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Alleged incompatibility of Epicurusa (TM) philosophy with rhetoric has led modern scholars to isolate rhetorical procedures in Lucretiusa (TM) De rerum natura and regard them as non-Epicurean, accessory features. This study of Lucretiusa (TM) rhetorical procedures is based on a wider understanding of the term rhetoric, not limited to the genre of oratory. In a fresh discussion of the questions of provenance and the role of the most important formal procedures of exposition in De rerum natura the author argues that instead of injecting rhetorical strategies from non-Epicurean sources, Lucretius…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Alleged incompatibility of Epicurusa (TM) philosophy with rhetoric has led modern scholars to isolate rhetorical procedures in Lucretiusa (TM) De rerum natura and regard them as non-Epicurean, accessory features. This study of Lucretiusa (TM) rhetorical procedures is based on a wider understanding of the term rhetoric, not limited to the genre of oratory. In a fresh discussion of the questions of provenance and the role of the most important formal procedures of exposition in De rerum natura the author argues that instead of injecting rhetorical strategies from non-Epicurean sources, Lucretius in fact intensified rhetorical elements already present in the work of Epicurus. These elements are used for the purpose of explanation, and function as cognitive and mnemonic aids for the reader.
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Autorenporträt
Daniel Markovic, Ph.D. (2006) in Classical Philology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is Lecturer in Classics at Temple University, Philadelphia. He has published on Lucretius and on the rhetorical function of hyperbaton and gnome in Greek poetry.