Author:Cicero,J. Ross,Horace McGregor
Towards the end of his life, Cicero turned away from his oratorical and political career and looked instead to matters of philosophy and religion. The dialogue The Nature of the Gods both explores his own views on these subjects, as a monotheist and member of the Academic School, and considers the opinion of other philosophical schools of the Hellenistic age through the figures of Velleius the Epicurean and Balbus the Stoic. Eloquent, clearly argued and surprisingly modern, it focuses upon a series of fundamental religious questions including: is there a God? If so, does he answer prayers, or intervene in human affairs? Does he know the future? Does morality need the support of religion? Profoundly influential on later thinkers, such as Saint Augustine and Thomas Aquinas, this is a fascinating consideration of fundamental issues of faith and philosophical thought.
"If you need a gentle counterbalance to a hectic lifestyle, want relief from stress or seek inner contentment, this is the book for you."
—— Daily ExpressThe poet-prophet of alternative medicine
—— TimeUndoubtedly one of the most lucid and inspired philosophers of our time
—— Mikhail GorbachevRead it, it's changed my life
—— Kelly Hoppen , The Independent on SundayThis is indeed a thought-provoking book
—— BBC History MagazineHighly readable
—— TLSA sympathetic and interesting guide to the intellectual and social landscape of the past 200 years or so.
—— Church TimesReadable and memorable, this is intellectual history at its best
—— Publishers Weekly