As you're roaming through the Trial of Instinct in the Final Chapter, you'll meet a strange character named Lucretius. This giant fish will desperately be searching for a Golden Top Knot, which is an ...
In his new book, The Swerve, Shakespeare scholar Stephen Greenblatt tells the story of an ancient poem and a manuscript explorer, and resurrects a time when people truly loved books. Shakespeare ...
Epicurus didn't like poetry. He thought it was unclear in comparison to prose, and in his own works used prose, often of a sparse and crabby variety. A wise man will be able to talk about poetry, ...
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3366/jj.30551299 Your institution does not have access to this book on JSTOR. Try searching on JSTOR for other items related to this ...
Lucretius (c. 99 B.C.-c. 55 B.C.), author of De Rerum Natura, was a Roman poet and philosopher who explained and expounded the beliefs of the Greek philosopher Epicurus—advocating a happy, tranquil ...
The subject of Lucretius's six-book poem De Rerum Natura was not war, love, myth or history – it was atomic physics Lucretius (full name Titus Lucretius Carus) lived in the first half of the century ...
In 1585, the greatest Elizabethan scientist, Thomas Harriot, was sent by his patron, Sir Walter Raleigh, to the nascent English colony in Virginia to assess the natural resources, observe the ...
Two millennia ago, Lucretius wrote a vast poem called “On the Nature of Things.” His goal was to explain the workings of the universe and the history of human beings. Above all, he wanted to rescue ...
Before he became a Professor of literature at Harvard, and way before he wrote his classic Shakespeare biography, Will in The World, Stephen Greenblatt was an I'll-read-anything kind of kid. One day, ...
Your institution does not have access to this book on JSTOR. Try searching on JSTOR for other items related to this book. LUCRETIUS’S ADEQUACY TO THE FEAR OF DEATH: LOGIC, POETRY, AND EMOTION Chapter ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results