The good Dogs are still in the Portico: Making sense of the cynic-stoic moral and sociopolitical continuities

South African Journal of Philosophy 43 (2):159-173 (2024)
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Abstract

The Cynic moral and sociopolitical imprint on Stoic philosophy has frequently been overlooked in recent academic studies. However, the Cynic influence is palpable throughout the history of Stoicism. In this article, I recognise seven Cynic-Stoic conceptual continuities concerning the idea of virtue, or aretē, and five continuities concerning the morally ideal society. This article is mainly descriptive, as it serves a modest but theoretically vital purpose: to explain the interrelation(s) among these 12 Cynic–Stoic continuities, which will elucidate the strong cohesion of each (moral/political) philosophical system. Ergo, I show how these 12 continuities strongly and simultaneously imply a Cynic-Stoic continuity in terms of the conceptions or appraisals of culture-tradition, epistemology, sexuality, money, law, religion and cosmopolitanism.

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F. M. Ortiz-Delgado
University of Guadalajara

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The Puppet and the Sage: Images of the Self in Marcus Aurelius.Sylvia Berryman - 2010 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 38:187-209.

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