Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Cicero De Inventione Notes. Every subject which contains in itself a controversy to be resolved by speech and debate involves a question about a fact, or about a definition, or about the nature of an act, or about. . . the processes of deciding it. --Marcus Tullius Cicero, On Invention.

  2. www.poesialatina.it › _ns › ProsaLatCicero-De inventione I

    Officium autem eius facultatis uidetur esse dicere adposite ad persuasionem; finis persuadere dictione. Inter officium et finem hoc interest, quod in officio, quid fieri, in fine, quid effici conueniat, consideratur. Vt medici officium dicimus esse curare ad sanandum apposite, finem sanare curatione, item, oratoris quid officium et quid finem ...

  3. Liber II. Categoriae: Opera omnia. Opera quae Marcus Tullius Cicero scripsit. Philosophia. Saeculi primi ante Christum opera. Opera sine editione. Opera sine fonte. Opera cum fonte in disputatione.

  4. Rhetorici libri duo qui vocantur de inventione. M. Tullius Cicero. Eduard Stroebel. In Aedibus B.G. Teubneri. Lipsiae. 1915. Keyboarding. The Mellon Foundation provided support for entering this text. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License .

  5. CICERO, De Inventione | Loeb Classical Library. Go to page: Go To Section. Find in a Library. View cloth edition. Show Greek Keyboard. Hide annotations. Display: View facing pages.

  6. Rhetorici libri duo qui vocantur de inventione. M. Tullius Cicero. Eduard Stroebel. In Aedibus B.G. Teubneri. Lipsiae. 1915. Keyboarding. The Mellon Foundation provided support for entering this text. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License .

  7. De Inventione, I Marcus Tullius Cicero Two Books on Rhetoric Commonly Called on Invention Book I 1. I. I have often seriously debated with myself whether men and communities have received more good or evil from oratory and a consuming devotion to eloquence.