Cicero, Ambrose, and Aquinas “on duties”or the limits of genre in morals

Journal of Religious Ethics 33 (3):485-502 (2005)
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Abstract

To compose a Christian book on exemplary Christian living, Ambrose appropriates and criticizes Cicero's book on "duties," "De officiis." In many passages within the moral part of his "Summa of Theology," Thomas Aquinas incorporates quotations from both Cicero and Ambrose. Comparison of the three texts raises issues about the relation of genres to terms, arguments, rules, and ideals in religious teaching. Genre becomes a useful category for analyzing religious rhetoric only when it is conceived as a set of persuasive or pedagogical relations below a text's surface disposition

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References found in this work

De Officiis.Marcus Tullius Cicero & Walter Miller - 2017 - William Heinemann Macmillan.
Phaedrus. Plato & Harvey Yunis (eds.) - 1952 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
The setting of the summa theologiae of saint Thomas (1982).Leonard E. Boyle - 2008 - In James P. Reilly (ed.), The Gilson Lectures on Thomas Aquinas. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.

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