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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › De_OtioDe Otio - Wikipedia

    De Otio (On Leisure) is a 1st-century Latin work by Seneca (4 BC–65 AD). It survives in a fragmentary state. The work concerns the rational use of spare time, whereby one can still actively aid humankind by engaging in wider questions about nature and the universe.

  2. Ad [Serenum] de otio (To Serenus on Leisure) comprises the fragmentary remains of a philosophical dialogue (what we would now call an essay) written by the Roman Stoic Lucius Annaeus Seneca (c. 4 BC–AD 65) and thought to be addressed to his younger friend or relative Annaeus Ser-enus.1 The date of its composition is uncertain but it is usually p...

  3. In its extant form the De Otio begins abruptly in the midst of a plea for the life of retirement. The theme, apparently, was part of the introduction of the essay, since the formal division of the subject is preserved at the end of Chapter 2.

  4. Quod nisi 1 in otio non fit. Tunc potest obtineri quod semel placuit , ubi nemo intervenit, qui iudicium adhuc imbecillum populo adiutore detorqueat; tunc potest vita aequali et uno tenore procedere, quam propositis diversissimis scindimus. [ 2 ] Nam inter cetera mala illud pessimum est, quod vitia ipsa mutamus.

  5. L. Annaeus Seneca. Moral Essays: volume 2. John W. Basore. London and New York. Heinemann. 1932. The National Endowment for the Humanities provided support for entering this text. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License . An XML version of this text is available for download, with the ...

  6. De Otio. Go to page: Show Greek Keyboard. Seneca. nascendi. Haec aut Atheniensium erit aut Carthaginiensium, aut alterius alicuius urbis, quae non ad omnis pertineat homines sed ad certos. Quidam eodem tempore utrique rei publicae dant operam, maiori minorique, quidam tantum minori, quidam tantum 2 maiori.

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  8. Jan 30, 2003 · This edition of Seneca's De otio and De brevitate vitae introduces undergraduates and more advanced students to Senecan philosophy. Both texts promote the benefits of living an inner...

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