Cicero: On the Laws

Table of Contents

Cicero: On the Laws
Overview
About the Author
Context
Explanation and Analysis of the Document
Audience
Impact
Document Text

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Abstract

Cicero’s On the Laws is one of the most famous and enduring of all the links between the modern world and ancient Rome. Written in the last decade of Cicero’s life, at a time when he considered himself retired from public service, it serves as a companion piece and a commentary on his earlier De re publica (On the Republic). On the Republic is a philosophical commentary on the ideal state, in much the same manner as the discourse of Cicero’s model Plato. On the Laws, by comparison, effectively sets out a constitution for that ideal state, an action plan for creating the structures necessary for making that state a reality. Cicero bases those laws not on a set of divine commandments imposed on humanity but on natural law.

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