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1882

Une piété de la raison, philosophie et religion dans le stoïcisme impérial

Des Lettres à Lucilius de Sénèque aux Pensées de Marc-Aurèle

Abstract

How can the stoics reconcile the research of rational piety based on moral perfection with the legitimization of the ritualism and traditional representation of pagan gods? After studying the constant oscillation between the legitimization and condemnation of traditional rites in ancient stoicism, we demonstrate that the roman stoics, Seneca, Cornutus, Persius, Epictectus and Marcus Aurelius, address the same question, but with two essential specifics: adapting it to the political-religious context of Imperial Rome and paying particular attention to their readers as to the pedagogic strategist to grant their moral conversion.

References

/content/books/10.1484/M.PHR-EB.5.112497
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