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Lucretius: De Rerum Natura Book 3 - Bk. 3

Lucretius Carus, TitusKenney, E. J.(Edited by)Easterling, P. E.(Series edited by)Hardie, Philip(Series edited by)Hunter, Richard(Series edited by)Kenney, E. J.(Series edited by)
Part of the Cambridge Greek and Latin classics series
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The De Rerum Natura of Lucretius is a sustained and impassioned protest against religious superstition and irrationality.

The poem takes the form of a detailed exposition of Epicurean physical theory - an extreme materialism designed to remove and discredit popular fears of the gods, death and an afterlife.

Book III is generally accepted to be the finest in the whole poem; Lucretius argues there that the soul is as mortal as the body and shows that human response to the fact of mortality and death can be at once rational, dignified and liberating.

Professor Kenney's commentary is the first to give proper critical emphasis to the techniques and intentions of Lucretius' poetry; it can be read with profit by all students of Latin from senior school level upwards.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521291771 / 9780521291774
Paperback
871.01
27/01/1977
United Kingdom
272 pages, black & white illustrations
123 x 186 mm, 300 grams
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