About This Book
The narrative follows a young man's intellectual and spiritual quest through classical social life, as he weighs Epicurean emphasis on aesthetic sensation against Stoic calls to duty and order. Portraits of salons, lectures, ceremonial rites, and the imperial court frame debates about taste, conscience, and moral assent. Encounters with rhetoricians, philosophers, religious communities, and public spectacles provoke second thoughts about personal liberty, inward adjustment to communal ethics, and the possibility of a Christian sensibility. The work moves between detailed social scenes and reflective chapters on will, devotion, martyrdom, and belief, ending in meditations on an innate orientation toward faith and the tensions between beauty, duty, and spiritual commitment.
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