Auteur: Russell, Daniel Charles
Titre: Virtue as « likeness to God » in Plato and Seneca
Revue/Collection: "Journal of the History of Philosophy", 42, 3
Lieu èdition: Baltimore
Éditeur: Johns Hopkins University Press
Annèe edition: 2004
Pages: 241-260
Mots-clès: Philosophie - Filosofia - Philosophy, Sources - Fonti - Sources
Description: [APh] [Comment] In many of his dialogues, Plato claims that our highest good is to be like God. Although this claim seems implausible, we can make greater sense of it if we interpret it through the lens of the Stoic version of likeness to God as found in texts such as Cicero's « De finibus » and Seneca's « Letters to Lucilius ».
Oeuvres:
Liens: https://muse.jhu.edu/article/170786/pdf
Sigle auteur: Russel 2004
Titre: Virtue as « likeness to God » in Plato and Seneca
Revue/Collection: "Journal of the History of Philosophy", 42, 3
Lieu èdition: Baltimore
Éditeur: Johns Hopkins University Press
Annèe edition: 2004
Pages: 241-260
Mots-clès: Philosophie - Filosofia - Philosophy, Sources - Fonti - Sources
Description: [APh] [Comment] In many of his dialogues, Plato claims that our highest good is to be like God. Although this claim seems implausible, we can make greater sense of it if we interpret it through the lens of the Stoic version of likeness to God as found in texts such as Cicero's « De finibus » and Seneca's « Letters to Lucilius ».
Oeuvres:
Liens: https://muse.jhu.edu/article/170786/pdf
Sigle auteur: Russel 2004