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Encyclopedia results for Epicureanism

  1. Book:Epicureanism

    saved book title Epicureanism subtitle The Complete Guide cover image Epicurus bust2.jpg cover color black Epicureanism The Complete Guide Main article and philosophy Epicureanism Tetrapharmakos Concepts and arguments Aponia Ataraxia Clinamen Eudaimonia H don Metakosmia Javelin argument Problem of evil Philosophers of the Greek era Epicurus Polyaenus of Lampsacus Timocrates of Lampsacus Metrodorus of Lampsacus the younger Metrodorus of Lampsacus Leontion Carneiscus Idomeneus of Lampsacus Batis of Lampsacus Leonteus of Lampsacus Themista of Lampsacus Hermarchus Amynomachus Colotes Polystratus the Epicurean Dionysius of Lamptrai Basilides the Epicurean Philonides of Laodicea Diogenes of Tarsus Apollodorus the Epicurean Demetrius Lacon Zeno of Sidon Diogenes of Seleucia Epicurean Diogenes of Seleucia Philosophers of the Roman era Amafinius Rabirius Epicurean Rabirius Titus Albucius Phaedrus the Epicurean Philodemus Lucretius Patro the Epicurean Catius Siro the Epicurean Diogenes of Oenoanda Works De rerum natura Lists and other resources List of Epicurean philosophers Villa of the Papyri Category Wikipedia books on philosophy Epicureanism ...   more details



  1. Metakosmia

    The metakosmia Greek language Greek , Latin intermundia , according to Epicurean philosophy were the relatively empty spaces in the infinite void where worlds had not been formed by the joining together of the atoms through their endless motion. Epicurus held that the metakosmia were the abode of the god s, whom he considered to be immortal and blissful living beings made of atoms. References noref date December 2008 philo stub Epicureanism Category Epicureanism Category Concepts in metaphysics ...   more details



  1. Hedone

    Unreferenced date December 2006 Template Hedonism H don lang grc is an English transliteration of a Greek language Greek word meaning pleasure , and is the root of the English word wikt hedonism hedonism . In the Epicureanism philosophy of Epicurus , h don was the quest for pleasure that would have only good consequences. This concept strikes a sharp contrast with the words hedonism and even pleasure in English today the former implies wanton pursuit of pleasure with disregard to all else, and the latter has no inherent connotations that extend the meaning beyond the immediate experiences it describes. Hedone is also the Greek name of Voluptas , the daughter of the Greek gods Eros Cupid and Psyche mythology Psyche . See also Hedonism Epicureanism DEFAULTSORT Hedone Category Hedonism Category Epicureanism Category Philosophical concepts philo stub es Hedon pt Hedon sr fi Hedone sv H don ...   more details



  1. Rabirius (Epicurean)

    Rabirius was a 1st century BC Epicureanism Epicurean associated with Amafinius and Catius as one of the early popularizers of the philosophy in Italy. Their works on Epicureanism were the earliest philosophical treatises written in Latin . ref Elizabeth Rawson , Intellectual Life in the Late Roman Republic Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985 , pp. 23 and 284. ref Other than Lucretius , Amafinius and Rabirius are the only Roman Epicurean writers named by Cicero . ref Charles Brittain, Cicero On Academic Skepticism Hackett, 2006 , p. 134 http books.google.com books?id r7dAZWVsD7EC&pg PA134&dq Rabirius epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &as drrb is b&as minm is 0&as miny is 1976&as maxm is 0&as maxy is 2010&num 100&as brr 0 v onepage&q Rabirius 20epicurean 20OR 20epicureanism 20OR 20epicureans&f false online. ref In his Academica , Cicero criticizes Amafinius and Rabirius from an elitist perspective for their unsophisticated prose style , and says that in their efforts to introduce philosophy to common people they end up saying nothing. He concludes indignantly they think there is no art of speechmaking or composition. ref Academica Posteriora 1.2 nullam denique artem esse nec dicendi nec disserendi Barbara Price Wallach, Lucretius and the Diatribe against the Fear of Death De rerum natura III 830 1094 Brill, 1976 , p. 5, note 10 http books.google.com books?id xLY3AAAAIAAJ&pg PA5&dq Rabirius epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &as drrb is b&as minm is 0&as miny is 1976&as maxm is 0&as maxy is 2010&num 100&as brr 0 v onepage&q Rabirius&f false online. ref Although Cicero in his writings is mostly hostile toward Epicureanism, his dear friend Titus Pomponius Atticus Atticus was an Epicurean, and this remark, occurring within a dialogue , is attributed to the interlocutor ... Rabirius epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &as drrb is b&as minm is 0&as miny is 1976&as maxm ... Epicureanism DEFAULTSORT Rabirius Epicurean Category Roman era Epicurean philosophers Category Philosophers ...   more details



  1. Epicurea

    italictitle Epicurea is a collection of texts, fragments and testimonies by Epicurus composed by Hermann Usener in 1887 . External links http www.archive.org details epicvreaedidith00epicgoog Complete text Greek and Latin at Internet Archive http www.epicurus.info etexts epicurea.html English version at http www.epicurus.info Epicurus.info Category Philosophy books Category Epicureanism Category Fragment collections AncientGreece stub philo book stub la Epicurea Usener fi Epicurea ...   more details



  1. On Nature (Epicurus)

    For other philosophical literature of the same name see On Nature italictitle On Nature is the name of a philosophical treatise written by the Ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus . It was a thirty seven volume work. While it has not come down to us complete, numerous fragments have been found among the charred papyrus fragments at the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum see Herculaneum papyri . ref http plato.stanford.edu entries epicurus 1 Epicurus at Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy ref reflist Category Ancient philosophical literature Category Epicureanism Category Natural philosophy ...   more details



  1. Self-interest

    wiktionary Self interest generally refers to a focus on the needs or desires interests of oneself. By extension, it can mean Individualism , a philosophy stressing the worth of individual selves Psychological egoism , the view that humans are always motivated by self interest Ethical egoism , the ethical position that moral agents ought to do what is in their own self interest Hedonism , the school of ethics which argues that pleasure is the only intrinsic good. Epicureanism , a philosophical system related to hedonism Enlightened self interest , a philosophy which states that acting to further the interests of others also serves one s own self interest Indirect self interest , any situation in which the interests of others match one s own, so that serving one will lead to serving the other See also Altruism Egoism disambiguation Interest disambiguation Self disambiguation Selfish disambiguation disambig ...   more details



  1. Dionysius of Lamptrai

    Dionysius 3rd century BCE of Lamptrai was an Epicurean philosopher, who succeeded Polystratus the Epicurean Polystratus as the head scholarch of the Epicurean school at Athens c. 219 BC. He died c. 205 BC and was succeeded by Basilides the Epicurean Basilides . ref Diogenes La rtius, The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers , x. 25 ref ref Tiziano Dorandi, Chapter 2 Chronology , in Algra et al. 1999 The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy , page 52. Cambridge. ref Notes reflist Epicureanism Category 205 BC deaths Category 3rd century BC Greek people Category 3rd century BC philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category Hellenistic era philosophers in Athens ca Dion s fil sof epicuri fr Dionysios de Lamptr e it Dionisio di Lamptrai pt Dion sio de Lamptrai fi Dionysios Lamptrailainen ...   more details



  1. Amafinia (gens)

    The gens Amafinia or Amafania was a Ancient Rome Roman family during the late Roman Republic Republic . The best known member of the gens was Gaius Amafinius, one of the earliest Roman writers in favor of the Epicureanism Epicurean philosophy. Cicero considered his works deficient in arrangement and style. ref Cicero Marcus Tullius Cicero , Academica Priora , i. 2, Tusculanae Quaestiones , iv. 3. ref See also List of Roman gentes References reflist SmithDGRBM Ancient Rome bio stub Category Roman gentes Category Ancient Roman families Category Prosopography of Ancient Rome bg ...   more details



  1. Catius

    to Epicureanism. ref See Gaius Cassius Longinus Epicureanism article on Cassius for more on his Epicureanism also Arnaldo Momigliano , review of Science and Politics in the Ancient World by Benjamin ... books?id WSOwWVUyUL4C&pg PA343&dq Catius epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &num 100 ... epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &num 100&as brr 3&as pt ALLTYPES online Robert D. Brown ...&dq Catius epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &num 100&as brr 3&as pt ALLTYPES online. ref ... s own Epicurean leanings, the passage should probably be read as a parody of the kind of false Epicureanism ...&pg PA141&dq Catius epicurean OR epicureanism OR epicureans&lr &num 100&as brr 3&as pt ALLTYPES online. ref See also Catia gens Notes Reflist SmithDGRBM Epicureanism Category Roman era Epicurean philosophers ...   more details



  1. Aponia

    Aponia lang grc means the absence of pain, and was regarded by the Epicureans to be the height of bodily pleasure. As with the other Hellenistic philosophy Hellenistic schools of philosophy , the Epicureans believed that the goal of human life is happiness . This was to be found in the tranquillity of spirit which resulted from aponia , suppression of physical pain, and ataraxia , elimination of mental disturbances. ref Epicurus, Ep. Men. , 128 ref The Epicureans defined pleasure as the absence of pain mental and physical , and hence pleasure can only increase up until the point in which pain is absent. ref Harvnb Reale 1985 pp 171 ref Beyond this, pleasure cannot increase further, and indeed one cannot rationally seek bodily pleasure beyond the state of aponia . ref Harvnb Furley 1999 pp 210 ref For Epicurus , aponia was one of the static katastematic pleasures, ref Diogenes La rtius, x. 136 ref that is, a pleasure one has when there is no want or pain to be removed. ref name Annas1995 Harvnb Annas 1995 pp 336 ref To achieve such a state, one has to experience kinetic pleasures, that is, a pleasure one has when want or pain is being removed. ref name Annas1995 Notes reflist References Citation last Reale first Giovanni year 1985 title A History of Ancient Philosophy The Systems of the Hellenistic Age publisher SUNY Press isbn Citation last Furley first David J. year 1999 title Routledge History of Philosophy, Volume II. From Aristotle to Augustine publisher Routledge isbn Citation last Annas first Julia year 1995 title The Morality of Happiness publisher Oxford University Press isbn Epicureanism Category Epicureanism Category Philosophical concepts fr Aponie hi it Aponia pt Aponia filosofia sk Aponia fi Aponia sv Epikuros Aponia ...   more details



  1. Unhappy consciousness

    Unreferenced date December 2006 For Hegel the unhappy consciousness German das ungl ckliche Bewu tsein is associated with a stage in the history of the development of the freedom of self consciousness . This stage of Hegel s Phenomenology of Spirit follows after the phase of the master slave consciousness. The three phases are Stoicism, followed by scepticism or cynicism, followed by the ascetic unhappy consciousness. Stoicism, Epicureanism and Hedonism For Hegel the resolution of the master slave dialectic in stoicism , hedonism and epicureanism is not lasting. The period in history Hegel associates with this is from the time of Alexander the Great on through the times of the Roman Empire. This Roman Stoicism is for Hegel something of a false resolution of the master slave dialectic, it emphasises only the freedom of thought. In the Stoic s distancing of himself from the world of desires, of pain and pleasure he achieves a freedom of conscience, but that he ignores the concrete reality is apparent in the unsatisfactory resolution of the master slave dialectic. He is ignoring the reality of the dissatisfaction apparent for both master and slave. Scepticism and Cynicism So for Hegel history shows that stoicism is replaced by scepticism and cynicism. Here again the complete disbelief in society, rather than the reasoned and calculated disbelief of the stoic, eventually leads to a dissolution of oneself. The comedy of the cynic that is directed against society, eventually begins to turn against the comedian. The idea of goodness is seen as completely foreign to mankind. The Unhappy Consciousness In this externalisation of the good from human affairs we see forming what Hegel calls the unhappy consciousness . This, Hegel associates with much of the early Christian era when people turned away from the world through ascetic and monastic life and prayer. Of course, for Hegel, each of these stages is an attainment, the achievement of the unhappy consciousness is the truth o ...   more details



  1. Demetrius Lacon

    Demetrius Lacon or Demetrius of Laconia late 2nd century BC was an Epicureanism Epicurean philosopher , and a disciple of Protarchus . ref Diogenes Laertius, x. 26 Strabo, xiv. 2. 20 ref He was an older contemporary of Zeno of Sidon and a teacher of Philodemus . Sextus Empiricus quotes part of a commentary by Demetrius on Epicurus , where Demetrius interprets Epicurus statement that time is an accident of accidents. ref Sextus Empiricus, Against the professors , 10.219 27 ref Papyrus scrolls containing portions of the works of Demetrius were discovered at the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum . The major works partially preserved are ref John T. Fitzgerald, Dirk Obbink , Glenn Stanfield Holland, 2004 , Philodemus and the New Testament World , page 10. BRILL. ref Quaestiones convivales PHerc. 1006 On the Puzzles of Polyaenus PHerc. 1083, 1258, 1429, 1642, 1647, 1822 On Geometry PHerc. 1061 On Poems PHerc. 188, 1014 two untitled works PHerc. 1786, 124 In addition, he is the probable author of the following works On the Size of the Sun PHerc. 1013 On Fickleness PHerc. 831 an untitled work on textual criticism of Epicurus writings PHerc. 1012 an untitled theological work PHerc. 1055 an untitled rhetorical work PHerc. 128 Notes Reflist Epicureanism Category 2nd century BC Greek people Category 2nd century BC philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category Hellenistic era philosophers Category Ancient Laconia philosopher stub ca Demetri fil sof epicuri de Demetrios Lakon fr D m trios Lacon it Demetrio di Laconia la Demetrius Laconicus fi Demetrios Lakonialainen sv Demetrius Laco ...   more details



  1. Philonides of Laodicea

    Philonides c. 200 &ndash c. 130 BCE of Laodicea in Syria , was an Epicurean philosopher and mathematician who lived in the Seleucid court during the reigns of Antiochus IV Epiphanes and Demetrius I Soter . He is known principally from a Life of Philonides which was discovered among the charred Papyri from Herculaneum papyrus scrolls at the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum . ref Vita Philonidi , PHerc. 1044 ref Philonides was born into a family with good connections with the Seleucid court. ref name gera Dov Gera, 1998 , Judaea and Mediterranean Politics, 219 to 161 B.C.E. , page 274. BRILL ref He is said to have been taught by one Eudemus, and Dionysodorus the mathematician. ref name mueller Ian Mueller, Geometry and scepticism , in Jonathan Barnes, 2005 , Science and Speculation Studies in Hellenistic Theory and Practice , page 94. Cambridge University Press. ref Philonides attempted to convert Antiochus IV Epiphanes to Epicureanism , and later instructed his nephew Demetrius I Soter in philosophy. ref name gera Philonides was highly honoured in the court, and he is also known from various stone inscriptions. ref name dewitt Dewitt, 1999 , Epicurus and His Philosophy , pages 119&ndash 120. U of Minnesota Press ref He was renowned as a mathematician, and is mentioned by Apollonius of Perga in the preface to the second book of his Conics . ref name mueller ref Apollonius, I 192.7&ndash 11 ref Philonides was a zealous collector of the works of Epicurus and his colleagues, and is said to have published over 100 treatises, probably compilations of the works he collected. ref name snyder H. Gregory Snyder, 2000 , Teachers and Texts in the Ancient World , pages 49&ndash 50. Routledge ref Notes reflist Epicureanism DEFAULTSORT Philonides of Laodicea Category 2nd century BC Greek people Category 2nd century BC philosophers Category Ancient Greek mathematicians Category Epicurean philosophers Category Hellenistic era philosophers from Syria Category People from Latakia Cat ...   more details



  1. Catherine (TV series)

    Catherine was a Quebec sitcom that aired on T l vision de Radio Canada Radio Canada from 1999 to 2003. It tells the story of Catherine Sylvie Moreau , a sexy, Epicureanism epicurean , man crazy Montreal er in her thirties working at the advertising agency Mirage Image , as well as the story of her best friend and orderly flatmate Sophie Marie H l ne Thibault , her landlord Rachel Dominique Michel , her ex boyfriend Pierre Charles Lafortune and other friends and co workers. See also Television of Quebec List of Quebec television series External links http radio canada.ca television catherine Official website Category Television series produced in Quebec Category Canadian television sitcoms Category 1999 Canadian television series debuts Category Radio Canada network shows Category Television series set in Montreal fr Catherine s rie t l vis e, 1998 ...   more details



  1. Carneiscus

    Carneiscus , was an Epicurean philosopher, and disciple of Epicurus , who lived c. 300 BC . He is known as the author of an essay, fragments of which were found among the charred remains at the Villa of the Papyri at Herculaneum . ref PHerc. 1027 ref The essay is entitled Philistas , and is a work on friendship which deals with a death of a friend. Philistas or Philista was a friend of Carneiscus, and she is presented as model Epicurean. Surviving fragments contain a polemic directed against Praxiphanes in which Carneiscus contrasts the Epicurean view of friendship and pleasure with the Peripatetic school Peripatetic view outlined by Praxiphanes. Notes reflist References David Konstan, 1997 , Friendship in the Classical World , pages 109 110. Cambridge University Press. James Warren, 2004 , Facing Death Epicurus and His Critics , page 134. Oxford University Press. Epicureanism Category Epicurean philosophers Category Hellenistic era philosophers Category 3rd century BC philosophers it Carneisco pl Karneiskos z Kos pt Carneisco fi Karneiskos sv Carneiscus ...   more details



  1. Epicurean (disambiguation)

    Epicurean , in its original meaning, refers to the philosophy of Epicureanism , founded and developed by the Greek philosopher Epicurus , c. 300 BC In modern parlance, the word epicure is employed as a synonym for Gourmet , a person concerned with fine food and drink, or refined sensuous enjoyment. The word epicure is never used when referring to the ancient philosophy. Epicurean or Epicure may also refer to Cuisine The Epicure s Almanac , a book containing a variety of tips for daily life, written in 1841 http www.epicurioustravels.com Epicurious Travels , a website dedicated to food and travel Epicurious , a website dedicated to cooking, drinking, entertaining, restaurants, etc Epicurean Masters of the World a series of gourmet dinners by world renowned chefs from Europe Ethicurean a person who attempts to combine ethical food consumption with gourmet eating Books The Epicurean , a novel by Thomas Moore, published in 1827 Marius the Epicurean , a philosophical novel by Walter Pater, published in 1885 Epicurus the Sage , a 2 issue, limited series, graphic novel, published 1989 1991 Music Epicure band , an Australian rock band Epicurean band , an American melodic death metal band Disambig ...   more details



  1. The Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature

    Italic title force true The Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature is a book written by the German philosopher Karl Marx as his university thesis. Completed in 1841, it was on the basis of this work that he earned his Ph.D. ref Whe00 Wheen 2000 . p. 32. ref References Footnotes Reflist colwidth 30em Bibliography refbegin cite book title Karl Marx last aut Francis Wheen Wheen, Francis year 1999 publisher Fourth Estate location London isbn 9781857026375 nopp ref Whe99 refend Extxernal Links http www.marxists.org archive marx works 1841 dr theses ch02.htm The text at the Marxists Internet Archive Category Epicureanism Category Books by Karl Marx DEFAULTSORT Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature, The Category 1841 books philosophy book stub fa fr Diff rence de la philosophie de la nature chez D mocrite et picure fi Demokritoksen ja Epikuroksen luonnonfilosofian ero ...   more details



  1. Zeno of Sidon

    reflist Epicureanism Greek mathematics Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Zeno Of Sidon ...   more details



  1. Prolepsis

    wiktionary Prolepsis may refer to Flashforward , in storytelling, an interjected scene that takes the narrative forward Prolepsis album Prolepsis album , 1975 work by Arrogance Procatalepsis , or prebuttal, a figure of speech in which the speaker raises an objection to their own argument and then immediately answers it. Cataphora , linguistics term to describe an expression that co refers with a later expression in the discourse D j vu , the experience of feeling sure that one has already witnessed or experienced a current situation Foreshadowing , literary technique to give clues to allow a reader to predict what will happen Prolepsis, or preconceptions, one of the three criteria of truth in Epicureanism The experience of having the anticipation of something not yet come to pass to impact the present moment, such as experiencing the reality of a future event in the present. This is the mirror image of anamnesis. An example would be the experience of a burning taste in your mouth when you think about tasting a lemon, or the euphoric experience of anticipation of being with God when you sing the powerful words of Amazing Grace about being in Heaven for ten thousand years, which has not yet come to pass. See also Proslepsis , figures of speech Proleptic disambiguation Disambig Category Rhetoric Category Figures of speech de Prolepse pt Prolepse ...   more details



  1. Basilides the Epicurean

    Basilides or Basileides, lang el c. 250 c. 175 BCE ref Tiziano Dorandi, Chapter 2 Chronology , in Algra et al. 1999 The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy , page 52. Cambridge. ref was an Epicurean philosopher, who succeeded Dionysius of Lamptrai ref Diogenes La rtius, The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers , x. 25 ref as the head of the Epicurean school at Athens c. 205 BC . It is not certain who succeeded Basilides Apollodorus the Epicurean Apollodorus is the next Epicurean leader we can be certain about, but there may have been at least one intermediate leader, and the name Thespis Epicurean Thespis has been suggested. ref Tiziano Dorandi, Chapter 2 Chronology , in Algra et al. 1999 The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy , page 45. Cambridge. ref Notes Reflist Epicureanism DEFAULTSORT Basilides The Epicurean Category 2nd century BC Greek people Category 2nd century BC philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category Hellenistic era philosophers in Athens fr Basilide picurien it Basilide epicureo pt Basilides, o Epicurista fi Basileides Tyroslainen ...   more details



  1. Apollodorus the Epicurean

    Apollodorus 2nd century BCE was an Epicurean philosopher, and head of the Epicurean school in Athens . He was according to Diogenes La rtius surnamed Tyrant of the Garden lang el from his exercising a kind of tyranny or supremacy in the garden or school of Epicurus. ref name diogx26 Diogenes La rtius, x. 26 ref He was the teacher of Zeno of Sidon , ref name diogx26 who succeeded him as the head of the school, about 100 BC . He is said to have written upwards of 400 books, ref name diogx26 but they have all perished. Only two works are mentioned by title. One was called a Life of Epicurus . ref name diogx2 Diogenes La rtius, x. 2 ref He also wrote a Collection of Doctrines , in which he asserted that Epicurus had written a greater amount of original writing than the Stoicism Stoic Chrysippus , because although Chrysippus had written 700 books, they were filled with quotations from other authors. ref Diogenes La rtius, vii. 180 ref Notes reflist SmithDGRBM Epicureanism Category 2nd century BC Greek people Category 2nd century BC philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category Hellenistic era philosophers in Athens Category Roman era philosophers in Athens br Apollodoros an Epikurad ca Apol lodor Epicur el es Apolodoro epic reo fr Apollodore l picurien pt Apolodoro, o Epicurista ru fi Apollodoros Puutarhantyranni sv Apollodorus ...   more details



  1. Siro the Epicurean

    Siro also Syro , Siron , or Syron floruit fl. c. 50 BC was an Epicurean philosopher who lived in Naples . He was a teacher of Virgil , ref Donatus, Vita Vergilii , 79. ref and taught at his school in Naples . There are two poems attributed to Virgil in the Appendix Vergiliana , ref Virgil, Catalepton , 5 Catalepton , 8. ref which mention Siro, and where the author speaks of seeking peace in the company of Siro blockquote I am setting sail for the havens of the blest to seek the wise sayings of great Siro, and will redeem my life from all care. ref Virgil, Catalepton , 5. ref blockquote Cicero also mentions Siro several times and speaks of Siro along with Philodemus as being excellent citizens and most learned men. ref Cicero, de Finibus , ii. 35 ref The 5th century commentator Maurus Servius Honoratus Servius claimed that Siro was commemorated in Virgil s sixth Bucolics Eclogue as the character Silenus . ref Servius on Eclogue 6.1 ref Notes Reflist AncientRome bio stub Philosopher stub Epicureanism Category 1st century BC philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category Philosophers of Roman Italy bg la Siro sk Sir n fi Siron ...   more details



  1. Themista of Lampsacus

    Themista of Lampsacus , the wife of Leonteus of Lampsacus Leonteus , was a student of Epicurus , early in the 3rd century BCE. ref Diogenes Laertius, x. 25, 26 ref Epicurus school was unusual in the 3rd century, in that it allowed women to attend, and we also hear of Leontion attending Epicurus school around the same time. Cicero ridicules Epicurus for writing countless volumes in praise of Themista, instead of more worthy men such as Miltiades the Elder Miltiades , Themistocles or Epaminondas . ref Cicero, De Finibus , 2. 21. 68 ref Themista and Leonteus named their son Epicurus. ref Diogenes Laertius, x. 26 ref Notes reflist References Diogenes Laertius, 10. 5, 25, 26 Lactantius, Divine Institutes , 3. 25. 15 Clement of Alexandria, Stromata , 4. 121. 4 Cicero, In Pisonem , 26. 63 De Finibus , 2. 21. 68 Epicureanism Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Themista Of Lampsacus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Themista Of Lampsacus Category Ancient Greek women philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category People from Lampsacus Category 3rd century BC Greek people Category 3rd century BC philosophers Category Year of birth unknown Category 3rd century BC deaths Category Article Feedback 5 fr Th mista it Temista di Lampsaco la Themista Lampsacena pt Temista de L mpsaco fi Themista Lampsakoslainen ...   more details



  1. Leonteus of Lampsacus

    Leonteus or Leontius of Lampsacus , was a pupil of Epicurus early in the 3rd century BCE. He was the husband of Themista of Lampsacus Themista , who also attended Epicurus school. ref name diog1 Diogenes Laertius, x. ref Such was the esteem in which they held Epicurus that they named their son after him. ref name diog1 Leonteus is described by Strabo , as one of the ablest men in the city of Lampsacus, along with Idomeneus of Lampsacus Idomeneus . ref Strabo, 13.1.19. ref Plutarch describes a letter, written by Leonteus, in which Leonteus describes how Democritus was honoured by Epicurus for having anticipated him in getting hold of correct knowledge, and how Epicurus originally proclaimed himself a Democritean. ref Plutarch, Against Colotes 3, 1108e f. ref Notes reflist Epicureanism Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Leonteus Of Lampsacus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Leonteus Of Lampsacus Category 4th century BC births Category 3rd century BC deaths Category 3rd century BC Greek people Category 3rd century BC philosophers Category Epicurean philosophers Category People from Lampsacus AncientGreece bio stub fr L ont e de Lampsaque it Leonteo di Lampsaco la Leonteus Lampsacenus fi Leonteus Lampsakoslainen ...   more details




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