epicureans in English

noun
1
a disciple or student of the Greek philosopher Epicurus.
They lift the curtain on a hitherto unknown community of philosophical debate among Epicureans and with other schools.

Use "epicureans" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "epicureans" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "epicureans", or refer to the context using the word "epicureans" in the English Dictionary.

1. Epicureans and Stoics

2. * The Epicureans believed that life came into existence by accident.

3. The Epicureans even refrained from political involvement and secret wrongdoing.

4. Like the ancient Epicureans, they make the pursuit of pleasure their chief aim in life.

5. The Epicureans were disciples of Epicurus, who believed pleasure to be the highest good in life.

6. Some may have reasoned that the Epicureans’ apparently high ethics made them safe associates for Christians.

7. The Epicureans were followers of the Greek philosopher Epicurus, who lived from 341 to 270 B.C.E.

8. Vaid classifies chronic Absentees into five categories viz.: (i) Entrepreneurs (ii) Status seekers (iii) Epicureans (iv) Family-oriented, and (v) The Sick and die Old.

9. Or he may have had in mind the beliefs of the Epicureans, who disdained any hope of a life after death and believed that fleshly pleasure was the chief good in life.

10. The Epicureans and Stoics for the most part rated him as a talkative lounger in the agora and either Berated him with ridicule upon the Hill of Ares or waved him aside (Acts 17:16-32)

11. On the other hand, the intellectual circle of the day was abuzz not only with the philosophical ideas of Plato and Aristotle but also with those of the newer schools, such as the Epicureans and the Stoics.

12. The stone seats of the Areopagus lay open to the sky; in the court stood Epicureans, Stoics, etc.; around them spread the city, full of idolaters and their temples; and little south-east rose the steep height of the Acropolis, on whose level summit were crowded more and richer idolatrous structures than on any other equal space in the world.