Epicureanism
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Epicureanism is a school of philosophy founded upon the teachings of its founder Epicurus It was known, to Rome, from the mid 2nd Century B.C. as a philosophical school and a way of life. It was immenesely popular in Italy during the 1st Century B.C. but by the 2nd Century A.D Stoicism was paramount.
- pleasure was the τελος of epicureanism
 - this was achieved by rational calculus συμμετρησις, a selection (αιρεσις) an aversions (φυγη)are to be evaluated by the pleasure it gives (129),[1]
 
- ataraxia αταραζια
 - live unobtrusively λαθε βιωσας
 
Prominent Roman Epicureans:
Greek teachers in Italy:
- Philodemus
 - Siro
 - M. Pompilius Andronicus
 
Epicurean vocabulary:
- hortulus
 - contubernium
 - contubernales
 - quies
 - voluptas
 
References
- ↑ Roskam, Geert Live unnoticed Λαθε Βιωσασ On the Vicissitudes of an Epicurean Doctrine (9004161716)
 
p.35-39