Marcus Aurelius was born in Rome in 121 AD and would become its
Emperor from 161 to 180. Considered by Machiavelli as the last of the
good Emperors, Marcus Aurelius would become one of the most important
of the Stoic philosophers. Educated in oratory, he would turn aside
from rhetoric to the study of the Stoic philosophy, of which he was
the last distinguished representative. The "Meditations," which he
wrote in Greek, are among the most noteworthy expressions of this
system, and exhibit it favorably on its practical side. The work is a
series of twelve books that he intended for his own guidance and
self-improvement, which picture with faithfulness the mind and
character of this noblest of the Emperors. Simple in style and sincere
in tone, they record for all time the height reached by pagan
aspiration in its effort to solve the problem of conduct. In Marcus
Aurelius’s practice of this philosophy along with his teaching he
showed that “even in a palace life may be led well.” This edition
follows the highly-regarded translation of George Long and includes an
introduction by Alice Zimmern.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781420951110
Publisert
2016
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Digireads.com Publishing / Neeland Media LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter