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Vol. 13 (2011): On the philosophy of politics

Temat numeru

The sovereign and his lieges – Gorgias 469 C according to Seneca the Younger

DOI: https://doi.org/10.35757/CIV.2011.13.08
Submitted: July 5, 2020
Published: 2011-01-28

Abstract

In Plato’s dialogue ‘Gorgias’, which is a polemic with rhetoric as an ability to choose the unfair, Socrates proves that it is better to experience the injustice rather than to cause it. A few centuries later, this idea was further exploited by a Roman Empire Stoic Lucius Annaeus Seneca, also called Seneca the Younger or Philosophus. The basic idea of Seneca’s political thought is hatred towards the tyranny and a simultaneous acceptance of a fair sovereign who can control his anger and look after his country. Through his work Seneca is encouraging a just life that is in accordance with god’s laws. For him, justice is the core for the functioning of a society. Seneca also claims that human relations should be based on natural reasoning rules.

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