Natural Philosophy

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Protagoras

due to his claims, 1) all his books were burned 2) he was arrested for impiety/heresy 3) he had to flee Athens

Anaximenes

earth is a disc; like a lid on top of a pot of boiling water; the steam holds up a concave earth

immutable

existence is ? when it does not change; Parmenides' beliefs

transitory

existence is ? when it is constantly changing; Heraclitus believed in this

Parmenides

existence is immutable; something cannot come from nothing; cosmos has always existed, no beginning or end, free will does not exist

chaos

flux, change, disorder; opposite of cosmos

descriptive

describing something afterwards; opposite of prescriptive

reason

for Xenophanes, the human purpose was to ?

Protagoras

foreshadowed Socrates

Pythagoras

found number pi; it was irrational, and he didn't want the secret getting out, so he drowned the person who found it

Gorgias

had the famous argument that nothing exists; founder; had a positive attitude: in a world where nothing is certain, isn't it best to know how to better yourself and define things for yourself?

prescriptive

has, does, and always will exist; based on order and reason; opposite of descriptive

Thales

"1st philosopher;" all is made of water, and different items look different because they're made up of different phases of water; Anaximander and Anaximenes came after him

Empedocles

"commits suicide by jumping into the volcano of Mt. Etna" probably a myth

sophists

"wise men"/"one who professes to make people wise"

rhetoric

speaking skills; making your point sound stronger; method sophists employed

aesthetics

study of beauty

moral philosophy

study of morality

political philosophy

study of political theories

Parmenides

takes from Pythagoras that cosmos exists; asks what came before it and why?

sophists

taught/tutored upper class/future politicians; knowledge they didn't know; used rhetoric and taught antilogic; the skill to argue all sides and make your argument sound stronger

epistemology

the study of knowledge

Heraclitus

the weeping philosopher; humans impose themselves on reality and take it for granted; very pessimistic

Democritus

thought about government; maybe it should be representative and made up of little parts

Anaximander

thought the world was a cylinder

Protagoras

top sophist; not Gorgias

Xenophanes

use reason to understand why experience changes, and expand your sphere of knowledge

Heraclitus

who said: "you can't put your foot in the same river twice;" believed in ultimate chaos

human condition

Animal + Rational = Awareness of Mortality

sophists

represented the transition to Athens/Socrates; money to be made

Parmenides

said "All is one;" very eastern philosophy

Gorgias

1) nothing exists 2) if it did, you couldn't know it 3) if you could know it, you couldn't communicate it 4) if you could communicate it, no one would understand it proved that nothing exists

what are things made of

1st primary ?

why do things change

2nd primary question

Axial Age

800 BCE-500 CE; when, throughout the world, civilizations started asking new questions; not always relying upon the gods

fire

Heraclitus's primary element; Thales was somewhat right with water, but it needs a transformative element

unity of opposites

Heraclitus; collision of opposites happens; humans are added to the mix, and we impose our judgment and add another layer of subjectivity

conflict

Heraclitus; reality is a product of ?

change

Parmenides believes that there is no ?

sophists

skeptics; had reasonable doubt for almost everything; practical

math

Pythagoras believed that people could develop their reason through learning ? (logos/logic)

Reason

Pythagoras believes that our purpose/telos is to develop, apply, and know ?; bridging the gap between isolated helplessness; you eventually know the divine

Xenophanes

Pythagoras takes the A + R = Human condition and increasing rationality from ?

suffering

all life is ? in an attempt to keep relationships stable; Heraclitus

sophistry

arguing just to argue; enjoying the debate because you feel there is no truth

subjective

based on experience; opposite of objective; experience precedes knowledge

objective

based on reason; reason precedes knowledge; opposite of subjective

antilogic

being able to argue all sides of a topic; skill sophists taught

Xenophanes

believed that Heraclitus was right in the idea that the world is in constant flux, but thought that humans weren't helpless

Xenophanes

believed that you become more human if you increased and emphasized your rationality and decreased the animal

metaphysics

beyond-physics

Empedocles

came up with 4 elements; everything is made up of a different ratio of earth, air, water, and fire

Gorgias

came up with the idea that two opposing sides (thesis and antithesis) come together to create a compromise (synthesis)

Pythagoras

if order exists, then disorder is an illusion; we need a language to decipher disorder; in his case, MATH

Democritus

invented the word "atom"

Gorgias

inventor of "prose"=argumentation

Pythagoras

invents the word philosophy; love of knowledge

Heraclitus

life is a result of conflict; means constant flux and change

Protagoras

made 3 claims 1) Man is the measure of all things (everything's subjective) 2) I can make the weaker argument appear to be the stronger one 3) You can't prove that god exists

poesis

making/creating; we must make a life

purpose

meaning of Greek word telos

atom

means indivisible; word invented by Democritus

math

objective language to understand disorder; means cosmos, logic, order exists; chaos is an illusion

cosmos

opposite of chaos; order

dualism

opposite of dialectic; fighting or struggling against another

dialectic

opposite of dualism; working together

5

philosophy has how many branches?

empiricism

physical science; based on observation/experience; natural philosophy

Parmenides

polar opposite of Heraclitus; ? believes world is immutable

Heraclitus

polar opposite of Parmenides; believes world is in constant flux

Xenophanes

rationality makes people human

Heraclitus

reality is a product of conflict; collision of two forces


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