Seneca’s
De Otiois (c.62) is among the 10 works gathered under the label
Dialogi. Our manuscripts for the
De Otioare incomplete. We have lost the beginning of the text – which would have included an addressee – and the text ends abruptly. The likely date of the
De Otiois 62 CE. This date is itself partly dependent on the conjecture that the
De Otiowas addressed to Annaeus Serenus (Williams 2003: 12-15; Griffin 1976: 316-7, 396).
Although the text of the De Otio is incomplete, the main argument of the work is clear. Seneca seeks to contrast the Stoic and Epicurean positions on the appropriateness of otium. ‘Otium’ refers to time away from public affairs or the business of public life. Thus, what one does in one’s public career is typically – and especially in Rome – seen
1690 words
Citation: Wagoner, Robert. "De Otio". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 01 April 2014 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=35239, accessed 25 November 2024.]