
What was Seneca's philosophy?
Despite his reputation as a philosopher, Seneca was also a prolific writer of drama. His Apocolocyntosis and his lost speeches are a reminder of his literary talent. Seneca was a Stoic, but he was also open to ideas from other philosophies. He often felt free to disagree with earlier Stoics, as he did in Letter 33, where he refers to Stoicism as 'ours' and is willing to agree with certain Peripatetic and Epicurean attacks on the philosophy.

