Cicero's "De Divinatione"

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Cicero's "De Divinatione" is a philosophical dialogue in which the Roman orator critically examines the practice and validity of divination and prophetic arts in Roman religion.

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Label Occurrences
Cicero's "De Divinatione" canonical 1

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Latin literary work
philosophical dialogue
associatedWork De Fato NERFINISHED
De Natura Deorum NERFINISHED
author Marcus Tullius Cicero NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin Roman Republic NERFINISHED
criticizes astrology
augury
haruspicy
omens and portents
prophetic dreams
dialogueForm dialogue between Cicero and Quintus
examines rational basis of divinatory practices
relationship between gods and human knowledge
role of chance and fate
featuresCharacter Marcus Tullius Cicero (as interlocutor) NERFINISHED
Quintus Tullius Cicero NERFINISHED
genre didactic literature
philosophical dialogue
hasPart Book I of De Divinatione NERFINISHED
Book II of De Divinatione NERFINISHED
hasTheme conflict between reason and superstition
limits of human knowledge
nature of divine providence
historicalContext late Roman Republic NERFINISHED
influenced Renaissance humanist critiques of astrology
later discussions of superstition in Christian authors
language Latin
literaryForm Ciceronian dialogue
literaryPeriod Golden Age of Latin literature NERFINISHED
mainTopic Roman religion
divination
skepticism about prophecy
partOf Ciceronian philosophical corpus
philosophicalSchoolReferenced Academic skepticism NERFINISHED
Epicureanism NERFINISHED
Stoicism
philosophicalTradition Academic skepticism NERFINISHED
preservedIn medieval manuscript tradition
questions reliability of prophetic arts
religiousContext traditional Roman state religion
settingLocation Tusculum NERFINISHED
subjectOf debate on the validity of divination
timePeriod 1st century BCE
title De Divinatione NERFINISHED
usesMethod dialectical argument
skeptical inquiry
workType prose

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

haruspex documentedIn Cicero's "De Divinatione"