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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

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6 results for "friendship"
1. Sappho, Fragments, 47 (7th cent. BCE - 6th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •friendship, within erotic love Found in books: Graver (2007) 185
2. Sappho, Fragments, 47 (7th cent. BCE - 6th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •friendship, within erotic love Found in books: Graver (2007) 185
3. Plato, Symposium, None (5th cent. BCE - 4th cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •friendship, within erotic love Found in books: Graver (2007) 188
4. Athenaeus, The Learned Banquet, None (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •friendship, within erotic love Found in books: Graver (2007) 188
5. Diogenes Laertius, Lives of The Philosophers, 7.129-7.130, 7.173 (3rd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •friendship, within erotic love Found in books: Graver (2007) 185, 186, 187
7.129. Neither do they think that the divergence of opinion between philosophers is any reason for abandoning the study of philosophy, since at that rate we should have to give up life altogether: so Posidonius in his Exhortations. Chrysippus allows that the ordinary Greek education is serviceable.It is their doctrine that there can be no question of right as between man and the lower animals, because of their unlikeness. Thus Chrysippus in the first book of his treatise On Justice, and Posidonius in the first book of his De officio. Further, they say that the wise man will feel affection for the youths who by their countece show a natural endowment for virtue. So Zeno in his Republic, Chrysippus in book i. of his work On Modes of Life, and Apollodorus in his Ethics. 7.130. Their definition of love is an effort toward friendliness due to visible beauty appearing, its sole end being friendship, not bodily enjoyment. At all events, they allege that Thrasonides, although he had his mistress in his power, abstained from her because she hated him. By which it is shown, they think, that love depends upon regard, as Chrysippus says in his treatise of Love, and is not sent by the gods. And beauty they describe as the bloom or flower of virtue.of the three kinds of life, the contemplative, the practical, and the rational, they declare that we ought to choose the last, for that a rational being is expressly produced by nature for contemplation and for action. They tell us that the wise man will for reasonable cause make his own exit from life, on his country's behalf or for the sake of his friends, or if he suffer intolerable pain, mutilation, or incurable disease. 7.173. He was present in the theatre when the poet Sositheus uttered the verse –Driven by Cleanthes' folly like dumb herds,and he remained unmoved in the same attitude. At which the audience were so astonished that they applauded him and drove Sositheus off the stage. Afterwards when the poet apologized for the insult, he accepted the apology, saying that, when Dionysus and Heracles were ridiculed by the poets without getting angry, it would be absurd for him to be annoyed at casual abuse. He used to say that the Peripatetics were in the same case as lyres which, although they give forth sweet sounds, never hear themselves. It is said that when he laid it down as Zeno's opinion that a man's character could be known from his looks, certain witty young men brought before him a rake with hands horny from toil in the country and requested him to state what the man's character was. Cleanthes was perplexed and ordered the man to go away; but when, as he was making off, he sneezed, I have it, cried Cleanthes, he is effeminate.
6. Stobaeus, Eclogues, None  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Graver (2007) 185, 186, 187