Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Heraclitus (ca. 500 BCE)
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Heraclitus was a Presocratic philosopher in Ephesus, a Greek city in Ionia, ruled at the time by Persia. Little is known about his life. He reputedly wrote a treatise entitled “On Nature” and deposited it in the temple of Artemis, but no part of that text has survived. All we have are “fragments,” quotations from Heraclitus found in other ancient texts. It is difficult, therefore, to determine exactly what he thought. Like modern natural scientists Heraclitus appears to have thought that everything is constantly in motion, but that there is an underlying intelligible order. Like modern social scientists Heraclitus also raised questions about the grounds and validity of human judgments of right and wrong: “To God, all things are beautiful, good and just; but men have assumed some things to be unjust, others just.”
Title: Heraclitus (ca. 500 BCE)
Description:
Abstract
Heraclitus was a Presocratic philosopher in Ephesus, a Greek city in Ionia, ruled at the time by Persia.
Little is known about his life.
He reputedly wrote a treatise entitled “On Nature” and deposited it in the temple of Artemis, but no part of that text has survived.
All we have are “fragments,” quotations from Heraclitus found in other ancient texts.
It is difficult, therefore, to determine exactly what he thought.
Like modern natural scientists Heraclitus appears to have thought that everything is constantly in motion, but that there is an underlying intelligible order.
Like modern social scientists Heraclitus also raised questions about the grounds and validity of human judgments of right and wrong: “To God, all things are beautiful, good and just; but men have assumed some things to be unjust, others just.
”.
Related Results
Olearius on Atomism and Theism in Heraclitus: A Presocratic in late 17th century Germany
Olearius on Atomism and Theism in Heraclitus: A Presocratic in late 17th century Germany
AbstractIn a 1697 monograph, Gottfried Olearius (1672–1715) endeavours to establish Heraclitus as an important new witness for a general thesis upheld by Ralph Cudworth in 1678. Ac...
Fighting Fire with Fire: Thinking Φύσις at the Inception
Fighting Fire with Fire: Thinking Φύσις at the Inception
Abstract
This essay explores the role of flame in Heidegger’s 1943–44 lectures on Heraclitus (GA 55). Specifically, I trace a tension that unfolds within the text between two flame...
Kaji eksperimen pengaruh hardening dan tempering terhadap kekuatan tarik dan kekerasan pada baja karbon sedang
Kaji eksperimen pengaruh hardening dan tempering terhadap kekuatan tarik dan kekerasan pada baja karbon sedang
This study aims to determine the effect of hardening and tempering on tensile strength (ASTM E 8) and hardness (Rockwell) applied to medium carbon steel. The heat treatment process...
Cleopatra VII, 69–30 BCE
Cleopatra VII, 69–30 BCE
Cleopatra VII (69–30 bce), “Thea Philopator” (“father-loving goddess”), “Thea Neotera” (“the younger goddess”), and Philopatris (“loving her country”), ruler of Egypt (52–30 bce), ...
Pendapatan Masyarakat pada Komponen Silvopasture dan Agrisilvikultur Kecamatan Parangloe Kabupaten gowa
Pendapatan Masyarakat pada Komponen Silvopasture dan Agrisilvikultur Kecamatan Parangloe Kabupaten gowa
Pendapatan Masyarakat pada Komponen Silvopasture dan Agrisilvikultur Kecamatan Parangloe Kabupaten gowaThe Community Revenue In Silvopasture Components and Agrisilvikulture Parangl...
Cato the Younger
Cato the Younger
Marcus Porcius Cato the Younger (95–46 bce), also identified as Uticensis from the place of his death, was a Roman politician in the final decades of the Republic. Orphaned as a yo...
Ancient Egyptian Warfare (3000 BCE–332 BCE)
Ancient Egyptian Warfare (3000 BCE–332 BCE)
The culture of Egyptian history spans millennia. Hence, we can see major changes (developments, innovations, borrowings from abroad) as well as the persistence of organizational st...

