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Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 88 — On Liberal and Vocational Studies (§5)

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It may be, perhaps, that they make you believe that Homer was a philosopher, although they disprove this by the very arguments through which they seek to prove it. For sometimes they make of him a Stoic, who approves nothing but virtue, avoids pleasures, and refuses to relinquish honour even at the price of immortality; sometimes they make him an Epicurean, praising the condition of a state in repose, which passes its days in feasting and song; sometimes a Peripatetic, classifying goodness in three ways; sometimes an Academic, holding that all things are uncertain.
Seneca·Letter 88 — On Liberal and Vocational Studies (§5)·trans. Gummere
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