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Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 117 — On Real Ethics as Superior to Syllogistic Subtleties (§10)

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The objector replies: “It is only an accessory of wisdom.” Very well, then, I say, this quality which you call being wise—does it actively produce wisdom, or is it a passive concomitant of wisdom? It is corporeal in either case. For that which is acted upon and that which acts, are alike corporeal; and, if corporeal, each is a Good. The only quality which could prevent it from being a Good, would be incorporeality.
Seneca·Letter 117 — On Real Ethics as Superior to Syllogistic Subtleties (§10)·trans. Gummere
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