On the Nature of the Gods
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Buy Now for $22.99
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Narrated by:
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Saethon Williams
About this listen
This new, original translation of Cicero's On the Nature of the Gods is the first to appear in many years. Do the gods exist? Is there a divine order to the universe? And if there is, what is humanity’s role in this grand conception? Does a divine power care about human affairs? These are just a few of the profound questions discussed in Cicero’s philosophical masterpiece.
In dialogues that showcase the differing perspectives of the Stoic, Epicurean, and Academic schools, Cicero delves into a stunning variety of subjects, including human anatomy, theology, cosmology, astronomy, biology, and divination. The persistent themes of Cicero’s vision are his insistence on a moral basis for human conduct, the existence of free will and human agency, and his soaring faith in the unique role reserved for the human race in the universe’s destiny. It is no wonder that Voltaire called On the Nature of the Gods, along with Cicero’s Tusculan Disputations, “[the] two most beautiful works ever composed by human wisdom.”
Translator Quintus Curtius has returned to the original Latin text to produce a fresh, modern English edition that breathes new life into a long-neglected classic of Western thought. The text is extensively annotated, and formatted using modern dialogue conventions for ease of listening. Also included are an explanatory introduction, topical content list, and a comprehensive index. Cicero’s seminal work has much to tell us today, and with this translation has never been more accessible to the modern listener.
The philosophical life of the pre-Christian world was so rich and diverse.
It appears that Cicero was making a comedically veiled denunciation of theism, which leads the reader to avoid religious superstition and to embrace either skepticism or atheism.
The translation is modern, clear and accessible.
The narrator’s different voices for the characters are helpful. For example, Cotta the skeptical priest is given an elitist voice (which seems quite appropriate in view of the lines that Cicero puts in his mouth), whereas Balbus the Stoic is given an ethereal voice (which also seems appropriate) and Velleius the Epicurean is given a more “man of the streets” voice.
The book has lots of “tongue in cheek” humour, which is unexpectedly fun.
A wonderful book!
A fascinating ancient debate in a modern translation! Wonderful!
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