Auteur: Treggiari, Susan
Titre: Ancestral Virtues and Vices: Cicero on Nature, Nurture and Presentation
Revue/Collection: in: Braund, D. & Gill, C. (Ed.), Myth, History and Culture in Republican Rome. Studies in Honour of T.P. Wiseman
Lieu èdition: Exeter
Éditeur: University of Exeter press
Annèe edition: 2003
Pages: 139-64
Mots-clès: Philosophie - Filosofia - Philosophy, Rhétorique - Retorica - Rhetorics
Comptes rendus:
Oeuvres:
Sigle auteur: Treggiari 2003
Titre: Ancestral Virtues and Vices: Cicero on Nature, Nurture and Presentation
Revue/Collection: in: Braund, D. & Gill, C. (Ed.), Myth, History and Culture in Republican Rome. Studies in Honour of T.P. Wiseman
Lieu èdition: Exeter
Éditeur: University of Exeter press
Annèe edition: 2003
Pages: 139-64
Mots-clès: Philosophie - Filosofia - Philosophy, Rhétorique - Retorica - Rhetorics
Comptes rendus:
Fox, Matthew, The Wiseman Effect, "Classical Review", NS 55, 2 (2005), 615-617.
Haeperen, Françoise van, "L’Antiquité Classique", 73 (2004), 535
Description: [APh] [Comment] By analyzing the ways in which Cicero deploys arguments about socio-political and moral ancestry (e.g., Inu. 1, 29; De orat. 1, 17; 1, 94; and 2, 68) we see that the Roman idea that virtues should run in families involves both a belief about how people develop, and a means of social or familial persuasion to induce action.Oeuvres:
Sigle auteur: Treggiari 2003