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https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/32884
Title: | Eunomia in heaven and on earth: Plutarch’s nomos between rhetoric and science | Authors: | Stockt, Luc Van der | Issue Date: | 2014 | Publisher: | Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra | Journal: | http://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/32868 | Abstract: | Against the Epicureans, Plutarch holds that philosophy and religion are more important for society than statute laws. Given the analogy between the politician and the god-creator of the harmonious cosmos, rulers and their laws should, then, humbly imitate god and his divine law of Justice, thereby having only persuasion as a tool. It is argued that the rhetorical concept of persuasion plays an equally important role in the way the god, according to Plutarch (as a Platonist) has created the cosmos: divine persuasion overcame the laws of nature. The prescriptive character of this persuasion, however, conflicts with our modern concept of the descriptive character of physical laws. | URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/32884 | ISBN: | 978-989-721-012-9 | DOI: | 10.14195/978-989-721-012-9_15 | Rights: | open access |
Appears in Collections: | Titulo:Nomos, Kosmos & Dike in Plutarch |
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nomos__kosmos_artigo15.pdf | 449.12 kB | Adobe PDF |
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