Malcolm Schofield
    • 7. The psychology of honor in Cicero's De re publica Margaret Graver
    • 8. Cicero on the justice of war Jed W. Atkins
    • 9. Towards a definition of sapientia: philosophy in Cicero's Pro Marcello Katherina Volk
    • 10. Old men in Cicero's political philosophy Sean McConnell
    • Bibliography.
      Contributors
    • Nathan Gilbert, Margaret Graver, Sean McConnell, Raphael Woolf, James E G Zetzel, Georgina White, Geert Roskam, Malcolm Schofield, Jed W. Atkins, Katherina Volk

    • Editors
    • Nathan Gilbert , University of Durham

      NATHAN GILBERT is an Associate Professor in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at University of Durham.

    • Margaret Graver , Dartmouth College, New Hampshire

      MARGARET GRAVER is Aaron Lawrence Professor of Classics at Dartmouth College and the author of Seneca: The Literary Philosopher, forthcoming 2023 from Cambridge University Press. Her other publications include Cicero on the Emotions: Tusculan Disputations 3 and 4 (2002); Stoicism and Emotion (2007); and, with A. A. Long, a complete annotated translation of Seneca's Letters on Ethics.

    • Sean McConnell , University of Otago, New Zealand

      SEAN McCONNELL is an Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Otago. He is the author of Philosophical Life in Cicero's Letters (Cambridge, 2014).