
by MARCUS TULLIUS. CICERO
In a series of stimulating dialogues, Tusculan Disputations examines some of the most fundamental questions of human life: the fear of death, the endurance of pain, the alleviation of sorrow, the various disorders of the soul, and the necessity of virtue for a happy life. These dialogues--accessible yet movingly profound--are perhaps even more relevant today than when they were first written.
This is the first complete translation of Tusculan Disputations to appear in English in nearly a hundred years. It uses a modern, vigorous idiom and a clear formatting of the dialogues to enhance understanding and readability. Translator Quintus Curtius, who has also translated Cicero's On Duties and On Moral Ends, has returned to the original Latin text to produce an edition that is accessible for the general reader, while rigorous enough for the serious student. It contains:
1. A detailed foreword and introduction
2. Summaries of the arguments of each book
3. Over six hundred and thirty annotations that explain places, names, and nuances in the text
4. Illustrations and photographs
5. A comprehensive index
6. Modern formatting of the dialogues for ease of reading and comprehension
This new translation restores Cicero's classic to its proper place in the history of Western philosophy.

by MARCUS TULLIUS. CICERO
In a series of stimulating dialogues, Tusculan Disputations examines some of the most fundamental questions of human life: the fear of death, the endurance of pain, the alleviation of sorrow, the various disorders of the soul, and the necessity of virtue for a happy life. These dialogues--accessible yet movingly profound--are perhaps even more relevant today than when they were first written.
This is the first complete translation of Tusculan Disputations to appear in English in nearly a hundred years. It uses a modern, vigorous idiom and a clear formatting of the dialogues to enhance understanding and readability. Translator Quintus Curtius, who has also translated Cicero's On Duties and On Moral Ends, has returned to the original Latin text to produce an edition that is accessible for the general reader, while rigorous enough for the serious student. It contains:
1. A detailed foreword and introduction
2. Summaries of the arguments of each book
3. Over six hundred and thirty annotations that explain places, names, and nuances in the text
4. Illustrations and photographs
5. A comprehensive index
6. Modern formatting of the dialogues for ease of reading and comprehension
This new translation restores Cicero's classic to its proper place in the history of Western philosophy.