Cicero and the People’s Will Cicero and the People’s Will

Cicero and the People’s Will

Philosophy and Power at the End of the Roman Republic

    • $49.99
    • $49.99

Publisher Description

This book tells an overlooked story in the history of the will, a contested idea in both politics and philosophy of mind. For it is Cicero, statesman and philosopher, who gives shape to the notion of will as it would become in Western thought and who invents the idea of 'the will of the people'. In a single word – voluntas – he brings Roman law in contact with Greek ideas, chief among them Plato's claim that a rational elite must rule. When the republic falls to Caesarism, Cicero turns his political argument inward: will is a force to win the virtue in the soul that was lost on the battlefield, the marker of inner freedom in an unfree age. Though his vision of a free republic failed in his time, Cicero's ideal of rational elitism has shaped and fractured the modern world – and Ciceronian creativity may yet save it.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2022
December 8
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
557
Pages
PUBLISHER
Cambridge University Press
SELLER
Cambridge University Press
SIZE
7.8
MB
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