The First Philosophers of Greece, Том 3Arthur Fairbanks K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, Limited, 1898 - 300 страници This book does a fantastic job of giving histories of the first philosophers of Greece. The reader is given insight into the achievements and life of each early philosopher, from Thales in the seventh century B.C. to Anaxagoras in the fifth century B.C.? |
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Страница 3
... called it Styx ; for that which is most ancient is most highly esteemed , and that which is most highly esteemed is an object to swear by . Whether there is any such ancient and early opinion concerning nature would be an obscure ques ...
... called it Styx ; for that which is most ancient is most highly esteemed , and that which is most highly esteemed is an object to swear by . Whether there is any such ancient and early opinion concerning nature would be an obscure ques ...
Страница 5
... called water an element and a first principle . i . 3 ; 276. Thales the Milesian declared that the first principle of things is water . [ This man seems to have been the first philo- sopher , and the Ionic school derived its name from ...
... called water an element and a first principle . i . 3 ; 276. Thales the Milesian declared that the first principle of things is water . [ This man seems to have been the first philo- sopher , and the Ionic school derived its name from ...
Страница 6
... called the arctic zone , and is always visible , the next is the summer solstice , the next is the equinoctial , the next the winter solstice , and the next the antarctic , which is invisible . And the ecliptic in the three middle ones ...
... called the arctic zone , and is always visible , the next is the summer solstice , the next is the equinoctial , the next the winter solstice , and the next the antarctic , which is invisible . And the ecliptic in the three middle ones ...
Страница 12
... called elements , but the infinite is something of a different nature , from which came all the heavens and the worlds in them ; and from what source things arise , to that they return of necessity when they are destroyed ; for he says ...
... called elements , but the infinite is something of a different nature , from which came all the heavens and the worlds in them ; and from what source things arise , to that they return of necessity when they are destroyed ; for he says ...
Страница 18
... called it air , thinking that air had a sufficient adaptability to change . Simpl . Phys . 32 r 149 , 32. Of this one writer alone , Theophrastos , in his account of the Physicists , uses the words μávwois and Túкvwois of texture . The ...
... called it air , thinking that air had a sufficient adaptability to change . Simpl . Phys . 32 r 149 , 32. Of this one writer alone , Theophrastos , in his account of the Physicists , uses the words μávwois and Túкvwois of texture . The ...
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Страница 44 - In the same rivers we step and we do not step.; we are and we are not.
Страница 31 - All things are exchanged for fire, and fire for all things ; as wares are exchanged for gold, and gold for wares.
Страница 29 - Much learning does not teach one to have understanding ; else it would have taught Hesiod, and Pythagoras, and again Xenophanes, and Hekataios.
Страница 67 - Yes, and if oxen and horses or lions had hands, and could paint with their hands and produce works of art as men do, horses would paint the forms of the gods like horses, and oxen like oxen, and make their bodies in the image of their several kinds.
Страница 237 - TEANSLATION. 1. All things were together, infinite both in number and in smallness ; for the small also was infinite. And when they were all together, nothing was clear and distinct because of their smallness ; for air and aether comprehended all things, both being infinite ; for these are present in everything, and are greatest both as to number and as to greatness.
Страница 33 - God is day and night, winter and summer, war and peace, satiety and hunger...
Страница 29 - This order, the same for all things, no one of gods or men has made, but it always was, and is, and ever shall be, an ever-living fire, kindling according to fixed measure, and extinguished according to fixed measure.
Страница 41 - For to souls it is death to become water, and for water it is death to become earth ; but water is formed from earth, and from water, soul.
Страница 93 - ... eye careless, thine ear and thy tongue overpowered by noise; but do thou weigh the much contested refutation of their words, which I have uttered. There is left but this single path to tell thee of: namely, that being is. And on this path there are many proofs that being is without beginning and indestructible; it is universal, existing alone, immovable and without end; nor ever was it nor will it be, since it now is, all together, one, and continuous.
Страница 82 - It [ie being] always abides in the same place, not moved at all, nor is it fitting that it should move from one place to another.