We'll they're not. The Romans took a more... regal(?) approach to their theological views. The Greeks felt like the gods were directly involved in a lot of things that happened, as if the conflict between gods was something that played out in the face of man. The Romans saw them as more of a static and distant force.
Philosophically, the Romans were far more violent, efficient, brutal, and anti-Democratic than Athens, and many Greeks generally.
And you think that Rome's philosophical and theological views weren't practically copies of Ancient Greece's?
We'll they're not. The Romans took a more... regal(?) approach to their theological views. The Greeks felt like the gods were directly involved in a lot of things that happened, as if the conflict between gods was something that played out in the face of man. The Romans saw them as more of a static and distant force.
Philosophically, the Romans were far more violent, efficient, brutal, and anti-Democratic than Athens, and many Greeks generally.