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5 sie 2024 · "Do not blame Caesar, blame the people of Rome who have so enthusiastically acclaimed and adored him and rejoiced in their loss of freedom and danced in his path and gave him triumphal processions.
- Wrongdoing
And uh, if it could um, sneak up on you, surprise you, and...
- 43 BC
Wikipedia's 43 BC article offers a list of noteworthy events...
- People From Lazio
Pages in category "People from Lazio" The following 22 pages...
- James Thomson
This disambiguation page, one that points to other pages...
- Alan Ryan
Introduction in Justice (1993) edited by Alan Ryan.. Mankind...
- Quintilian
Vain hopes are often like the dreams of those who wake....
- Wrongdoing
On Duties (De Officiis) - Book II Lyrics. 1. I Think, my son Marcus, that it has been sufficiently explained in my first book how duties are to be derived from the right, and from each of the...
De finibus bonorum et malorum ("On the ends of good and evil") is a Socratic dialogue by the Roman orator, politician, and Academic Skeptic philosopher Marcus Tullius Cicero.
Marcus Tullius Cicero. Politician, Born. 406 Copy quote. Do not blame Caesar, blame the people of Rome who have so enthusiastically acclaimed and adored him and rejoiced in their loss of freedom and danced in his path and gave him triumphal processions.
De Officiis (On Duties, On Obligations, or On Moral Responsibilities) is a 44 BC treatise by Marcus Tullius Cicero divided into three books, in which Cicero expounds his conception of the best way to live, behave, and observe moral obligations.
The Paradoxa Stoicorum (English: Stoic Paradoxes) is a work by the academic skeptic philosopher Cicero in which he attempts to explain six famous Stoic sayings that appear to go against common understanding: (1) virtue is the sole good; (2) virtue is the sole requisite for happiness; (3) all good deeds are equally virtuous and all bad deeds ...
24 maj 2008 · On Duties is in the form of an extended letter from Cicero to his twenty-one-year-old son, Marcus, who is, at the time, studying in Athens. This is Cicero’s major ethical writing and his final philosophical work, done in the last year and a half of his life.