Online Encyclopedia

CRATIPPUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 382 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CRATIPPUS  , of Mitylene (1st

century B.C.), Peripatetic philosopher, contemporary with
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Cicero, whose son he taught at Athens, and by whom he is praised in the De officiis as the greatest of his school . He was the friend of
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Pompey also and shared his
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flight after the
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battle of Pharsalia, for the purpose, it is said, of convincing him of the justice of
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providence . Brutus, while at Athens after the assassination of Caesar, attended his lectures . The freedom of Rome was conferred upon him by Caesar, at the request of Cicero . The only
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work attributed to him is a
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treatise on divination, but his reputation may be gauged by the fact that in 44 B.C. the Areopagus invited him to succeed Andronicus of Rhodes as scholarch . He seems to have held that, while motion, sense and appetite cannot exist apart from the
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body, thought reaches its greatest power when most
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free from bodily influence, and that divination is due to the
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direct
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action of the divine mind on that faculty of the human soul which is not dependent on the body . Cicero, De divinatione, i . 3, 32, 50, ii . 48, 52 ; De dials, i . 1, iii . 2 ; Plutarch, Cicero, 24 .

End of Article: CRATIPPUS
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CRATINUS (c. 520—423 B.C.)
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CRATIPPUS (fl. c. 375 B.c.)

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