"Homo reciprocus": Seneca, Paul and benefaction Reciprocity was basic to most forms of social interaction in the ancient Mediterranean world. Any exchange of services/gits was based on the principle that the obligations incurred between two parties required an adequate response. In his ethical treatise on beneit exchange, "<em>De beneficiis</em>,"Seneca presents an idealistic reinterpretation of the basic tenets of benefaction by providing a "<em>lex vitae</em>", a law of conduct, according to which the giving of beneits becomes an intrinsically rewarding experience in itself. On his part, the apostle Paul conceptualises his "ecumenical" collecion for the Jerusalem church in terms of the principles inherent to beneit...
In contrast to many of today's sectarian religious figures, Thomas Aquinas was interested in engagi...
Abstract: In one of the earliest documents of Christianity, in a highly patriarchal society, when ad...
The most famous line from Terence, homo sum etc. (Heautontimoroumenos 77), has been interpreted in d...
<strong>The leadership of the Jerusalem church as benefactors at the meeting with Paul: Galati...
Seneca's De Beneficiis (On Benefits) is the only work surviving from antiquity that discusses the ex...
The tendency to reciprocate – to return good for good and evil for evil – is a potent force in human...
M.A. (Greek Studies)This study aims to give an account of Paul's argument concerning homo-erotic beh...
Exercising the gift: pragmatics and paradoxes of relationships in Seneca’s “De Beneficiis”. The mon...
The author discusses Grace in its cognate in the inscriptions, papyri, Jewish literature and the pop...
This thesis attempts to provide a reason for Paul’s seemingly inconsistent financial policy, insofar...
This thesis argues that it is insufficient to define love in Paul as the rejection of all forms of s...
This thesis provides the first book-length comparative treatment of consolation in the writings of t...
During the past half-century Roman historians have for the most part put political history on the ba...
For centuries before and after Paul, Jewish sages taught that charitable deeds are among the supreme...
Jesus proclaimed the kingdom of God. The principle of general reciprocity took centre stage. The sys...
In contrast to many of today's sectarian religious figures, Thomas Aquinas was interested in engagi...
Abstract: In one of the earliest documents of Christianity, in a highly patriarchal society, when ad...
The most famous line from Terence, homo sum etc. (Heautontimoroumenos 77), has been interpreted in d...
<strong>The leadership of the Jerusalem church as benefactors at the meeting with Paul: Galati...
Seneca's De Beneficiis (On Benefits) is the only work surviving from antiquity that discusses the ex...
The tendency to reciprocate – to return good for good and evil for evil – is a potent force in human...
M.A. (Greek Studies)This study aims to give an account of Paul's argument concerning homo-erotic beh...
Exercising the gift: pragmatics and paradoxes of relationships in Seneca’s “De Beneficiis”. The mon...
The author discusses Grace in its cognate in the inscriptions, papyri, Jewish literature and the pop...
This thesis attempts to provide a reason for Paul’s seemingly inconsistent financial policy, insofar...
This thesis argues that it is insufficient to define love in Paul as the rejection of all forms of s...
This thesis provides the first book-length comparative treatment of consolation in the writings of t...
During the past half-century Roman historians have for the most part put political history on the ba...
For centuries before and after Paul, Jewish sages taught that charitable deeds are among the supreme...
Jesus proclaimed the kingdom of God. The principle of general reciprocity took centre stage. The sys...
In contrast to many of today's sectarian religious figures, Thomas Aquinas was interested in engagi...
Abstract: In one of the earliest documents of Christianity, in a highly patriarchal society, when ad...
The most famous line from Terence, homo sum etc. (Heautontimoroumenos 77), has been interpreted in d...