'any service I may have rendered my countrymen in my active life I may also extend to them... now that I am at leisure'Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC), Rome's greatest orator, had a career of intense activity in politics, the law courts and the administration, mostly in Rome. His fortunes, however, followed those of Rome, and he found himself driven into exile in 58 BC, only to
return a year later to a city paralyzed by the domination of Pompey, Crassus, and Caesar. Cicero, though a senior statesman, struggled to maintain his independence and it was during these years that, frustrated in public life, he first started to put his excess
energy, stylistic brilliance, and superabundant vocabulary into writing these works of philosophy. The three dialogues collected here are the most accessible of Cicero's works, written to his friends Atticus and Brutus, with the intent of popularizing philosophy in Ancient Rome. They deal with the everyday problems of life; ethics in business, the experience of grief, and the difficulties of old age.
'any service I may have rendered my countrymen in my active life I may also extend to them... now that I am at leisure'Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC), Rome's greatest orator, had a career of intense activity in politics, the law courts and the administration, mostly in Rome. His fortunes, however, followed those of Rome, and he found himself driven into exile in 58 BC, only to
return a year later to a city paralyzed by the domination of Pompey, Crassus, and Caesar. Cicero, though a senior statesman, struggled to maintain his independence and it was during these years that, frustrated in public life, he first started to put his excess
energy, stylistic brilliance, and superabundant vocabulary into writing these works of philosophy. The three dialogues collected here are the most accessible of Cicero's works, written to his friends Atticus and Brutus, with the intent of popularizing philosophy in Ancient Rome. They deal with the everyday problems of life; ethics in business, the experience of grief, and the difficulties of old age.
Introduction
Note on the Text
Select Bibliography
A Chronology of Cicero
TUSCULAN DISPUTATIONS
Book 1
Book 2
Preface to Book 3
Preface to Book 4
Book 5
ON OLD AGE
ON FRIENDSHIP
Appendix: Two Letters to Friends
Explanatory Notes
John Davie is Lecturer in Classics at Trinity Collge, Oxford and
former Head of Classics at St Paul's School, London. He has
previously translated the complete plays of Euripides for Penguin
Classics and has also translated for the Oxford World's Classics
Seneca's Dialogues and Essays and Horace's Satires and Epistles
Miriam T. Griffin was born in New York and studied at Barnard
College and Radcliffe before receiving a Fulbright Scholarship
to
Oxford, where she completed her DPhil under the supervision of Sir
Ronald Syme. She was initially the Fulford Research Fellow at St.
Anne's College, later being appointed to a tutorial fellowship in
Ancient History at
Somerville College and a CUF Lectureship in the University, as well
as holding a post as Langford Eminent scholar at Florida State
University in 2008. She was the editor of The Classical Quarterly
from 2002 until 2007 and was a long-standing editor of the
Clarendon Ancient History Series for Oxford University Press. In
2018, Dr Griffin was posthumously awarded a British Academy Medal
for her lifetimes contribution to Roman history and ancient
thought.
Very accessible... provides much thought-provoking material... will
appeal both to those who are already well-versed in philosophy and
to those who come new to this discipline.
*Marion Gibbs, Classics for All*
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