Title: ????????Pre-Socratic%20philosophy
1???????
2- ????????Pre-Socratic philosophy
- ????????????????????????
- Aristotle ???????
3Milesian School Eleatic School Pythagorean Pluralist School Atomist School of Pluralists
Thales 624-546
Anaximander 610-546
Solon 580-570 Anaximenes 585-525 Xenophanes 580-480 Pythagoras 580-500
Cleisthenes Parmenides 539-469 Heraclitus 540-475 520 in Crotona established a secret religious society
Zeno 490-430 Empedocles 493-433
Melissus 480-400 Anaxagoras 500-438 Leucippus ca.450
Democritus 460-370
460-430 Sophists Gorgias 483-375 Cratylus Protagoras 484-411
Socrates 469-399
4(No Transcript)
5?????Milesian School, School of Miletus
- ???(Milet, Miletus)?????? Ionia??,??????????????(?
?)? ??????????(????????????)? - ?????
- Thales (624-546 BC)
- Anaximander (610-547 BC)
- Anaximenes (585-525 BC)
6Thales
- 624-546 BC
- water is substance
7??
- ?????????,?????????
- ???????,????Iranians
- ??????????
- ??????
8????(Seven Sages )
- Solon of Athens "Nothing in excess"
- ?????????
- Chilon of Sparta "Know thyself"
- ?????????????
- Thales of Miletus "To bring surety brings
ruin" - ???? Cf.
Edmund Burke (1729-17977) - Bias of Priene "Too many workers spoil the
work" - ??????????(
vs.????? ) - Cleobulus of Lindos "Moderation is impeccable"
- ????
- Pittacus of Mytilene "Know thine opportunity"
-
????????? - Periander of Corinth Forethought in all
things -
??????????
9Thales???
- Of all things that are, the most ancient is God,
for he is uncreated. (??????????) - The most beautiful is the universe, for it is
God's. - The greatest is space, for it holds all things.
- The swiftest is mind, for it speeds everywhere.
- The strongest, necessity, for it masters all.
- The wisest, time, for it brings everything to
light.
10water is substance
- Thales????????????
- Thales ??,???????????????????????
- Thales???from which is everything that exists
and from which it first becomes and into which it
is rendered at last, its substance remaining
under it, but transforming in qualities, that is
the element and principle of things that are. - For it is necessary that there be some nature,
either one or more than one, from which become
the other things of the object being saved...
Thales the founder of this type of philosophy
says that it is water. - Thales drew his conclusion from seeing moist
substance turn into air, slime and earth. It
seems clear that Thales viewed the Earth as
solidifying from the water on which it floated
and which surrounded Ocean
11Anaximander
- 610-547 BC
- Apeiron is substance
12- Thales??????
- ???????
- ??????????
13- Anaximander argues that water cannot embrace all
of the opposites found in nature for example,
water can only be wet, never dry and therefore
cannot be the one primary substance nor could
any of the other candidates. - He postulated the apeiron (limitless) as a
substance that, although not directly perceptible
to us, could explain the opposites he saw around
him.
14- According to him, the Universe originates in the
separation of opposites in the primordial
(???)matter. It embraces the opposites of hot and
cold, wet and dry, and directs the movement of
things an entire host of shapes and differences
then grow - (????????????????)
15- Anaximander maintains that all dying things are
returning to the element from which they came
(apeiron). - The one surviving fragment of Anaximanders
writing deals with this matter - Whence things have their origin, Thence also
their destruction happens, According to
necessity For they give to each other justice
and recompense(??)for their injustice In
conformity with the ordinance of
Time.????,?????????,?????
16Anaximenes
- 585-525 BC
- Aer is substance
17- He held that the air, with its variety of
contents, its universal presence, its vague
associations in popular fancy with the phenomena
of life and growth, is the source of all that
exists. - Everything is air at different degrees of
density, and under the influence of heat, which
expands, and of cold, which contracts its volume,
it gives rise to the several phases of existence.
The process is gradual, and takes place in two
directions, as heat or cold predominates. In this
way was formed a broad disk of earth, floating on
the circumambient air.
18- Similar condensations produced the sun and stars
and the flaming state of these bodies is due to
the velocity of their motions. He states - Just as our soul, being air, holds us
together(?????), so do breath and air encompass
the whole world." - It was actually "aer" which he believed to be the
common characteristic between all things. "Aer"
is the Greek word for a mist rather than just
pure air. - ??Thales ?Anaximanders
19Milesian School ???
- The theoretical human has become a reality. The
way of thinking has in its basic form moved away
from the mythological thinking (or mythos) and
into the domain of the theoretical thinking (or
logos). - From now on it is about explaining the universal
and the general. Everything in the universe can
now be approached by the thoughts of humans. - ????/??????
20??????????????
- ???
- Eleatic School??-?-??
- Heraclitus???-?-??
- ?-????
- Pythagorean????
- Pluralist School?
- Atomist School of Pluralists?
21Eleatic School???Xenophanes
- 570 480 BC (??Anaximenes??)
- ????Ionia?,?????,?Elea???
- ??,??????????????
22????? Xenophanes
- there actually exists a truth of reality, but
that humans as mortals are unable to know
it.(????,????) Therefore, it is possible to act
only on the basis of working hypotheses - we may
act as if we knew the truth, as long as we know
that this is extremely unlikely. - This aspect of Xenophanes was brought out again
by the late Sir Karl Popper and is a basis of
Critical rationalism.
23 Xenophanes
- Before Xenophanes, the method of the natural
philosophers was inductive. That is, their ideas
were based on observations of the world. And,
their proofs were empirical and direct. However,
Xenophanes pointed out that these sorts of ideas
were relative. That is, different people had
different perceptions of the world therefore,
they had different ideas of the world. Their
ideas about the world may be true, but they could
not know it. So, according to Xenophanes, we
cannot be sure that ideas about the world that
are inductively derived are true. That is, we
cannot be sure that ideas about the world that
are based on our perceptions of the world are
true. This posed a problem for the presocratics.
24Xenophanes
- Heraclitus??? He looked at what we can all agree
to, that all is change. Inductively, if we look
at the world, everything changes. - But, this is still induction, based on our
perceptions of the world. - Parmemides ???the only truth is that that is
deductively determined. Therefore, inductive
"truths" are only opinions.
25?????? Xenophanes
- The Ethiops say that their gods are flat-nosed
and black,While the Thracians say that theirs
have blue eyes and red hair.Yet if cattle or
horses or lions had hands and could draw,And
could sculpture like men, then the horses would
draw their godsLike horses, and cattle like
cattle and each they would shapeBodies of gods
in the likeness, each kind, of their own
26Xenophanes
- there was only one god -- namely, the world. God
is one incorporeal(????) eternal being, and, like
the universe, spherical in form(??) that he is
of the same nature with the universe,
comprehending all things within himself is
intelligent, and pervades all things
(???Pan-theism), but bears no resemblance to
human nature either in body or mind.
27- There is no evidence that Xenophanes regarded
this 'god' with any religious feeling, and all we
are told about him (or rather about it) is purely
negative. He is quite unlike a man, and has no
special organs of sense, but 'sees all over,
thinks all over, hears all over' (fr. 24).
Further, he does not go about from place to place
(fr. 26), but does everything 'without toil (fr.
25).
28Xenophanes
- if there had ever been a time when nothing
existed, nothing could ever have existed.
Whatever is, always has been from eternity,
without deriving its existence from any prior
principles. - Nature, he believed, is one and without limit
that what is one is similar in all its parts,
else it would be many that the one infinite,
eternal, and homogeneous universe is immutable
and incapable of change.
29Eleatic School??? Parmenides
- 539-469 BC
- ??Elea??
- On Nature?150????aletheia ? doxa
30? vs. ??
- there are two ways of inquiry that it is, that
it is not. He said that the latter argument is
never feasible because nothing can not be - For never shall this prevail, that things that
are not are.
31- For this view, that That Which Is Not exists, can
never predominate. You must debar your thought
from this way of search, nor let ordinary
experience in its variety force you along this
way, (namely, that of allowing) the eye,
sightless as it is, and the ear, full of sound,
and the tongue, to rule but (you must) judge by
means of the Reason (Logos) the much-contested
proof which is expounded by me.
32Zeno of Elea
- ca. 490BC-430BC?
- SOPHIST???
33Zenos Paradox
- Achilles and the tortoise
- "You can never catch up.
- In a race, the quickest runner can never overtake
the slowest, since the pursuer must first reach
the point whence the pursued started, so that the
slower must always hold a lead - The dichotomy paradox
- "You cannot even start.
- That which is in locomotion must arrive at the
half-way stage before it arrives at the goal. - The arrow paradox
- "You cannot even move.
- If everything when it occupies an equal space is
at rest, and if that which is in locomotion is
always occupying such a space at any moment, the
flying arrow is therefore motionless.
34Heraclitus??
- 540-475BC
- Ephesus in Ionia
- The weeping philosopher
35???
- Democritus had gone insane and was laughing at
everything obsessively, including weddings and
funerals. Hippocrates found him surrounded by
books and the bodies of animals which he had
dissected to examine their bile. He said he was
investigating the causes of insanity. On being
questioned as to why he found the matters at
which he laughed comical, he replied with the
vanity argument, that all is "folly and baseness"
and a waste of time, which is essentially what
Heraclitus had said. Hippocrates gave him a
"passing" on mental health and went away. - ?????
36- CHANGE is real, and stability illusory
- the nature of everything is change itself
37??
- Everything flows and nothing is left (unchanged),
orEverything flows and nothing stands still,
orAll things are in motion and nothing remains
still. - By cosmic rule, as day yields night, so winter
summer, war peace, plenty famine. All things
change. Air penetrates the lump of myrrh, until
the joining bodies die and rise again in smoke
called incense."
38??
- Men do not know how that which is drawn in
different directions harmonises with itself. The
harmonious structure of the world depends upon
opposite tension like that of the bow (?) and the
lyre(?)." - "This universe, which is the same for all, has
not been made by any god or man, but it always
has been, is, and will be an ever-living fire,
kindling itself by regular measures and going out
by regular measures
39?????
- "??taµ??? t??? a?t??? ?µßa???µ?? te ?a? ???
?µßa???µe?, e?µ?? te ?a? ??? e?µe?.""We both
step and do not step in the same rivers. We are
and are not. - OrNo man ever steps in the same river twice,
for it is not the same river and he is not the
same man .
40Logos
- The idea of the logos (?)is also credited to him,
as he proclaims that everything originates out of
the logos. Further, Heraclitus said "I am as I am
not", and "He who hears not me but the logos will
say All is one." - ???????????
41Pythagoreanism
- Pythagoras of Samos
- Between 580 and 572 BC between 500-490 BC
- Ionia
- 520 in Crotona established a secret religious
society
42- ?? Pyth-ian?Delphi?Apollo??, agor-?????, "He
spoke (agor-) the truth no less than did the
Pythian (Pyth-)." - ??????,??????????????
- Pythagorean theorem a2b2c2
- ??????????,????????????
43- number is the ruler of forms and ideas and the
cause of gods and demons. - Pythagoras and his students believed that
everything was related to mathematics and that
numbers were the ultimate reality and, through
mathematics, everything could be predicted and
measured in rhythmic patterns or cycles.
44- Knowledge of the essence of being can be found in
the form of numbers. If this is taken a step
further, one can say that because mathematics is
an unseen essence, the essence of being is an
unseen characteristic that can be encountered by
the study of mathematics.
45- One of Pythagoras' beliefs was that the essence
of being is number. Thus, being relies on
stability of all things that create the universe.
- Things like health relied on a stable proportion
of elements too much or too little of one thing
causes an imbalance that makes a being unhealthy.
46- ????the soul were located in the brain and not
the heart. He himself claimed to have lived four
lives that he could remember in detail, and heard
the cry of his dead friend in the bark of a dog. - ?????????(??)???
47- ????????,???????,??????????????
- ?????????????
- ?????,?????
- ?????,??????????
- ????????
- ??????,????????(???? vs.????)
- ???????,????????
- ????????
- ???????????,???????????
- ?????,??????????
- ????????????
- ?????????
- ????????????
48Pluralist SchoolEmpedocles
- 493-433 BC
- citizen of Agrigentum, a Greek colony in Sicily
49- the origin of the cosmogenic theory of the four
classical elements - all matter is made up of four elements water,
earth, air and fire. Empedocles called these the
four "roots" the term "element" (st???e???) - Apart from these four roots, Empedocles
postulated something called Love (f???a) to
explain the attraction of different forms of
matter, and of something called Strife (?e????)
to account for their separation - Love and Strife explain their variation and
harmony
50Pluralist SchoolAnaxagoras
51- he may have been a soldier of the Persian army
when Clazomenae was suppressed during the Ionia
Revolt - ??????Pericles??
- He attempted to give a scientific account of
eclipse, meteors, rainbows and the sun, which he
described as a mass of blazing metal, larger than
the Peloponnese. The heavenly bodies, he
asserted, were masses of stone torn from the
earth and ignited by rapid rotation. However,
these theories brought him into collision with
the popular faith Anaxagoras' views on such
things as heavenly bodies were considered
"dangerous." - About 450 Anaxagoras was arrested by Pericles'
political opponents on a charge of contravening
the established religion (some say the charge was
one of Medism). It took Pericles' power of
persuasion to secure his release. Even so he was
forced to retire from Athens to Lampsacus in
Ionia (c. 434-433 BC).
52- All things have existed from the beginning. But
originally they existed in infinitesimally small
fragments of themselves, endless in number and
inextricably combined. - All things existed in this mass, but in a
confused and indistinguishable form. There were
the seeds (spermata) or miniatures of corn and
flesh and gold in the primitive mixture but
these parts, of like nature with their wholes had
to be eliminated from the complex mass before
they could receive a definite name and character.
- Mind arranged the segregation of like from
unlike. This peculiar thing, called Mind (Nous),
was no less illimitable than the chaotic mass,
but, unlike the logos of Heraclitus, it stood
pure and independent (mounos ef eoutou), a thing
of finer texture, alike in all its manifestations
and everywhere the same. This subtle agent,
possessed of all knowledge and power, is
especially seen ruling in all the forms of life.
53- Mind causes motion. It rotated the primitive
mixture, starting in one corner or point, and
gradually extended until it gave distinctness and
reality to the aggregates of like parts, working
something like a centrifuge, and eventually
creating the known cosmos. But even after it had
done its best, the original intermixture of
things was not wholly overcome. No one thing in
the world is ever abruptly separated, as by the
blow of an axe, from the rest of things.
54from original chaos to present arrangements
- Anaxagoras proceeded to give some account of the
stages in the process. The division into cold
mist and warm ether first broke the spell of
confusion. With increasing cold, the former gave
rise to water, earth and stones. The seeds of
life which continued floating in the air were
carried down with the rains and produced
vegetation. Animals, including man, sprang from
the warm and moist clay. - If these things be so, then the evidence of the
senses must be held in slight esteem. We seem to
see things coming into being and passing from it
but reflection tells us that decease and growth
only mean a new aggregation (sugkrisis) and
disruption (diakrisis). (?????)Thus Anaxagoras
distrusted the senses, and gave the preference to
the conclusions of reflection.
55??
- Anaxagoras marked a turning-point in the history
of philosophy. With him speculation passes from
the colonies of Greece to settle at Athens. By
the theory of minute constituents of things, and
his emphasis on mechanical processes in the
formation of order, he paved the way for the
atomic theory. - However, his enunciation of the order that comes
from an intelligent mind suggested the theory
that nature is the work of design.
56Atomist School of PluralistsLeucippus
- ??Empedocles?Anaxagoras??,Abdera
- Nothing happens at random (maten), but everything
from reason (ek logou) and by necessity.
57Atomist School of PluralistsDemocritus
- 460-360 BC
- Abdera in Thrace
- Atoma
- 'he prefers to discover a causality rather than
become a king of Persia'.
58????
- Of knowledge there are two forms, one legitimate,
one bastard. To the bastard belong all this
group sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch. The
other is legitimate and separate from that. - When the bastard can no longer see any smaller,
or hear, or smell, or taste, or perceive by
touch, but finer matters have to be examined,
then comes the legitimate, since it has a finer
organ of perception. (Fr. 11 Sextus, Adv. Math.
VII, 138). - But we in actuality grasp nothing for certain,
but what shifts in accordance with the condition
of the body and of the things (atoms) which enter
it and press upon it. (Fr. 9 Sextus Adv. Math.
VII 136).
59??
- different tastes were a result of differently
shaped atoms in contact with the tongue. - Smells and sounds could be explained similarly.
Vision works by the eye receiving "images" or
"effluences" of bodies that are emanated. - Sweet exists by convention, bitter by convention,
color by convention but in reality atoms and the
void alone exist. - senses could not provide a direct or certain
knowledge of the world. In his words, "It is
necessary to realize that by this principle man
is cut off from the real."
60??
- Though intelligence is allowed to explain the
organization of the world, according to
Democritus, he does give place for the existence
of a soul, which he contends is composed of
exceedingly fine and spherical atoma. - He holds that, "spherical atoma move because it
is their nature never to be still, and that as
they move they draw the whole body along with
them, and set it in motion." - In this way, he viewed soul-atoma as being
similar to fire-atoma small, spherical, capable
of penetrating solid bodies and good examples of
spontaneous motion.
61Sophists
- Kleisthenes???(509-507)???????????,???????????
- ?????Pericles?????(460-430)???????????????????
- ???????????(?????????)
- ??????????
62?? vs.????
- 1. ????????????
-
- 2. ?????????????
- ??????????????????????????????????????????????
- Sophist ????????????????
- ?????????,??????
63Sophist??Protagoras
- 484-411 BC
- ??????ATHEN
- Man is the measure of all things
64- Man is the measure of all things of things which
are, that they are, and of things which are not,
that they are not (???????????,?????? ) - Man????
- Concerning the gods, I have no means of knowing
whether they exist or not or of what sort they
may be, because of the obscurity of the subject,
and the brevity of human life
65Gorgias
66Nihilistic arguments
- Nothing exists
- Even if something exists, nothing can be known
about it and - Even if something can be known about it,
knowledge about it can't be communicated to
others. - der erste, dass nichts ist der zweite, dass,
auch wenn ist, es dem Menschen nicht erfassbar
ist, und drittens, dass, auch wenn es erfassbar
ist, nicht dem anderen mitteilbar und erklärbar
ist.
67Socrates
- 484-411 BC
- Sophist or philosopher
- virtue is Knowledge
68- Xenopon Plato???
- ???(Chaerephon)?Delphi???????????????????????????
???????????????????????????????????????????????
???????????,????????????,???????????,????????????
??????????????????????(he was wise only insofar
as "that what I don't know, I don't think I
know." )?
69- ???????????????????????????????,????????????
- ??????????,?????????????????????????????,?????????
??????,??????????,??????????? - ????????????,???????????,????????????????,????????
?????????????????????????????????????,????????????
???????????????????????????????,??????????????????
??
70- MethodeDialectics?????
- ???(µa?a) ??
- ??????????Virtue is knowledge ??,????????
- ??????,?????????,??????????????????,?????????????
?? - ???????????????????????????????,??????,???????
71??
- Aristippus of Cyrene(???????)???Protagras,????(Hed
onism)?I own, Im not owned. ??Theodorus,
Annikeris, Hegesias, Euemerus__????? - Antistenes of Athen, ?Cynic school
(?Kynosarges??????),??Diogenes of
Sinope??????????,???????__??????(????)__?????? - Euclid of Megara?Socrtaes Eleatic school
(Parmenides)??????????????Zeno???????????????????