On the Nature of Things

About The Book

Titled De rerum natura in Latin On the Nature of Things written by Titus Lucretius Carus and translated by John Selby Watson is an epic poem and philosophical essay in one. Written with the intent of explaining Epicurean philosophy to the Romans the original poem was divided into six books and written in dactylic hexameter. The overarching principle in the book explains the human role in a universe ruled by chance. Notable is the absence of the gods the Romans depended upon; though LUCRETIUS invokes the goddess Venus in the poems opening lines he uses her merely as an allegory for sexual and reproductive power. Other themes throughout the poem include the nature of the soul and mind why we sense and feel and think principles of the void and atomism the creation and evolution of the world and celestial and terrestrial phenomena (and their differences). It tries to explain human life and purpose in a nutshell or the nature of the Universe--a way for people to cope and understand in a confused and terrifying world. TITUS LUCRETIUS CARUS (c. 99 BC - 55 BC) was a Roman philosopher and poet. Very little is known about his life and his only known work is the epic poem on Epicurean philosophy On the Nature of Things. He dedicated the work to the famous Roman orator and poet Gaius Memmius who may have been a friend and it is thought that he may have died before he finished editing the poem as it ends rather abruptly. The books translator JOHN SELBY WATSON (1804-1884) was a British translator and writer convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering his wife in 1872.
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