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         Heraclitus:     more books (100)
  1. Heraclitus & Derrida: Presocratic Deconstruction by Erin O'Connell, 2006-01-31
  2. Heracliti Ephesii Reliquiae (1877) (Latin Edition) by Heraclitus, 2009-02-16
  3. Heraclitus. by Philip Ellis Wheelwright, 1981-12-10
  4. Heraclitus by Mrs. St. Clair Stobart, 2006-09-15
  5. Heraclitean Fragments: A Companion Study to the Heraclitus Seminar by John Sallis, Kenneth Maly, 1980-11
  6. The fragments of the work of Heraclitus of Ephesus on nature; translated from the Greek text of Bywater, with an introd. historical and critical by George Thomas White Patrick, Ingram Bywater, 2010-08-25
  7. Roger Von Oech's Ancient Whacks of Heraclitus: A Creativity Tool Based on the Epigrams of Heraclitus by Roger Von Oech, 1998-06
  8. The Book of the Cosmos: Imagining the Universe from Heraclitus to Hawking, A Helix Anthology
  9. technology and Change: The New Heraclitus by Donald A. Schon, 1967-01-01
  10. Death by Philosophy: The Biographical Tradition in the Life and Death of the Archaic Philosophers Empedocles, Heraclitus, and Democritus by Ava Chitwood, 2004-08-20
  11. An epitome of the civil and literary chronology of Rome and Constantinople from the death of Augustus to the death of Heraclitus; by Henry Fynes Clinton, 2010-08-28
  12. 470s Bc Deaths: 470 Bc Deaths, 473 Bc Deaths, 474 Bc Deaths, 475 Bc Deaths, 476 Bc Deaths, 478 Bc Deaths, 479 Bc Deaths, Confucius, Heraclitus
  13. Studies in Heraclitus (Spudasmata: Studien Zur Klassichen Philologie Und Ihren Grenzgebieten) by Roman Dilcher, 1995
  14. First-century cynicism in the Epistles of Heraclitus (Harvard theological studies) by Harold W Attridge, 1976

21. Heraclitus
heraclitus. 1. Introduction. Born in the sixth century BCE, heraclitus was an Ephesian, who, by all accounts, was not a terribly social creature.
http://www.abu.nb.ca/Courses/GrPhil/Heraclitus.htm
Heraclitus
1. Introduction Born in the sixth century BCE, Heraclitus was an Ephesian, who, by all accounts, was not a terribly social creature. Diogenes Laertius reports that Heraclitus refused to participate in public life in Ephesus, heaping scorn on his fellow citizens and the city's constitution; he eventually "became a hater of mankind" ( misanthropesas ), and withdrew from Ephesus, wandering in the mountains and eating grass and other plants. Only when he became ill did he return to Ephesus, where he died of the illness that drove back to the city ( Lives , 9. 2-4). Many of his sayings provide evidence of Heraclitus's contempt for human kind. Fr. 29, for example, says, "The best choose one thing in place of all else, 'everlasting' glory among mortals; but the majority are glutted like cattle" (Clement, Strom. V. 59, 5). Fittingly, Hippolytus describes him as follows, "But Heraclitus, a natural philosopher of Ephesus, surrendered himself to universal grief, condemning the ignorance of the entire of life, and of all men; nay, commiserating the (very) existence of mortals, for he asserted that he himself knew everything, whereas the rest of mankind nothing" ( Ref.

22. Heraclitus - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
heraclitus. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. heraclitus.jpg. heraclitus of Ephesus (Greek Herakleitos) (about 535 475 BC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heraclitus
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Heraclitus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Heraclitus of Ephesus (Greek: Herakleitos ) (about 475 BC ), known as 'The Obscure,' was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher . He disagreed with Thales Anaximander , and Pythagoras about the nature of the ultimate substance and claimed instead that everything is derived from the Greek classical element fire, rather than from air, water, or earth. This led to the belief that change is real, and stability illusory. For Heraclitus everything is "in flux." He is famous for saying: "No man can cross the same river twice, because neither the man nor the river are the same." Heraclitus' view that an explanation of change was foundational to any theory of nature was strongly opposed by Parmenides , who argued that change is an illusion and that everything is fundamentally static. Only fragments of Heraclitus' writings have been found. He appears to have taught by means of small, oracular aphorisms meant to encourage thinking based on natural law and reason.
External link

23. Heraclitus At Peithô S Web
? heraclitus, featuring the GTW Patrick English translation and Unicode Greek text. heraclitus OF EPHESUS. The Fragments.
http://classicpersuasion.org/pw/heraclitus/
Jump to fragment: Heraclitus, tr. Patrick Heraclitus, tr. Patrick (uni) Burnet (at EPD)
HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS
The Fragments
The English translation by G.T.W. Patrick.
Patrick's 1888 translation of the fragments of Heraclitus, based on the Greek text of Bywater. Includes ancient sources and contexts for each fragment. Patrick translation with Unicode Greek text.
You'll need a Unicode Greek font such as the free Athena Unicode to see the Greek text as it appeared in Patrick's edition.
Life of Heraclitus
The Life of Heraclitus by Diogenes Laertius.
Heraclitus Links
Heraclitus, by William Harris
William Harris, Professor Emeritus at Middlebury College provides several Internet classical treasures. Harris' translation of Heraclitus includes commentary and a fresh perspective. Arthur Fairbanks translation of Heraclitus
At Hanover College. John Burnet's translation of Heraclitus.
At Exploring Plato's Dialogues, from Burnet's Early Greek Philosophy (3rd edition). Be sure to see Burnet's introduction to and discussion of Heraclitus

24. The Fragments Of Heraclitus, Translated By GTW Patrick (1889)
heraclitus OF EPHESUS. 9. ContextAnd that Reason always exists, being all and permeating all, he (heraclitus) says in this manner To this universal, etc.
http://classicpersuasion.org/pw/heraclitus/herpate.htm
Jump to fragment: Heraclitus, tr. Patrick (uni) Burnet (at EPD)
HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS
The G.W.T. Patrick translation
(Click here for English with Unicode Greek)
It is wise for those who hear, not me, but the universal Reason, to confess that all things are one. SOURCESHippolytus, Ref. haer. ix. 9. Context:Heraclitus says that all things are one, divided undivided, created uncreated, mortal immortal, reason eternity, father son, God justice. "It is wise for those who hear, not me, but the universal Reason, to confess that all things are one." And since all do not comprehend this or acknowledge it, he reproves them somewhat as follows: "They do not understand how that which separates unites with itself; it is a harmony of oppositions like that of the bow and of the lyre" (=frag. 45). Compare Philo, Leg. alleg. iii. 3, p. 88. Context, see frag: 24.
To this universal Reason which I unfold, although it always exists, men make themselves insensible, both before they have heard it and when they have heard it for the first time. For notwithstanding that all things happen according to this Reason, men act as though they had never had any experience in regard to it when they attempt such words and works as I am now relating, describing each thing according to its nature and explaining how it is ordered. And some men are as ignorant of what they do when awake as they are forgetful of what they do when asleep. SOURCESHippolytus, Ref. haer. ix. 9. Context:And that Reason always exists, being all and permeating all, he (Heraclitus) says in this manner: "To this universal," etc.

25. Heraclitus VII - Zomaar Wat Gedachten Van Een Voorbijganger
heraclitus VII gedachten en gedichten van een voorbijganger. Over filosofie, religie/spiritualiteit, katten en allerlei andere onderwerpen.
http://home.hetnet.nl/~heraclitus/
inclusief diverse filosofen en hun uitspraken inclusief mijn geloof, dood-gewoon, abrahamitische godsdiensten en de Kelten van anderen, plus vervolgpagina's met gedichten van 'Toon' tot Brodsky... van Nicole en van mezelf ! inclusief o.a. katten, Mickey, nieuwe citaten (over 'Denken' ! , HAN®, 'Volgens mij', en een 'fan-pagina' gewijd aan Amanda Burton o.a. naar de beste anti-virus-club, betrouwbare medische sites, 'Andere links' en een Goede Doelen - pagina met gastpagina's van Lie(f)s, de Boekenwurm, Alice (via de knoppen-pagina) en Miranda Recentste vernieuwing/ aanvulling: mei 2004 Hartelijk welkom op deze homepage, waarop ik onder andere enkele van de puzzelstukjes, die ik de afgelopen halve eeuw gevonden denk te hebben , in beeld heb gebracht en nog hoop te brengen. De ene keer zal het een hoek- of kantstukje zijn, waarvan iedereen zegt: 'Dat weet ik zelf ook wel !' Een andere keer hoop ik dat er iets tussen zal zitten, waar jij als bezoek(st)er iets aan hebt. En kan het je mogelijk helpen bij je speurtocht naar stukjes van jouw puzzel. 'k Zal proberen er regelmatig iets aan toe te voegen. De ene keer nieuwe citaten of gedichten, een andere keer een 'nieuwe' filosoof en soms iets totaal anders... over darts of de Tour de France. Bedenk echter wel, dit zijn mijn stukjes, die dus nooit zonder meer in jouw puzzel passen ! Er zijn en komen meer-en-meer mensen die (zullen) zeggen dat hun oplossing ook voor jou geldt... vanuit oude en nieuwe 'religies'... 'One size, fits all'. Vaak in hapklare, gemakkelijk te verteren brokken. Wanneer je je kostbaarste bezit, je persoonlijke vrijheid, ook maar enigszins op prijs stelt:

26. Heraclitus Van Efeze
De belangrijkste Griekse filosofen vóór Socrates, de zogenaamde VoorSocratici, zijn Parminedes en heraclitus. Beiden leefden
http://home.hetnet.nl/~heraclitus/heraclitus_efeze.html
In de eerste plaats omdat Heraclitus de eerste Griekse filosoof was, die met rationele middelen werkte, die -onafhankelijk van het bovennatuurlijke- gebaseerd waren op zijn eigen ervaring. Heraclitus keek om zich heen en zocht in zichzelf naar antwoorden die zich aan hem opdrongen. Dat hij hierdoor los van anderen kwam te staan, die veel meer aansloten bij voorgangers, zoals tot op zekere hoogte ook Parminedes deed, spreekt mij aan..... Zijn meest bekend geworden uitspraak Panta Rhei, alles stroomt, kan gezien worden als de basis voor het hedendaags Europees denken. De gedachte dat het universum in een voortdurend proces van verandering is en dat er een onderliggende oorzaak of reden moet zijn voor deze verandering, een onveranderlijke geldige uitleg (oftewel Logos), kun je terugzien in ons wetenschappelijk, economisch en zelfs politieke denken. Op dat wat in dezelfde rivier gaat, stroomt steeds weer ander water toe... oftewel de wereld verandert steeds...maar de rivier blijft hetzelfde. Een andere uitspraak geeft nog beter zijn denken weer: God is dag en nacht, winter en zomer, oorlog en vrede, verzadiging en honger. Hij verandert zoals vuur verandert wanneer daar geurstoffen aan worden toegevoegd en krijgt een naam naar aanleiding van iedere geurstof.....

27. Philosophical Dictionary: Hedonism-Heuristic
heraclitus (540475 BCE). Greek presocratic traditional opposites. Recommended Reading Fragments The Collected Wisdom of heraclitus , tr.
http://www.philosophypages.com/dy/h2.htm
Philosophy
Pages
F A Q Dictionary ... Locke
hedonism
hdonh intrinsic value. Although commonly defended as a moral theory about the proper aim of human conduct, hedonism is usually grounded on the psychological claim that human beings simply do act in such ways as to maximize their own happiness Aristotle argued against any attempt to identify pleasure as the highest good, but Epicurus held that physical pleasure and freedom from pain are significant goals for human life. The utilitarianism of Bentham proposes a practical method for calculating hedonic value Recommended Reading: F. E. Peters, Greek Philosophical Terms: A Historical Lexicon at Amazon.com The Essential Epicurus at Amazon.com The Pursuit of Pleasure at Amazon.com Utilitarianism, Hedonism, and Desert: Essays in Moral Philosophy at Amazon.com Pleasures and Pains: A Theory of Qualitative Hedonism at Amazon.com Troubled Pleasures: Writings on Politics, Gender, and Hedonism at Amazon.com Also see IEP SEP Roberto Dante Flores ColE ... CE , and PP
Hegel, Georg W.F.
German philosopher who employed a dialectical logic (moving from thesis to antithesis to synthesis ) and its corollary analysis of historical inevitability in support of an idealism in which human culture is properly seen as a manifestation of the self-consciousness of the Absolute For a discussion of his life and works, see

28. Heraclitus: A New Translation Of The Fragments
University of Paisley 1996. The verses of heraclitus of Ephesus. Malcolm Crowe. Feedback welcomed. All authentic quotations from heraclitus (fl.
http://cis.paisley.ac.uk/crow-ci0/Articles/heraclitus.html
Best viewed with Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.0. This article appeared in Systemist (1996) p. 161-176 and Computing and Information Systems University of Paisley The verses of Heraclitus of Ephesus Malcolm Crowe Feedback welcomed Kahn suggests that the surviving fragments may well represent most of the original. This observation has inspired the tentative reconstruction offered here. All authentic quotations from Heraclitus (fl. 500 BC) are included in the following text; material shown in square brackets on the English side has been added by the editor; and some small fragments and guesses in Marcovich's edition have been added in brackets to the Greek. Marcovich has pointed out by implication that Heraclitus wrote in free verse rather than straight prose. Heraclitus' words are of legendary opacity, and all of the fragments can be translated in many ways: the translation given here is partly new. The numbers are references to the fragments in Kahn's translation. The ordering of the fragments, apart from the opening paragraph, is of course conjectural: the relationship of the ordering given here with other translations is shown in the appendix. tou de logou tou d eontoV ginomenwn gar pantwn kata ton logon tonde okoiwn egw dihgeumai touV de allouV anqrwpouV Although this account holds forever men fail to comprehend it, both before they hear it and when they first hear. Even though all happenings are in accordance with this account, people behave like the unlearned when they experience works and words; whereas I set them forth, distinguishing everything according to its nature and telling how it is. But then most people are as unconscious of what they do awake as they are forgetful of what they do asleep:

29. Heraclitus - Presocratic Philosopher
heraclitus was the presocratic philosopher who thought of the logos as an orderly process of change, the doctrine of flux, and heraclitus recurrent fallacy of
http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/heraclitus/
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Heraclitus - Presocratic Philosopher
Heraclitus was the presocratic philosopher who thought of the logos as an orderly process of change, the doctrine of flux, and Heraclitus' recurrent fallacy of dropped qualifications.
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Recent Up a category Heraclitus Information on the paradoxes of the presocratic philosopher Heraclitus (Heracleitus). Heralitus: IEP An Ephesian nobleman with contempt for the masses. He wrote On Nature in the Ionic dialect in prose that was difficult enough for his contemporaries to award him the epithet "the obscure." Heraclitus Biography and fragments.

30. Pre-Socratic Philosophers: Heraclitus
Search. Ancient / Classical History The Presocratic Philosophers. heraclitus (c. 540c.480 BC). heraclitus was an Ephesian nobleman with contempt for the masses.
http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa010599d.htm
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Heraclitus was an Ephesian nobleman with contempt for the masses. He wrote "On Nature" in the Ionic dialect in prose that was difficult enough for his contemporaries to award him the epithet "the obscure." J. V. Luce, in " An Introduction to Greek Philosophy ," says the paradox that encompasses all of Heraclitus' work is "the Identity of Opposites." Dark cannot exist without Light, Cold without Hot, Death without Life, etc. Heraclitus also says that the kosmos is now, was, and ever will be and that no god ever created it. Perhaps he is most famous for the saying about flux, that "one can't step twice in the same river.

31. Heraclitus
heraclitus (c.540–480 BC). No Greek philosopher born before Socrates was more creative and influential than heraclitus of Ephesus.
http://www.routledge-ny.com/rep/a055sam.html
HERACLITUS (c.540–480 BC) No Greek philosopher born before Socrates was more creative and influential than Heraclitus of Ephesus. Around the beginning of the fifth century BC, in a prose that made him proverbial for obscurity, he criticized conventional opinions about the way things are and attacked the authority of poets and others reputed to be wise. His surviving work consists of more than 100 epigrammatic sentences, complete in themselves and often comparable to the proverbs characteristic of 'wisdom' literature. Notwithstanding their sporadic presentation and transmission, Heraclitus' sentences comprise a philosophy that is clearly focused upon a determinate set of interlocking ideas. As interpreted by the later Greek philosophical tradition, Heraclitus stands primarily for the radical thesis that 'Everything is in flux', like the constant flow of a river. Although it is likely that he took this thesis to be true, universal flux is too simple a phrase to identify his philosophy. His focus shifts continually between two perspectives – the objective and everlasting processes of nature on the one hand and ordinary human beliefs and values on the other. He challenges people to come to terms, theoretically and practically, with the fact that they are living in a world 'that no god or human has made', a world he describes as 'an ever-living fire kindling in measures and going out in measures'

32. Heraclitus

http://home.wanadoo.nl/kees.koopman/heraclitus.html

33. Heraclitus & Parmenides
heraclitus Parmenides. heraclitus claims that sense perception alone cannot reveal the truth about things, for they are not really what they seem to be.
http://www.soci.niu.edu/~phildept/Dye/Heraclitus&Parmenides.html
Heraclitus claims that sense perception alone cannot reveal the truth about things, for they are not really what they seem to be. Thought is required to reveal that what seems stable is really constantly changingthat what seems to be a thing is but a slice of a process. Heraclitus invents the distinction between appearance and reality . Perceptual objects are not the real entities constituting the natural world; they are only the ways those entities appear to us. Our perceptions are the effects of causes which we do not directly perceive and which we can know only by inference. (Does the image on the movie screen or the television monitor exist ? Is it a real thing in the world? Do we exist or are we more like a movie or a television programprocesses seeming to be entities only because of the abstractive character of our experience of ourselves?) Parmenides takes note of Heraclitus' observations about sense perception but disagrees that the mind could ever reconstruct the truth out of the sensory data. There is no one way our sensations can be manipulated to yield a single, coherent story about what really exits. Therefore any single way in which they are assembled will at best be an

34. The Fragments Of Heraclitus
This site has moved to http//www.randyhoyt.net/projects/heraclitus.
http://www.ou.edu/logos/heraclitus/
location.replace("http://www.randyhoyt.net/projects/heraclitus"); This site has moved to http://www.randyhoyt.net/projects/heraclitus

35. Heraclitus From FOLDOC
heraclitus. archÍ) of the universe, heraclitus supposed that its changeable nature results in the formation of all of the traditional opposites.
http://www.swif.uniba.it/lei/foldop/foldoc.cgi?Heraclitus

36. Academic Directories
DETAILS/DISCOUNTS. heraclitus, heraclitus and Plato This site contains a brief discussion of the connections between heraclitus and Plato.
http://www.alllearn.org/er/tree.jsp?c=40181

37. Planetary Coral Reef Foundation
Nonjavascript version of this page here, RV heraclitus. To meet the present crew on board the RV heraclitus, Click Here! Flag Belize. Rig Chinese Junk.
http://www.pcrf.org/asta.html
Planetary Coral Reef Foundation Latest News On Our Voyage! Home PCRF Movie Donate Now! ... Contact Us Your browser does not support Javascript!
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RV Heraclitus
The R/V Heraclitus (named after the Greek philosopher, Heraclitus) is an 84 ft, ferro-cement, Chinese junk designed and built by the Institute of Ecotechnics (UK), and outfitted as an ocean-going research vessel. In March 1975, the ship was launched in Oakland, California and set sail under the Golden Gate Bridge on her maiden voyage. Since that time, RV Heraclitus has traveled over 200,000 nautical miles, undertaking a series of voyages and expeditions to some of the most challenging, remote and exotic places on Earth - from the upper reaches of the Amazon River to the frozen waters of the Antarctic to the coral reefs spanning the tropical waters of the world’s oceans.
Although the R/V Heraclitus has performed many different tasks during this time, perhaps the real meaning of the ship has been to introduce people who first arrive aboard - with little understanding of life at sea - to the classic explorer tradition and the ancient ways of sea-peoples. All who have voyaged on RV Heraclitus have experienced this marvelous way of life, the adventure of the high seas, remote cultures and coral reefs.

38. PCRF Seamanship And Marine Ecology Training Program
PCRF Seamanship and Marine Ecology Training Program Go to Sea and Join the Research Vessel heraclitus Expedition. The RV heraclitus. The
http://www.pcrf.org/youthprogram.html
Planetary Coral Reef Foundation Latest News On Our Voyage! Home PCRF Movie Donate Now! ... Contact Us Your browser does not support Javascript!
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PCRF Seamanship and Marine Ecology Training Program
Go to Sea and Join the Research Vessel Heraclitus Expedition
The RV Heraclitus in the Indian Ocean, 1997
(Photo by Michel Lippitsch) Planetary Coral Reef Foundation is happy to be able to offer the opportunity to a few qualified people to participate fully in its unique expedition of adventure and science in a seamanship and marine ecology training program developed by the Institute of Ecotechnics (UK) especially for the ship, the RV Heraclitus. In the past twenty years, more than one hundred people, from ages of 18 to 30, have successfully completed these programs which are unique in their comprehensiveness: fom learning the ropes to learning to interact with different cultures, to participating in cutting edge research. They have come from more than twenty cultures including Venezuela, Mexico, Germany, Great Britain, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, India, Italy, Portugal, USA, South Africa, New Zealand, Vietnam, and Australia

9 Month Program:
  • Coral Reef Research
  • Underwater Diving
  • Seamanship and Maritime Skills
  • International Teamwork
  • Cultural Interactions
Crew members in the command room of the ship participating in a ship's meeting (Photo by A. Alling).

39. Heracleitus --  Encyclopædia Britannica
also spelled heraclitus Greek philosopher remembered for his cosmology, in which fire forms the basic material principle of an orderly universe.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=40944&tocid=0

40. PHIL 2510: Heraclitus & Parmenides
heraclitus Parmenides. the search for the common; balance, harmony, ratios. heraclitus of Ephesus fragments with commentary online; his reputation the riddler;
http://www.webster.edu/~evansja/guides/HeraclParm.html
  • Taking stockbackground assumptions:
    • the threat of CHAOS
    • oppositions: paired opposites
    • natural cycles
    • whatever is eternal is divinehence timeless?
    • the search for the common
    • balance, harmony, ratios
  • Heraclitus of Ephesus
    • fragments with commentary on-line
    • his reputation: the riddler
    • his style
      • "the way up & the way down are one and the same"
      • "you cannot step twice into the same river"
      • fire: it lives by consuming
    • strife
    • PANTA RHEI
    • the LOGOS is common to all
    • cosmology
    • radical Heracliteanism
      • Cratylus
      • a Platonic question: does radical Heracliteanism make language impossible?
    • Parmenides of Elea
      • his poem ( selections
      • the prolog
      • the two ways
        • the way of truth
          • [what] is, is, and cannot not be
          • indivisible and continuous
          • motionless
        • the way of mortal opinions
          • names
          • mere opinions
          • for an on-line outline of his central argument, click here
        • The post-Parmenidean problem: "Save the Appearances!" SOZEIN TA PHAINOMENA
          revised September 21, 1996
          Index to Study Guides
          Return to main menu
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