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Discourses (Epictetus)

Epictetus
Sort Name
Discourses
Release Date
2020-04-07
Format
eBook
Status
Official
Languages
English
Page Count
?
Publishers
Standard Ebooks

Annotation

https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/epictetus/discourses/george-long

Last modified: 2023-02-02 (revision #111810)

Works

NameAuthorLanguagesType
Of the Things Which Are in Our Power, and Not in Our PowerEnglishNon-fiction
How a Man on Every Occasion Can Maintain His Proper CharacterEnglishNon-fiction
How a Man Should Proceed From the Principle of God Being the Father of All Men to the RestEnglishNon-fiction
Of Progress or ImprovementEnglishNon-fiction
Against the AcademicsEnglishNon-fiction
Of Providence (Book I, Chapter VI)EnglishNon-fiction
Of the Use of Sophistical Arguments and Hypothetical and the LikeEnglishNon-fiction
That the Faculties Are Not Safe to the UninstructedEnglishNon-fiction
How From the Fact That We Are Akin to God a Man May Proceed to the ConsequencesEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who Eagerly Seek Preferment at RomeEnglishNon-fiction
Of Natural AffectionEnglishNon-fiction
Of Contentment (Epictetus non-fiction)EnglishNon-fiction
How Everything May Be Done Acceptably to the GodsEnglishNon-fiction
That the Deity Oversees All ThingsEnglishNon-fiction
What Philosophy PromisesEnglishNon-fiction
Of Providence (Book I, Chapter XVI)EnglishNon-fiction
That the Logical Art Is NecessaryEnglishNon-fiction
That We Ought Not to Be Angry with the Errors (Faults) of OthersEnglishNon-fiction
How We Should Behave to TyrantsEnglishNon-fiction
About Reason, How It Contemplates ItselfEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who Wish to Be AdmiredEnglishNon-fiction
On PrecognitionsEnglishNon-fiction
Against EpicurusEnglishNon-fiction
How We Should Struggle With Circumstances (Book I, Chapter XXIV)EnglishNon-fiction
How We Should Struggle With Circumstances (Book I, Chapter XXV)EnglishNon-fiction
What Is the Law of LifeEnglishNon-fiction
In How Many Ways Appearances Exist, and What Aids We Should Provide Against ThemEnglishNon-fiction
That We Ought Not to Be Angry With Men; and What Are the Small and the Great Things Among MenEnglishNon-fiction
On Constancy (Or Firmness)EnglishNon-fiction
What We Ought to Have Ready in Difficult CircumstancesEnglishNon-fiction
That Confidence (Courage) Is Not Inconsistent With CautionEnglishNon-fiction
Of Tranquillity (Freedom From Perturbation)EnglishNon-fiction
To Those Who Recommend Persons to PhilosophersEnglishNon-fiction
Against a Person Who Had Once Been Detected in AdulteryEnglishNon-fiction
How Magnanimity Is Consistent With CareEnglishNon-fiction
Of IndifferenceEnglishNon-fiction
How We Ought to Use DivinationEnglishNon-fiction
What Is the Nature (Ἡ Οὐσία) of the GoodEnglishNon-fiction
That When We Cannot Fulfil That Which the Character of a Man Promises, We Assume the Character of a PhilosopherEnglishNon-fiction
How We May Discover the Duties of Life From NamesEnglishNon-fiction
What the Beginning of Philosophy IsEnglishNon-fiction
Of Disputation or DiscussionEnglishNon-fiction
On Anxiety (Solicitude)EnglishNon-fiction
To NasoEnglishNon-fiction
To or Against Those Who Obstinately Persist in What They Have DeterminedEnglishNon-fiction
That We Do Not Strive to Use Our Opinions About Good and EvilEnglishNon-fiction
How We Must Adapt Preconceptions to Particular CasesEnglishNon-fiction
How We Should Struggle Against AppearancesEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who Embrace Philosophical Opinions Only in WordsEnglishNon-fiction
Against the Epicureans and AcademicsEnglishNon-fiction
Of InconsistencyEnglishNon-fiction
On FriendshipEnglishNon-fiction
On the Power of SpeakingEnglishNon-fiction
To (Or Against) a Person Who Was One of Those Who Were Not Valued (Esteemed) by HimEnglishNon-fiction
That Logic Is NecessaryEnglishNon-fiction
What Is the Property of ErrorEnglishNon-fiction
Of Finery in DressEnglishNon-fiction
In What a Man Ought to Be Exercised Who Has Made Proficiency; and That We Neglect the Chief ThingsEnglishNon-fiction
What Is the Matter on Which a Good Man Should Be Employed, and in What We Ought Chiefly to Practice OurselvesEnglishNon-fiction
Against a Person Who Showed His Partisanship in an Unseemly Way in a TheatreEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who on Account of Sickness Go Away HomeEnglishNon-fiction
MiscellaneousEnglishNon-fiction
To the Administrator of the Free Cities Who Was an EpicureanEnglishNon-fiction
How We Must Exercise Ourselves Against Appearances (Φαντασίας)EnglishNon-fiction
To a Certain Rhetorician Who Was Going Up to Rome on a SuitEnglishNon-fiction
In What Manner We Ought to Bear SicknessEnglishNon-fiction
Certain Miscellaneous Matters (Book III, Chapter XI)EnglishNon-fiction
About ExerciseEnglishNon-fiction
What Solitude Is, and What Kind of Person a Solitary Man IsEnglishNon-fiction
Certain Miscellaneous Matters (Book III, Ch. XIV)EnglishNon-fiction
That We Ought to Proceed With Circumspection to EverythingEnglishNon-fiction
That We Ought With Caution to Enter Into Familiar Intercourse With MenEnglishNon-fiction
On Providence (Epictetus Discourse, Book III, Chapter XVII)EnglishNon-fiction
That We Ought Not to Be Disturbed by Any NewsEnglishNon-fiction
What Is the Condition of a Common Kind of Man and of a PhilosopherEnglishNon-fiction
That We Can Derive Advantage From All External ThingsEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who Readily Come to the Profession of SophistsEnglishNon-fiction
About CynismEnglishNon-fiction
To Those Who Read and Discuss for the Sake of OstentationEnglishNon-fiction
That We Ought Not to Be Moved by a Desire of Those Things Which Are Not in Our PowerEnglishNon-fiction
To Those Who Fall Off (Desist) From Their PurposeEnglishNon-fiction
To Those Who Fear WantEnglishNon-fiction
About FreedomEnglishNon-fiction
On Familiar IntimacyEnglishNon-fiction
What Things We Should Exchange for Other ThingsEnglishNon-fiction
To Those Who Are Desirous of Passing Life in TranquillityEnglishNon-fiction
Against the Quarrelsome and FerociousEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who Lament Over Being PitiedEnglishNon-fiction
On Freedom From FearEnglishNon-fiction
Against Those Who Hastily Rush Into the Use of the Philosophic DressEnglishNon-fiction
To a Person Who Had Been Changed to a Character of ShamelessnessEnglishNon-fiction
What Things We Ought to Despise, and What Things We Ought to ValueEnglishNon-fiction
About Purity (Cleanliness)EnglishNon-fiction
On AttentionEnglishNon-fiction
Against or to Those Who Readily Tell Their Own AffairsEnglishNon-fiction
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Last Modified
2023-02-02