fbpx
Wikipedia

Panaetius

Panaetius (/pəˈnʃiəs/; Greek: Παναίτιος, translit. Panaítios; c. 185c. 110/109 BC)[1] of Rhodes was an ancient Greek Stoic philosopher.[2] He was a pupil of Diogenes of Babylon and Antipater of Tarsus in Athens, before moving to Rome where he did much to introduce Stoic doctrines to the city, thanks to the patronage of Scipio Aemilianus. After the death of Scipio in 129 BC, he returned to the Stoic school in Athens, and was its last undisputed scholarch. With Panaetius, Stoicism became much more eclectic. His most famous work was his On Duties, the principal source used by Cicero in his own work of the same name.

Panaetius
Panaetius, depicted as a medieval scholar in the Nuremberg Chronicle
Born185/180 BC
Died110/109 BC
EraAncient philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolStoicism
Main interests
Ethics

Life edit

Panaetius, son of Nicagoras, was born around 185–180 BC,[1] into an old and eminent Rhodian family.[3] He is said to have been a pupil of the linguist Crates of Mallus,[4] who taught in Pergamum, and moved to Athens where he attended the lectures of Critolaus and Carneades, but attached himself principally to the Stoic Diogenes of Babylon and his disciple Antipater of Tarsus.[5] Although it is often thought that he was chosen by the people of Lindos, on Rhodes, to be the priest of Poseidon Hippios, this was actually an honour bestowed upon his grandfather, who was also called Panaetius, son of Nicagoras[6][7]

Probably through Gaius Laelius, who had attended the lectures of Diogenes and then of Panaetius,[8] he was introduced to Scipio Aemilianus and, like Polybius before him,[9] gained his friendship.[10] Both Panaetius and Polybius accompanied him on the Roman embassy that Scipio headed to the principal monarchs and polities of the Hellenistic east in 139–138 BC.[11] Along with Polybius, he became a member of the Scipionic Circle.

He returned with Scipio to Rome, where he did much to introduce Stoic doctrines and Greek philosophy. He had a number of distinguished Romans as pupils, amongst them Q. Scaevola the augur and Q. Aelius Tubero the Stoic. After the death of Scipio in spring 129 BC, he resided by turns in Athens and Rome, but chiefly in Athens, where he succeeded Antipater of Tarsus as head of the Stoic school.[12] The right of citizenship was offered him by the Athenians, but he refused it. His chief pupil in philosophy was Posidonius. He died in Athens[13] sometime in 110/09 BC,[1] the approximate year in which L. Crassus the orator found there no longer Panaetius himself, but his disciple Mnesarchus.[14]

Philosophy edit

With Panaetius began the new eclectic shaping of Stoic theory; so that even among the Neoplatonists he passed for a Platonist.[15] For this reason also he assigned the first place in philosophy to Physics, not to Logic,[16] and appears not to have undertaken any original treatment of the latter. In Physics he gave up the Stoic doctrine of the conflagration of the universe;[17] tried to simplify the division of the faculties of the soul;[18] and doubted the reality of divination.[19] In Ethics he recognised only a two-fold division of virtue, the theoretical and the practical, in contrast to the dianoetic and the ethical of Aristotle.[16][20]

Panaetius attempted to bring the ultimate goal of life closer to natural impulses,[21] and to show by similes the inseparability of the virtues.[22] Possibly as an answer to a similar criticism of stoicism given by Carneades, he stated virtue alone was not enough if there is no adequate living and health.[23] He argued that the recognition of the moral, as something to be striven after for its own sake, was a fundamental idea in the speeches of Demosthenes.[24] He rejected the doctrine of apatheia,[25] and instead affirmed that certain pleasurable sensations could be regarded as in accordance with nature.[26] He also insisted that moral definitions should be laid down in such a way that they might be applied by the person who had not yet attained to wisdom.[27]

Writings edit

On Duties edit

The principal work of Panaetius was, without doubt, his treatise On Duties (Greek: Περί του Καθήκοντος 'Peri tou Kathēkontos' (Classical) or 'Peri tou Kathikodos' (Modern)) composed in three books. In this he proposed to investigate, first, what was moral or immoral; then, what was useful or not useful; and lastly, how the apparent conflict between the moral and the useful was to be decided; for, as a Stoic, he could only regard this conflict as apparent not real. The third investigation he had expressly promised at the end of the third book, but had not carried out;[28] and his disciple Posidonius seems to have only timidly and imperfectly supplied what was needed.[29]

Cicero wrote his own work On Duties in deliberate imitation of Panaetius,[30] and stated that in the third section of the subject that he did not follow Posidonius, but instead that he had completed independently and without assistance what Panaetius had left untouched.[31] To judge from the insignificant character of the deviations, to which Cicero himself calls attention, as for example, the attempt to define moral obligation,[32] the completion of the imperfect division into three parts,[33] the rejection of unnecessary discussions,[34] small supplementary additions,[35] in the first two books Cicero has borrowed the scientific contents of his work from Panaetius, without any essential alterations. Cicero seems to have been induced to follow Panaetius, passing by earlier attempts of the Stoics to investigate the philosophy of morals, not merely by the superiority of his work in other respects, but especially by the effort that prevailed throughout it, laying aside abstract investigations and paradoxical definitions, to demonstrate the philosophy of morals in its application to life.[36]

Generally speaking, Panaetius, following Aristotle, Xenocrates, Theophrastus, Dicaearchus, and especially Plato, had softened down the severity of the earlier Stoics, and, without giving up their fundamental definitions, had modified them so as to be capable of being applied to the conduct of life, and clothed them in the garb of eloquence.[37]

That Cicero has not reproduced the entire contents of the three books of Panaetius, we see from a fragment, which is not found in Cicero, preserved by Aulus Gellius,[38] and which acquaints us with Panaetius's treatment of his subject in its rhetorical aspects.

Other works edit

Panaetius also wrote treatises concerning On Cheerfulness;[39] on the Magistrates;[40] On Providence;[41] On Divination;[19] a political treatise used by Cicero in his De Republica; and a letter to Quintus Aelius Tubero.[42] His work On Philosophical Schools[43] appears to have been rich in facts and critical remarks, and the notices which we have about Socrates, and on the books of Plato and others of the Socratic school, given on the authority of Panaetius, were probably taken from that work.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Dorandi 1999, pp. 41–42.
  2. ^ "Panaetius (c. 185–c. 110 BC) – Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy". www.rep.routledge.com. Retrieved 2021-07-24.
  3. ^ Suda, Panaitios; Strabo, xiv 2.13 – 655 ed. Casaubon, includes Panaetius' ancestors (hoi progonoi) among the most memorable Rhodian commanders and athletes
  4. ^ Strabo, xiv 5.16 – 676 ed. Casaubon
  5. ^ Suda Panaitios; Cicero, de Divinatione, i. 3
  6. ^ P. E. Easterling, Bernard Knox, (1989), The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Part 3, p. 196. Cambridge University Press
  7. ^ Erskine, A (1990). The Hellenistic Stoa: political thought and action. Bristol: Bristol Classical Press. p. 211.
  8. ^ Cicero, de Finibus, ii. 8
  9. ^ Suda, Panaitios, comp. Polybios
  10. ^ Cicero, de Finibus, iv. 9, de Officiis, i. 26, de Amicitia, 27, comp. pro Murena, 31, Velleius i.13.3
  11. ^ Cicero de Re Publica vi. 11, A. E. Astin, Classical Philology 54 (1959), 221–27, and Scipio Aemilianus (Ox., 1967), 127, 138, 177
  12. ^ Cicero, de Divinatione, i. 3
  13. ^ Suda, Panaitios
  14. ^ Cicero, de Oratore, i. 11
  15. ^ Proclus, in Plat. Tim.
  16. ^ a b Laërtius 1925b, § 41
  17. ^ Cicero, De Natura Deorum, ii. 46, comp. 142; Stobaeus, Ecl. Phys. i.
  18. ^ Nemes. de Nat. Hom. c. 15; Tertull. de Anima, c. 14
  19. ^ a b Cicero, de Divinatione, i. 3, ii. 42, 47, Academica, ii. 33, comp. Epiphanius, adv. Haeres. ii. 9
  20. ^ Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, VI.
  21. ^ Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, ii.
  22. ^ Stobaeus, Ecl. Eth. ii.
  23. ^ Hubbard, Thomas K. (2013). A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1118610688.
  24. ^ Plutarch, Demosthenes
  25. ^ Aulus Gellius, xii. 5
  26. ^ Sextus Empiricus, adv. Math. xi. 73
  27. ^ Seneca, Epistles, 116. 5
  28. ^ Cicero, ad Atticum, xvi. 11, de Officiis, iii. 2, 3, comp. i. 3, iii. 7, ii. 25
  29. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, iii. 2
  30. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, ii. 17, iii. 2, i. 2, ad Atticum, xvi. 11
  31. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, iii. 7
  32. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, i. 2
  33. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, i. 3, comp. ii. 25
  34. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, ii. 5
  35. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, ii. 24, 25
  36. ^ Cicero, de Officiis, ii. 10
  37. ^ Cicero, de Finibus, iv. 28, Tusculanae Quaestiones, i. 32, de Legibus, iii. 6; comp. Plutarch, de Stoic. Repugnant.
  38. ^ Aulus Gellius, xiii. 27
  39. ^ Peri Euthumias: Laërtius 1925c, § 20, which Plutarch probably had before him in his composition of the same name.
  40. ^ Cicero, de Legibus, iii. 5, 6
  41. ^ Cicero, ad Atticum, xiii. 8
  42. ^ Cicero, De Finibus, iv. 9, 23
  43. ^ Laërtius 1925, § 87.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Gill, Christopher. 1994. "Peace of Mind and Being Yourself: Panaetius to Plutarch." In Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt. Vol. II.36.7. Edited by Wolfgang Haase and Hildegard Temporini, 4599–4640. Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter. [ISBN missing]
  • Dyck, Andrew R. 1979. "The Plan of Panaetius' Περι τοῦ καθήκοντος." American Journal of Philology C: 408–416.
  • Holiday, Ryan; Hanselman, Stephen (2020). "Panaetius the Connector". Lives of the Stoics. New York: Portfolio/Penguin. pp. 74–86. ISBN 978-0525541875.
  • Morford, Mark P. O. 1999. "The Dual Citizenship of the Roman Stoics." In Veritatis Amicitiaeque Causa: Essays in Honor of Anna Lydia Motto and John R. Clark. Edited by Anna Lydia Motto, 147–164. Wauconda (Ill.) : Bolchazy-Carducci. [ISBN missing]
  • Roskam, Geert. 2005. "The Doctrine of Moral Progress in Later Stoic Thinking.” On the Path to Virtue: The Stoic Doctrine of Moral Progress and its Reception in (Middle-) Platonism. Ancient and Medieval Philosophy 33. Leuven, Belgium: Leuven Univ. Press. [ISBN missing]
  • Sandbach, Francis Henry. 1975. The Stoics. Ancient Culture and Society. London: Chatto & Windus. [ISBN missing]
  • Schofield, Malcolm. 2012. "The Fourth Virtue." Cicero's Practical Philosophy. Edited by Water Nicgorski, 43–57. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. [ISBN missing]
  • Stone, A. M. 2008. "Greek Ethics and Roman Statesmen: De Officiis and the Philippics." In Cicero’s Philippics: History, rhetoric and ideology. Edited by Tom Stevenson and Marcus Wilson, 214–239. Prudentia 37–38. Auckland, New Zealand: Polygraphia. [ISBN missing]
  • Straaten, M. van. 1976. "Notes on Panaetius' Theory of the Constitution of Man." In Images of Man in Ancient and Medieval Thought: Studia Gerardo Verbeke ab amicis et collegis dicata. Edited by Gérard Verbeke & Fernand Bossier. Leuven: Leuven University Press. [ISBN missing]
  • Tieleman, Teun L. 2007. "Panaetius’ Place in the History of Stoicism, with Special Reference to his Moral Psychology." In Pyrrhonists, Patricians, Platonizers: Hellenistic Philosophy in the Period 155–86 BC; Tenth Symposium Hellenisticum. Edited by Anna Maria Ioppolo and David N. Sedley, 104–142. Naples: Bibliopolis. [ISBN missing]
  • Walbank, Frank William. 1965. "Political Morality and the Friends of Scipio." Journal of Roman Studies 55.1–2: 1–16.
  • Wiemer, Hans-Ulrich. 2018. "A Stoic Ethic for Roman Aristocrats? Panaitios' Doctrine of Behavior, its Context and its Adressees". In The Polis in the Hellenistic World. Edited by Henning Börm and Nino Luraghi, 229–258. Stuttgart: Steiner. [ISBN missing]
Preceded by Leader of the Stoic school
129–110 BC
Last undisputed head

panaetius, greek, Παναίτιος, translit, panaítios, rhodes, ancient, greek, stoic, philosopher, pupil, diogenes, babylon, antipater, tarsus, athens, before, moving, rome, where, much, introduce, stoic, doctrines, city, thanks, patronage, scipio, aemilianus, afte. Panaetius p e ˈ n iː ʃ i e s Greek Panaitios translit Panaitios c 185 c 110 109 BC 1 of Rhodes was an ancient Greek Stoic philosopher 2 He was a pupil of Diogenes of Babylon and Antipater of Tarsus in Athens before moving to Rome where he did much to introduce Stoic doctrines to the city thanks to the patronage of Scipio Aemilianus After the death of Scipio in 129 BC he returned to the Stoic school in Athens and was its last undisputed scholarch With Panaetius Stoicism became much more eclectic His most famous work was his On Duties the principal source used by Cicero in his own work of the same name PanaetiusPanaetius depicted as a medieval scholar in the Nuremberg ChronicleBorn185 180 BCRhodesDied110 109 BCAthensEraAncient philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolStoicismMain interestsEthics Contents 1 Life 2 Philosophy 3 Writings 3 1 On Duties 3 2 Other works 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further readingLife editPanaetius son of Nicagoras was born around 185 180 BC 1 into an old and eminent Rhodian family 3 He is said to have been a pupil of the linguist Crates of Mallus 4 who taught in Pergamum and moved to Athens where he attended the lectures of Critolaus and Carneades but attached himself principally to the Stoic Diogenes of Babylon and his disciple Antipater of Tarsus 5 Although it is often thought that he was chosen by the people of Lindos on Rhodes to be the priest of Poseidon Hippios this was actually an honour bestowed upon his grandfather who was also called Panaetius son of Nicagoras 6 7 Probably through Gaius Laelius who had attended the lectures of Diogenes and then of Panaetius 8 he was introduced to Scipio Aemilianus and like Polybius before him 9 gained his friendship 10 Both Panaetius and Polybius accompanied him on the Roman embassy that Scipio headed to the principal monarchs and polities of the Hellenistic east in 139 138 BC 11 Along with Polybius he became a member of the Scipionic Circle He returned with Scipio to Rome where he did much to introduce Stoic doctrines and Greek philosophy He had a number of distinguished Romans as pupils amongst them Q Scaevola the augur and Q Aelius Tubero the Stoic After the death of Scipio in spring 129 BC he resided by turns in Athens and Rome but chiefly in Athens where he succeeded Antipater of Tarsus as head of the Stoic school 12 The right of citizenship was offered him by the Athenians but he refused it His chief pupil in philosophy was Posidonius He died in Athens 13 sometime in 110 09 BC 1 the approximate year in which L Crassus the orator found there no longer Panaetius himself but his disciple Mnesarchus 14 Philosophy editWith Panaetius began the new eclectic shaping of Stoic theory so that even among the Neoplatonists he passed for a Platonist 15 For this reason also he assigned the first place in philosophy to Physics not to Logic 16 and appears not to have undertaken any original treatment of the latter In Physics he gave up the Stoic doctrine of the conflagration of the universe 17 tried to simplify the division of the faculties of the soul 18 and doubted the reality of divination 19 In Ethics he recognised only a two fold division of virtue the theoretical and the practical in contrast to the dianoetic and the ethical of Aristotle 16 20 Panaetius attempted to bring the ultimate goal of life closer to natural impulses 21 and to show by similes the inseparability of the virtues 22 Possibly as an answer to a similar criticism of stoicism given by Carneades he stated virtue alone was not enough if there is no adequate living and health 23 He argued that the recognition of the moral as something to be striven after for its own sake was a fundamental idea in the speeches of Demosthenes 24 He rejected the doctrine of apatheia 25 and instead affirmed that certain pleasurable sensations could be regarded as in accordance with nature 26 He also insisted that moral definitions should be laid down in such a way that they might be applied by the person who had not yet attained to wisdom 27 Writings editOn Duties edit The principal work of Panaetius was without doubt his treatise On Duties Greek Peri toy Ka8hkontos Peri tou Kathekontos Classical or Peri tou Kathikodos Modern composed in three books In this he proposed to investigate first what was moral or immoral then what was useful or not useful and lastly how the apparent conflict between the moral and the useful was to be decided for as a Stoic he could only regard this conflict as apparent not real The third investigation he had expressly promised at the end of the third book but had not carried out 28 and his disciple Posidonius seems to have only timidly and imperfectly supplied what was needed 29 Cicero wrote his own work On Duties in deliberate imitation of Panaetius 30 and stated that in the third section of the subject that he did not follow Posidonius but instead that he had completed independently and without assistance what Panaetius had left untouched 31 To judge from the insignificant character of the deviations to which Cicero himself calls attention as for example the attempt to define moral obligation 32 the completion of the imperfect division into three parts 33 the rejection of unnecessary discussions 34 small supplementary additions 35 in the first two books Cicero has borrowed the scientific contents of his work from Panaetius without any essential alterations Cicero seems to have been induced to follow Panaetius passing by earlier attempts of the Stoics to investigate the philosophy of morals not merely by the superiority of his work in other respects but especially by the effort that prevailed throughout it laying aside abstract investigations and paradoxical definitions to demonstrate the philosophy of morals in its application to life 36 Generally speaking Panaetius following Aristotle Xenocrates Theophrastus Dicaearchus and especially Plato had softened down the severity of the earlier Stoics and without giving up their fundamental definitions had modified them so as to be capable of being applied to the conduct of life and clothed them in the garb of eloquence 37 That Cicero has not reproduced the entire contents of the three books of Panaetius we see from a fragment which is not found in Cicero preserved by Aulus Gellius 38 and which acquaints us with Panaetius s treatment of his subject in its rhetorical aspects Other works edit Panaetius also wrote treatises concerning On Cheerfulness 39 on the Magistrates 40 On Providence 41 On Divination 19 a political treatise used by Cicero in his De Republica and a letter to Quintus Aelius Tubero 42 His work On Philosophical Schools 43 appears to have been rich in facts and critical remarks and the notices which we have about Socrates and on the books of Plato and others of the Socratic school given on the authority of Panaetius were probably taken from that work Notes edit a b c Dorandi 1999 pp 41 42 Panaetius c 185 c 110 BC Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy www rep routledge com Retrieved 2021 07 24 Suda Panaitios Strabo xiv 2 13 655 ed Casaubon includes Panaetius ancestors hoi progonoi among the most memorable Rhodian commanders and athletes Strabo xiv 5 16 676 ed Casaubon Suda Panaitios Cicero de Divinatione i 3 P E Easterling Bernard Knox 1989 The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Part 3 p 196 Cambridge University Press Erskine A 1990 The Hellenistic Stoa political thought and action Bristol Bristol Classical Press p 211 Cicero de Finibus ii 8 Suda Panaitios comp Polybios Cicero de Finibus iv 9 de Officiis i 26 de Amicitia 27 comp pro Murena 31 Velleius i 13 3 Cicero de Re Publica vi 11 A E Astin Classical Philology 54 1959 221 27 and Scipio Aemilianus Ox 1967 127 138 177 Cicero de Divinatione i 3 Suda Panaitios Cicero de Oratore i 11 Proclus in Plat Tim a b Laertius 1925b 41 Cicero De Natura Deorum ii 46 comp 142 Stobaeus Ecl Phys i Nemes de Nat Hom c 15 Tertull de Anima c 14 a b Cicero de Divinatione i 3 ii 42 47 Academica ii 33 comp Epiphanius adv Haeres ii 9 Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics VI Clement of Alexandria Stromata ii Stobaeus Ecl Eth ii Hubbard Thomas K 2013 A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1118610688 Plutarch Demosthenes Aulus Gellius xii 5 Sextus Empiricus adv Math xi 73 Seneca Epistles 116 5 Cicero ad Atticum xvi 11 de Officiis iii 2 3 comp i 3 iii 7 ii 25 Cicero de Officiis iii 2 Cicero de Officiis ii 17 iii 2 i 2 ad Atticum xvi 11 Cicero de Officiis iii 7 Cicero de Officiis i 2 Cicero de Officiis i 3 comp ii 25 Cicero de Officiis ii 5 Cicero de Officiis ii 24 25 Cicero de Officiis ii 10 Cicero de Finibus iv 28 Tusculanae Quaestiones i 32 de Legibus iii 6 comp Plutarch de Stoic Repugnant Aulus Gellius xiii 27 Peri Euthumias Laertius 1925c 20 which Plutarch probably had before him in his composition of the same name Cicero de Legibus iii 5 6 Cicero ad Atticum xiii 8 Cicero De Finibus iv 9 23 Laertius 1925 87 References editDorandi Tiziano 1999 Chapter 2 Chronology In Algra Keimpe et al eds The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 41 42 ISBN 978 0521250283 nbsp Laertius Diogenes 1925 Socrates with predecessors and followers Aristippus Lives of the Eminent Philosophers Vol 1 2 Translated by Hicks Robert Drew Two volume ed Loeb Classical Library nbsp Laertius Diogenes 1925b The Stoics Zeno Lives of the Eminent Philosophers Vol 2 7 Translated by Hicks Robert Drew Two volume ed Loeb Classical Library nbsp Laertius Diogenes 1925c Others Xenophanes Lives of the Eminent Philosophers Vol 2 9 Translated by Hicks Robert Drew Two volume ed Loeb Classical Library Aristotle Book VI Nicomachean Ethics nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1870 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Further reading editLibrary resources about Panaetius Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Panaetius Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Panaetius Gill Christopher 1994 Peace of Mind and Being Yourself Panaetius to Plutarch In Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt Vol II 36 7 Edited by Wolfgang Haase and Hildegard Temporini 4599 4640 Berlin and New York Walter de Gruyter ISBN missing Dyck Andrew R 1979 The Plan of Panaetius Peri toῦ ka8hkontos American Journal of Philology C 408 416 Holiday Ryan Hanselman Stephen 2020 Panaetius the Connector Lives of the Stoics New York Portfolio Penguin pp 74 86 ISBN 978 0525541875 Morford Mark P O 1999 The Dual Citizenship of the Roman Stoics In Veritatis Amicitiaeque Causa Essays in Honor of Anna Lydia Motto and John R Clark Edited by Anna Lydia Motto 147 164 Wauconda Ill Bolchazy Carducci ISBN missing Roskam Geert 2005 The Doctrine of Moral Progress in Later Stoic Thinking On the Path to Virtue The Stoic Doctrine of Moral Progress and its Reception in Middle Platonism Ancient and Medieval Philosophy 33 Leuven Belgium Leuven Univ Press ISBN missing Sandbach Francis Henry 1975 The Stoics Ancient Culture and Society London Chatto amp Windus ISBN missing Schofield Malcolm 2012 The Fourth Virtue Cicero s Practical Philosophy Edited by Water Nicgorski 43 57 Notre Dame University of Notre Dame Press ISBN missing Stone A M 2008 Greek Ethics and Roman Statesmen De Officiis and the Philippics In Cicero s Philippics History rhetoric and ideology Edited by Tom Stevenson and Marcus Wilson 214 239 Prudentia 37 38 Auckland New Zealand Polygraphia ISBN missing Straaten M van 1976 Notes on Panaetius Theory of the Constitution of Man In Images of Man in Ancient and Medieval Thought Studia Gerardo Verbeke ab amicis et collegis dicata Edited by Gerard Verbeke amp Fernand Bossier Leuven Leuven University Press ISBN missing Tieleman Teun L 2007 Panaetius Place in the History of Stoicism with Special Reference to his Moral Psychology In Pyrrhonists Patricians Platonizers Hellenistic Philosophy in the Period 155 86 BC Tenth Symposium Hellenisticum Edited by Anna Maria Ioppolo and David N Sedley 104 142 Naples Bibliopolis ISBN missing Walbank Frank William 1965 Political Morality and the Friends of Scipio Journal of Roman Studies 55 1 2 1 16 Wiemer Hans Ulrich 2018 A Stoic Ethic for Roman Aristocrats Panaitios Doctrine of Behavior its Context and its Adressees In The Polis in the Hellenistic World Edited by Henning Borm and Nino Luraghi 229 258 Stuttgart Steiner ISBN missing Preceded byAntipater of Tarsus Leader of the Stoic school129 110 BC Last undisputed head Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panaetius amp oldid 1218380891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.