The First Philosophers of Greece, Том 3Arthur Fairbanks K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, Limited, 1898 - 300 страници |
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... thinkers in the history of Greek thought , and the importance of a knowledge of their work for all who wish to understand Plato and Aristotle . Since Zeller's monumental work , several writers ( e.g. Benn , Greek Philosophers , vol . i ...
... thinkers in the history of Greek thought , and the importance of a knowledge of their work for all who wish to understand Plato and Aristotle . Since Zeller's monumental work , several writers ( e.g. Benn , Greek Philosophers , vol . i ...
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... thinkers in Plato and Aristotle , and in the Greek doxographists as col- lected by Diels , in order that the student of early Greek thought might have before him in compact form practi- cally all the materials on which the history of ...
... thinkers in Plato and Aristotle , and in the Greek doxographists as col- lected by Diels , in order that the student of early Greek thought might have before him in compact form practi- cally all the materials on which the history of ...
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... thinker and was regarded as the founder of Greek philosophy because he discarded mythical explanations of things , and asserted that a physical element , water , was the first principle of all things . There are various stories of his ...
... thinker and was regarded as the founder of Greek philosophy because he discarded mythical explanations of things , and asserted that a physical element , water , was the first principle of all things . There are various stories of his ...
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... thinker to regard water as the first principle of all things . For from this all things come , and to it they all return . Aet . Plac . i . 2 ; Dox . 275. Thales of Miletos regards the first principle and the elements as the same thing ...
... thinker to regard water as the first principle of all things . For from this all things come , and to it they all return . Aet . Plac . i . 2 ; Dox . 275. Thales of Miletos regards the first principle and the elements as the same thing ...
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... thinker to call the underlying substance the first principle . And the opposites are heat and cold , dry and moist , and the rest . Phys . iii . 5 ; 204 b 22. But it is not possible that infinite matter is one and simple ; either , as ...
... thinker to call the underlying substance the first principle . And the opposites are heat and cold , dry and moist , and the rest . Phys . iii . 5 ; 204 b 22. But it is not possible that infinite matter is one and simple ; either , as ...
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Страница 31 - In his opinion want is the process of arrangement, and satiety the process of conflagration. \ . 25. Fire lives in the death of earth, and air lives in the death of fire ; water lives in the death of air, and earth in that of water.
Страница 33 - Herakleitos, bring all things.' 35. Hesiod is the teacher of most men ; they suppose that his knowledge was very extensive, when in fact he did not know night and day, for they are one. 36. God is day and night, winter and summer, war and peace, satiety and hunger...
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 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 55 - Monac. 195, p. 282. 129. (Herakleitos fittingly called religious rites) cures (for the soul). 130. They purify themselves by defiling themselves with blood, as if one who had stepped into the mud were to wash it off with mud. If any one of men should observe him doing so, he would think he was insane. And to these images they pray, just as if one -were to converse with men's houses, for they know not what gods and heroes are.
Страница 237 - TRANSLATION. 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.