Title: Heraclitus of Ephesus (http://sailturkey.com/panoramas/ephesus/)
1Heraclitus of Ephesus(http//sailturkey.com/panor
amas/ephesus/)
- 540-480
- Studied with Milesians
- Wrote philosophical poetry, insights
- Reflected on physics, language, ethics,
self-knowledge, society
2 Chronology600-530? Milesian school
of philosophy530 Persians begin conquest of
Ionia540-480 Life of Heraclitus530-440 Life of
Parmenides490-479 Persian Wars (Greek
victory)479-405 Athenian Empire in
Aegean470s-50s Anaxagoras, Parmenides in
Athens445-30 Protagoras in Athens433-399
Socrates philosophical mission
3(No Transcript)
4Temple of Artemis at Ephesus
5Heraclitean Doctrines
- Logos (language, logic, truth)
- Harmony-in-tension
- Fire
- Relativity
- Flux
- Self-Knowledge
- Law
6Logos
- Listening not to me, but to the Logos, it is wise
to agree all things are one. - This Logos holds always but humans prove unable
to grasp it. - The Lord whose oracle is at Delphi neither speaks
nor conceals, but gives a sign
7Harmony-in-tension
- They do not understand how, at variance with
itself, it agrees with itself, a
backwards-turning attunement. - Together whole and divided, accordant and
discordant, coming together in one, dividing into
all things. - God is day and night, winter and summer, war and
peace, satiety and hunger.
8Fire
- Fire lives the death of earth and air the death
of fire, water lives the death of air, earth that
of water. - This cosmos, the same for all, none of the gods
nor humans has made, but it was always and is and
shall be an ever-living fire being kindled in
measures and extinguished in measures. - All things are an exchange for fire
9Two Fragments
- This kosmos, the same for all, none of the gods
nor humans has made, but it was always and is and
shall be an ever-living fire being kindled in
measures and extinguished in measures. - To God all things are beautiful and just and
good but humans have supposed some unjust and
other just.
10Rituals of Eros and Thanatos
- Dionysian and Orphic rituals a God who dies and
is reborn - Expressed in drunken processions, music and
(sometimes) orgies - Heraclitus realizes these have a spiritual aspect
11Dionysus
If it were not for Dionysus that they hold
processions and sing hymns to the shameful parts
(phalli), it would be shameful but Hades and
Dionysus are the same, in whose honor they go mad
and celebrate the Bacchic rites.
12 The wise is one alone willing and unwilling to
be called Zeus.
13Relativity
- The suns breadth is the length of a human
foot. - The sea is the purest to fishes and most
polluted water to humans - The most beautiful ape is ugly to a human the
wisest human is an ape to a god
14Panta rei the Doctrine of Flux
- Upon those who step into the same rivers,
different and different waters flow. - It is not possible to step twice into the same
river. - We step and do not step into the same rivers. We
are and we are not.
15- Becoming Being
- (ta panta, all things processes)
- / \
- Being Fire/energy
- (arche, origin or governing-principle)
16Flux
- Of matter earth-air-water-fire
- Of individuals life and death
- Of social or natural laws
- Of concepts (linguistic change)
17Cratylus the Heraclitean
- You cannot step into the same river even once.
- Nouns are all a lie and should be replaced by
gerunds. A tree is not a thing it is a
treeing. - Things seem to be, but in reality, they are all
in motion, on fire.
18Ship of Theseus
- Theseus, sailing ship A to Crete, replaces plank
by plank of his ship. - Scavenger, following in ship B, picks them from
the sea and replaces all the parts of his own
ship, before they make land. - Is Theseus still sailing the same ship?
- Or is Scavenger now sailing ship A?
19Self-Knowledge
- It belongs to all people to know themselves and
to think rightly. - I searched myself.
- The soul has a self-increasing logos.
20Ethics
- A man when drunk is led by a boy.
- Whatever anger wants it buys at the cost of soul.
- Character is fate.
21Law (Nomos)
- The people must fight for the law as for the city
wall.
22Heraclitean Frame of Meaning
- Nature Logos changing framework of physical
intellectual world - But Nature loves to hide
- Humans must discover and re-discover the Logos
to overcome delusion
23Dynamic Tension
- Openness to Physis --
- to the Logos, to contingency, to Fire
- /
- vs.
- /
- Concealedness of everyday life
- in the technenomosmythos world of the polis
- Nature loves to hide.
24Man and Nature
- Nature is not resource for technology or
intellectual appropriate - Nature E-mergence, the encompassing reality in
which human-being dwells - We are in and of Nature, and Nature is in us
- The Heraclitean Sage is at one with Nature, but
this must be ever-recovered through creative
logos, since even words become reified
25Science and Alienation
- Heraclitean sage is cognitively alienated from
conventional social reality - But H-sage discovers Fusis, Logos, i.e.
discovers alienation from Reality associated
with conventional belief - Is it possible to embrace the aesthetic vision
of Nature/Life that Heraclitus teaches?
26- The aeon (unending time) is a child playing,
playing checkers the kingdom belongs to a child. - --Heraclitus (Curd 109)
27Aesthetic View of Life
- Just as the child and the artist play, the
eternally living fire plays, builds up and
destroys, in innocence--and this is the game the
Aeon (God, Nature, Matter) plays with himself. - Who will demand from such a philosophy a moral
vindication of life? Heraclitus is not compelled
to prove that this is the best of all possible
worlds, as if he were caught between Christian
piety and science it is enough for Heraclitus,
in his sublime Greek naivete, that the world is
the beautiful, innocent play of the Aeon. - It is not for the mere human to judge this
contest, this play it is for him to share in it,
and to take sides as a joyful warrior, gamesman,
and creator. -
- --Nietzsche, Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the
Greeks