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Review article

https://doi.org/10.31337/oz.73.1.7

Stoic Virtue Ethics and Rousseau’s Concept of Civil Religion

Petar Jakopec orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-0353-2806 ; Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia


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Abstract

Stoicism, one among several Greco–Hellenistic schools, not only played a key role in the history of philosophical thought, but also in the shaping of our very understanding of ethics. Stoic teachings during the period of Roman Stoicism (early Stoicism) placed a special focus on ethical issues. Thus, Stoic ethics as a distinct philosophical discipline in fact came into being in the period of the early Stoa during the latter centuries before Christ and in the first two centuries after Christ. Fundamental to Stoic ethics is the subdueing of passions and emotions by means of reason. A Stoic’s ethical ideal is to become wise and to be wise, while the ultimate goal and purpose of the followers of Stoicism is to endure in the spirit of its integral philosophy. The model for achieving virtue, that is, a life in harmony with other persons, is seen by Stoics as existing in nature (the cosmos). This article aims to demonstrate the role and meaning of ethics during the period of early Roman Stoicism. This reflection on Stoic ethical teaching is focused upon some key components of Stoic ethics, such as logos and virtue. Furthermore, for a clearer understanding of Stoic ethics, the article introduces the most significant thinkers of early Roman Stoicism: Seneca, Epictetus and Marcus Aurelius. Finally, a critical reconstruction will serve to assess Rousseau’s grasp of civil religion as being a sort of counterpart to Stoic civil religion and ethics.

Keywords

Roman Stoicism; logos; virtue; Seneca; Epictetus; Marcus Aurelius; civil religion; Jean–Jacques Rousseau

Hrčak ID:

200468

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/200468

Publication date:

23.5.2018.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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