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Full Idea
A neo-Stoic movement began at the end of the sixteenth century, under the inspiration of the Dutch scholar Justus Lipsius.
Gist of Idea
A neo-Stoic movement began in the late sixteenth century
Source
report of Justus Lipsius (works [1584]) by A.C. Grayling - What is Good? Ch.5
Book Ref
Grayling,A.C.: 'What is Good? The Best Way to Live' [Phoenix 2003], p.123
A Reaction
I would take this to be just as much a movement against Christianity as the interest in the less theistic Epicurus. They wanted the virtues of Christianity without the theological trappings.
7822 | A neo-Stoic movement began in the late sixteenth century [Lipsius, by Grayling] |
7504 | Modern science comes from Descartes' view that knowledge doesn't need moral purity [Descartes, by Foucault] |
19635 | Hegel produced modern optimism; he failed to grasp that consciousness never progresses [Hegel, by Cioran] |
7662 | Romanticism is the greatest change in the consciousness of the West [Berlin] |
8060 | In the 17th-18th centuries morality offered a cure for egoism, through altruism [MacIntyre] |
8021 | The Levellers and the Diggers mark a turning point in the history of morality [MacIntyre] |
8092 | Logic was merely a branch of rhetoric until the scientific 17th century [Devlin] |
9307 | Modern Western culture suddenly appeared in Jena in the 1790s [Svendsen] |
19648 | Since Kant we think we can only access 'correlations' between thinking and being [Meillassoux] |
19674 | The Copernican Revolution decentres the Earth, but also decentres thinking from reality [Meillassoux] |
21855 | Only in the 1780s did it become acceptable to read Spinoza [Lord] |
20678 | The Scientific Revolution was the discovery of our own ignorance [Harari] |
20686 | For millenia people didn't know how to convert one type of energy into another [Harari] |