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Volumn 65, Issue 4, 2003, Pages 375-393

On the intention of Cicero's de officiis

(1)  Kries, Douglas a  

a NONE

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EID: 43249189750     PISSN: 00346705     EISSN: 17486858     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S0034670500039085     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (18)

References (39)
  • 1
    • 77954053499 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • In his impressive new commentary on Ambrose's book, Davidson argues persuasively that the title of the work was originally not De officiis ministrorum, as it has come to be known in recent centuries, but simply De officiis. (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
    • In his impressive new commentary on Ambrose's book, Davidson argues persuasively that the title of the work was originally not De officiis ministrorum, as it has come to be known in recent centuries, but simply De officiis. See I. J. Davidson, Ambrose De officiis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), 1: 1-2.
    • (2001) Ambrose de Officiis , vol.1 , pp. 1-2
    • Davidson, I.J.1
  • 2
    • 77954037489 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The works cited in notes 5 and 6 below each contain more extensive treatments of the influence of Cicero's De officiis
    • The works cited in notes 5 and 6 below each contain more extensive treatments of the influence of Cicero's De officiis.
  • 3
    • 77954055970 scopus 로고
    • All Latin quotations from De officiis will be taken from this edition (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
    • M. Winterbottom, De offlciis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994). All Latin quotations from De officiis will be taken from this edition.
    • (1994) De Offlciis
    • Winterbottom, M.1
  • 5
    • 17544364458 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (Oxford: Oxford University Press), All English quotations from De officiis used in this essay will be taken from Walsh's translation
    • P. G. Walsh, On Obligations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000). All English quotations from De officiis used in this essay will be taken from Walsh's translation.
    • (2000) On Obligations
    • Walsh, P.G.1
  • 12
    • 77954064009 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • emphasizes De officiis as an act of parenting by Cicero, he does note that the work was also addressed to a larger audience
    • Although Dyck, Commentary on Cicero, emphasizes De officiis as an act of parenting by Cicero, he does note (p. 16) that the work was also addressed to a larger audience.
    • Commentary on Cicero , pp. 16
    • Dyck, A.1
  • 13
    • 77954075067 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Letters to Atticus, trans. D. R. Shackleton Bailey (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), 15.13a.2, #417. Cicero also connects the theme of duty to the theme of father and son early on in De officiis: "I intend to begin with the subject most suited to both your years and my paternal authority" (1.4)
    • Letters to Atticus, trans. D. R. Shackleton Bailey (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), 15.13a.2, #417. Cicero also connects the theme of duty to the theme of father and son early on in De officiis: "I intend to begin with the subject most suited to both your years and my paternal authority" (1.4)
  • 14
    • 77954068887 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • De divinatione 2.1
    • De divinatione 2.1.
  • 15
    • 77954043422 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Pro Murena 29.61-31, 66; cf. De finibus 4.74
    • Pro Murena 29.61-31, 66; cf. De finibus 4.74.
  • 16
    • 77954046209 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Other texts in which Cicero is often thought to assume the position of the Stoics include his De legibus and his Paradoxa Stoicorum. There is not space to comment thoroughly on those works in this article, but they are addressed obliquely in the conclusion of the present essay
    • Other texts in which Cicero is often thought to assume the position of the Stoics include his De legibus and his Paradoxa Stoicorum. There is not space to comment thoroughly on those works in this article, but they are addressed obliquely in the conclusion of the present essay.
  • 17
    • 84970782249 scopus 로고
    • Cicero's paradoxes and his idea of utility
    • Walter Nicgorski, "Cicero's Paradoxes and His Idea of Utility," Political Theory 12 (1984): 559.
    • (1984) Political Theory , vol.12 , pp. 559
    • Nicgorski, W.1
  • 20
    • 77954044117 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Dyck's commentary emphasizes "source-criticism" as an appropriate approach to De officiis, and so he emphasizes Cicero's reliance on Panaetius. He gives an argument to justify his approach on pp. 18-21 (Commentary on Cicero). I have suggested, to the contrary, that Cicero seems critical of Panaetius, which would mean that source-criticism may not be a good approach to Cicero's book, especially since it is impossible to compare it with Panaetius's lost work. Whatever one decides about using source-criticism for Books 1 and 2 of De officiis, it seems that source-criticism will not work well for Book 3, since Cicero himself indicates that he is not following Panaetius in this final book: "So now I shall complete the remaining part of this work with no props to lean on, battling it out by myself, as the saying goes" (3.34)
    • Dyck's commentary emphasizes "source-criticism" as an appropriate approach to De officiis, and so he emphasizes Cicero's reliance on Panaetius. He gives an argument to justify his approach on pp. 18-21 (Commentary on Cicero). I have suggested, to the contrary, that Cicero seems critical of Panaetius, which would mean that source-criticism may not be a good approach to Cicero's book, especially since it is impossible to compare it with Panaetius's lost work. Whatever one decides about using source-criticism for Books 1 and 2 of De officiis, it seems that source-criticism will not work well for Book 3, since Cicero himself indicates that he is not following Panaetius in this final book: "So now I shall complete the remaining part of this work with no props to lean on, battling it out by myself, as the saying goes" (3.34)
  • 21
    • 77954044378 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cicero begins Book 3 with praise of Scipio Africanus and even says that he is Cicero's superior. But by paragraph 16 even this Scipio is demoted to the status of being common or at least to being inferior to the Stoic sage
    • Cicero begins Book 3 with praise of Scipio Africanus and even says that he is Cicero's superior. But by paragraph 16 even this Scipio is demoted to the status of being common or at least to being inferior to the Stoic sage.
  • 22
    • 61349201855 scopus 로고
    • Stoic intermediates and the end of man
    • See also 1.8. For analysis of this aspect of the teaching of Stoicism, ed. A. A. Long (London: The Athlone Press, (Originally published under a different title in Classical Quarterly [1955]: 181-94)
    • See also 1.8. For analysis of this aspect of the teaching of Stoicism, see I.G. Kidd, "Stoic Intermediates and the End of Man," in Problems in Stoicism, ed. A. A. Long (London: The Athlone Press, 1971), pp. 150-172 (Originally published under a different title in Classical Quarterly [1955]: 181-94)
    • (1971) Problems in Stoicism , pp. 150-172
    • Kidd, I.G.1
  • 23
    • 66649130050 scopus 로고
    • Moral actions and rules in stoic ethics
    • ed. John M. Rist (Berkeley, University of California Press)
    • see also, "Moral actions and rules in stoic ethics ". In The Stoics. ed. John M. Rist (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1978), pp. 247-49
    • (1978) The Stoics , pp. 247-49
  • 24
    • 0348006738 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 6, and 10
    • See also J. M. Rist, Stoic Philosophy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1969), esp. chaps. 5, 6, and 10.
    • (1969) Stoic Philosophy , vol.5
    • Rist, J.M.1
  • 25
    • 77954059819 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cicero's generous stance in Book 3 toward those who are confused about the honorable and the useful conflicts with his harsh remarks toward them in Book 2(2.10
    • Cicero's generous stance in Book 3 toward those who are confused about the honorable and the useful conflicts with his harsh remarks toward them in Book 2(2.10)
  • 26
    • 77954078027 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • This analogy is, of course, not as perfect as it might be. An arm cut off from a body cannot be even an arm any longer, for its very function is to be a part of a greater body. An arm has no end outside of the body to which it belongs. Yet, even if one admits that a human being can only be perfected in and through a political community, it does not follow that a human being is only a part that can have no function or end outside of the city. Given what he says about the Peripatetic insistence that human ends are not reducible to virtue only, one wonders if Cicero does not know the limitations of the analogy he is using
    • This analogy is, of course, not as perfect as it might be. An arm cut off from a body cannot be even an arm any longer, for its very function is to be a part of a greater body. An arm has no end outside of the body to which it belongs. Yet, even if one admits that a human being can only be perfected in and through a political community, it does not follow that a human being is only a part that can have no function or end outside of the city. Given what he says about the Peripatetic insistence that human ends are not reducible to virtue only, one wonders if Cicero does not know the limitations of the analogy he is using.
  • 27
    • 77954053502 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The serious analysis these cases deserve is not possible here, but they generally involve a pattern whereby a case implying the need for a distinction between honor and utility is proposed and Cicero vigorously appeals to his rule and reasserts the lack of such a distinction
    • The serious analysis these cases deserve is not possible here, but they generally involve a pattern whereby a case implying the need for a distinction between honor and utility is proposed and Cicero vigorously appeals to his rule and reasserts the lack of such a distinction.
  • 28
    • 84895598754 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • There are also rich new resources for students of De finibus, namely a new critical text in the Oxford Classical Texts series as well as a new translation in the Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy series. Oxford: Oxford University Press
    • There are also rich new resources for students of De finibus, namely a new critical text in the Oxford Classical Texts series as well as a new translation in the Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy series. See L. D. Reynolds, De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum Libri Quinque (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998)
    • (1998) De Finibus Bonorum et Malorum Libri Quinque
    • Reynolds, L.D.1
  • 29
    • 77954074569 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Raphael Woolf, trans., and Julia Annas, ed., Cicero: On Moral Ends (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001
    • Raphael Woolf, trans., and Julia Annas, ed., Cicero: On Moral Ends (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001
  • 30
    • 77954061502 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • With the exception of the later Phillipics, De officiis is the last work of Cicero's pen. De finibus was completed during the summer of 45 B.C.
    • With the exception of the later Phillipics, De officiis is the last work of Cicero's pen. De finibus was completed during the summer of 45 B.C.
  • 31
    • 77954060045 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The aborted visit to Athens was to take place during the summer of 44. Cicero entered Rome to confront Antony in September of 44 but soon recognized Antony's growing political power and withdrew. Work on De officiis began in late October and the first two books were completed by November 5, even as Cicero was beginning the series of attacks on Antony that would ultimately culminate in his death in December of 43
    • the aborted visit to Athens was to take place during the summer of 44. Cicero entered Rome to confront Antony in September of 44 but soon recognized Antony's growing political power and withdrew. Work on De officiis began in late October and the first two books were completed by November 5, even as Cicero was beginning the series of attacks on Antony that would ultimately culminate in his death in December of 43.
  • 32
    • 77954076175 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See De divinatione 2.1
    • See De divinatione 2.1.
  • 33
    • 77954076065 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Piso is not sure whether Aristotle or Nicomachus is the author of the Nicomachean Ethics (5.12), but of course we do not know for sure whether the work Cicero would have known by that name was the same as the work we know by that name.
  • 34
    • 52249114985 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Roman aristotle
    • On the important question of what Aristotle's texts were like during Cicero's time, see the recent treatment, ed. Jonathan Barnes and Mariam Griffin. (Oxford: Clarendon Press). Texts in the Nicomachean Ethics as it presently exists that would support Piso's interpretation of Peripatetic ethics include 1.8.1099a31-b8; 1.10.1100b22-1101a20; 10.7.1177a28-35; 10.8.1178a24-68,1178b33- 1179al7;cf. also the implications of 4.1-2
    • On the important question of what Aristotle's texts were like during Cicero's time, see the recent treatment by Jonathan Barnes, "Roman Aristotle," in Philosophia Togata, ed. Jonathan Barnes and Mariam Griffin. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997), 2: 1-69. Texts in the Nicomachean Ethics as it presently exists that would support Piso's interpretation of Peripatetic ethics include 1.8.1099a31-b8; 1.10.1100b22-1101a20; 10.7.1177a28-35; 10.8.1178a24-68,1178b33-1179al7;cf. also the implications of 4.1-2
    • (1997) Philosophia Togata , vol.2 , pp. 1-69
    • Barnes, J.1
  • 35
    • 77954038677 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cicero: On Moral Ends, 143, n. 55. It should be noted that Cicero himself employs an argument very much like that of Piso as one part of his refutation of Cato in Book 4 (4.3-15). In Cicero's eyes, it seems that the argument of Piso's Old Academy, while unsound, might still be useful for refuting Stoicism
    • Cicero: On Moral Ends, 143, n. 55. It should be noted that Cicero himself employs an argument very much like that of Piso as one part of his refutation of Cato in Book 4 (4.3-15). In Cicero's eyes, it seems that the argument of Piso's Old Academy, while unsound, might still be useful for refuting Stoicism.
  • 36
    • 77954057903 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Of course, Cicero has already rejected the fundamental premise of the Stoic position in Book 4 of De flnibus. His point here in Book 5 is that if the premise is once accepted, the Stoics accurately reason about what it implies. To use the language of introductory logic, Cicero thinks that the position of the Stoics is valid (that is, their conclusion follows from their premises) but unsound (their premises are not all true)
    • Of course, Cicero has already rejected the fundamental premise of the Stoic position in Book 4 of De flnibus. His point here in Book 5 is that if the premise is once accepted, the Stoics accurately reason about what it implies. To use the language of introductory logic, Cicero thinks that the position of the Stoics is valid (that is, their conclusion follows from their premises) but unsound (their premises are not all true)
    • But Unsound (Their Premises Are Not All True)
  • 37
    • 77954038941 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cicero calls attention to this fact by including a short discussion of the education of the absent young Lucullus at the beginning of the conversation (3.9)
    • Cicero calls attention to this fact by including a short discussion of the education of the absent young Lucullus at the beginning of the conversation (3.9)
  • 38
    • 77954070754 scopus 로고
    • The stoic tradition from antiquity to the early middle ages
    • Leiden: E. J. Brill
    • Marcia L. Colish, The Stoic Tradition from Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages. vol.I, Stoicism in Classical Latin Literature (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1985), p. 151.
    • (1985) Stoicism in Classical Latin Literature , vol.1 , pp. 151
    • Colish, M.L.1


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