Philodemus was a prominent Epicurean philosopher of the first century B.C. who wrote on central philosophical questions like the fear of death and the nature of happiness.
The author was probably an Epicurean philosopher, possibly, according to Grenfell and Hunt, Epicurus himself.
Carneiscus, was an Epicurean philosopher, and disciple of Epicurus, who lived c. 300 BC.
Epicurean philosophers were thrown out of Rome either in 173 or in 154 B.C. (Athen. 12.547a).
Catius, an Epicurean philosopher, thought to have been an Insubrian Gaul; he may have been a freedman of the gens.
Protarchus the Epicurean philosopher, the mentor of Demetrius Lacon, was a native of Bargylia.
Most contained the writings of Philodemus, an Epicurean philosopher of the first century B.C.
Whether they were Epicurean philosophers themselves is uncertain.
Rabirius, an Epicurean philosopher.
It is not true, as the ancient Epicurean philosophers taught, that human beings only invent gods out of ignorance and fear.