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6 results for "diogenes"
1. Seneca The Younger, Letters, 94.3, 94.48 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •diogenes of ptolemais Found in books: Motta and Petrucci (2022) 98
2. Plutarch, On Stoic Self-Contradictions, None (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •diogenes of ptolemais Found in books: Motta and Petrucci (2022) 98
3. Sextus, Against The Mathematicians, 7.20-7.21 (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •diogenes of ptolemais Found in books: Motta and Petrucci (2022) 98
4. Alcinous, Handbook of Platonism, 3.153.30 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •diogenes of ptolemais Found in books: Motta and Petrucci (2022) 98
5. Diogenes Laertius, Lives of The Philosophers, 7.40-7.41, 7.87-7.88 (3rd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •diogenes of ptolemais Found in books: Motta and Petrucci (2022) 98
7.40. Philosophy, they say, is like an animal, Logic corresponding to the bones and sinews, Ethics to the fleshy parts, Physics to the soul. Another simile they use is that of an egg: the shell is Logic, next comes the white, Ethics, and the yolk in the centre is Physics. Or, again, they liken Philosophy to a fertile field: Logic being the encircling fence, Ethics the crop, Physics the soil or the trees. Or, again, to a city strongly walled and governed by reason.No single part, some Stoics declare, is independent of any other part, but all blend together. Nor was it usual to teach them separately. Others, however, start their course with Logic, go on to Physics, and finish with Ethics; and among those who so do are Zeno in his treatise On Exposition, Chrysippus, Archedemus and Eudromus. 7.41. Diogenes of Ptolemas, it is true, begins with Ethics; but Apollodorus puts Ethics second, while Panaetius and Posidonius begin with Physics, as stated by Phanias, the pupil of Posidonius, in the first book of his Lectures of Posidonius. Cleanthes makes not three, but six parts, Dialectic, Rhetoric, Ethics, Politics, Physics, Theology. But others say that these are divisions not of philosophic exposition, but of philosophy itself: so, for instance, Zeno of Tarsus. Some divide the logical part of the system into the two sciences of rhetoric and dialectic; while some would add that which deals with definitions and another part concerning canons or criteria: some, however, dispense with the part about definitions. 7.87. This is why Zeno was the first (in his treatise On the Nature of Man) to designate as the end life in agreement with nature (or living agreeably to nature), which is the same as a virtuous life, virtue being the goal towards which nature guides us. So too Cleanthes in his treatise On Pleasure, as also Posidonius, and Hecato in his work On Ends. Again, living virtuously is equivalent to living in accordance with experience of the actual course of nature, as Chrysippus says in the first book of his De finibus; for our individual natures are parts of the nature of the whole universe. 7.88. And this is why the end may be defined as life in accordance with nature, or, in other words, in accordance with our own human nature as well as that of the universe, a life in which we refrain from every action forbidden by the law common to all things, that is to say, the right reason which pervades all things, and is identical with this Zeus, lord and ruler of all that is. And this very thing constitutes the virtue of the happy man and the smooth current of life, when all actions promote the harmony of the spirit dwelling in the individual man with the will of him who orders the universe. Diogenes then expressly declares the end to be to act with good reason in the selection of what is natural. Archedemus says the end is to live in the performance of all befitting actions.
6. Stoic School, Stoicor. Veter. Fragm., 2.42  Tagged with subjects: •diogenes of ptolemais Found in books: Motta and Petrucci (2022) 98