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         Anaxagoras Of Clazomenae:     more detail
  1. Anaxagoras ofClazomenae: Fragments and Testimonia (Phoenix Presocractic Series) by Patricia Curd, 2007-10-27
  2. Anaxagoras of Clazomenae: Fragments and Testomonia (Phoenix Presocratics)
  3. Anaxagoras of Clazomenae: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Stephen D. Norton, 2001
  4. Anaxagoras of Clazomenae: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i>
  5. ANAXAGORAS OF CLAZOMENAE(c. 500428 BCE): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Daniel Graham, 2006

81. Anaxagoras - Encyclopedia Article About Anaxagoras. Free Access, No Registration
anaxagoras, Greek For other meanings see Greece (disambiguation At his native town of clazomenae clazomenae (modern Kelisinan), was an ancient town of Ionia and
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Anaxagoras
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Anaxagoras
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition This article is about the philosopher Anaxagoras. For the mythical Greek King Anaxagoras of Argos Argos is a city in Greece in Peloponnese near Nafplio. In Homeric times it belonged to a follower of Agamemnon and gave its name to the surrounding district - the Argolid . Eclipsed by nearby Sparta after the 6th century BC, Argos remained neutral or the ineffective ally of Athens during the 5th century BC struggles between Sparta and Athens. Considerable remains of the city survive and are a popular tourist attraction. Citrus fruits also dominate Argos, and the entire valley in agriculture.
Click the link for more information. , see Anaxagoras (mythology) This aticle is about the mythical Greek King Anaxagoras of Argos. For the Greek philosopher Anaxagoras, see Anaxagoras. In Greek mythology, Anaxagoras was a King of Argos and son of Argeus. The prince, Anaxagoras' son, suffered from a strange malady and the king offered a reward for anybody that could heal him. Melampus, a local seer, killed an ox and talked to the vultures
Click the link for more information.

82. Esoterische-filosofische-medische Encyclopedie - A2
mogilalie. anaxagoras van clazomenae. Grieks wijsgeer uit de Ionische school (ca. 500428 vC) De eerste filosoof die zich (ca. 480
http://www.regressietherapeut.nl/a2.htm
[vorige pagina]
Analyse

Analytische filosofie

Anamnese
...
Azu-vreesvragenlijst
Analyse
(Gr., ontbinding, oplossing) Het ontbinden of uiteenleggen van een bestaand geheel in zijn samenstellende onderdelen. In de logica is analyse: het uiteenleggen van een samengesteld begrip in zijn kenbegrippen; Aristoteles spreekt al van analytica als deel van de logica.
Analytische filosofie
Samenvattende term voor verschillende wijsgerige richtingen die in de Anglo-Amerikaanse landen hun voornaamste vertegenwoordigers hebben, en waarin als de belangrijkste taak van de filosofie wordt gezien een exacte analyse van de taal en van alle taalgebruik en bepaling van de zin, uitgaande van onweerlegbare propositie s en niet-analyseerbare begrippen.
Anamnese
(Gr., anamnesis , herinnering) Volgens Plato berust de ware wijsgerige kennis op anamnese. Wanneer nl. de ziel zich naar aanleiding van zintuiglijke waarnemingen een begrip van de dingen tracht te vormen, herinnert zij zich de idee
Anankasme
Dwanggedachte , dwangvoorstelling.
Anankastisch
Onvermijdelijk door het noodlot gedwongen; zie

83. ANAXAGORAS
anaxagoras, Greek philosopher, was born probably about the year 500 BC (Apollodorus ap. Diog. Laert. ii. 7.) At his native town of clazomenae in Asi. anaxagoras.
http://97.1911encyclopedia.org/A/AN/ANAXAGORAS.htm
ANAXAGORAS
ANAXAGORAS Anaxagoras was arrested on a charge of contravening the established dogmas of religion (some say the charge was one of Medism), and it required all the eloquence of Pericles to secure his acquittal. Even so he was forced to retire from Athens to Lampsacus (434-433 B.C.) , where he died about 428 B.C., honored and respected by the whole city. while Socrates (Plato, Phaedo, 98 B) objects that his vovs is merely a deus ex machina to which he refuses to attribute design and knowledge. Anaxagoras proceeded to give some account of the stages in the process from original chaos to present arrangements. The division into cold mist and warm ether first broke the spell of confusion. With increasing cold, the former gave rise to water, earth and stones. The seeds of life which continued floating in the air were carried down with the rains and produced vegetation. Animals, including man, sprang from the warm and moist clay. If these things be so, then the evidence of the senses must be held in slight esteem. We seem to see things coming into being and passing from it; but reflection tells us that decease and growth only mean a new aggregation (crvy-Kpims) and disruption (Sid/cpicm). Thus Anaxagoras distrusted the senses, and gave the preference to the conclusions of reflection. Thus he maintained that there must be blackness as well as whiteness in snow; how otherwise could it be turned into dark water? Anaxagoras marks a turning-point in the history of philosophy. With him speculation passed from the colonies of Greece to settle at Athens. By the theory of minute constituents of things, and his emphasis on mechanical processes in the formation of order, he paved the way for the atomic theory. By his enunciation of the order that comes from reason, on the other hand, he suggested, though he seems not to have stated explicitly, the theory that nature is the work of design. The conception of reason in the world passed from him to Aristotle, to whom it seemed the dawn of sober thought after a night of disordered dreams. From Aristotle it descended to his commentators, and under the influence of Averroes became the engrossing topic of speculation.

84. Anaxagoras
anaxagoras. born c. 500 BC, , clazomenae, Anatolia now in Turkey died c. 428, , Lampsacus. Greek philosopher of nature remembered
http://www.kat.gr/kat/history/Greek/Ph/Anaxagoras.htm
Anaxagoras
born c. BC , , Clazomenae, Anatolia [now in Turkey]
died c. 428, , Lampsacus Greek philosopher of nature remembered for his cosmology and for his discovery of the true cause of eclipses. He was associated with the Athenian statesman Pericles About 480 Anaxagoras moved to Athens, then becoming the centre of Greek culture, and brought from Ionia the new practice of philosophy and the spirit of scientific inquiry. After 30 years' residence in Athens, he was prosecuted on a charge of impiety for asserting that the Sun is an incandescent stone somewhat larger than the region of the Peloponnese. The attack on him was intended as an indirect blow at Pericles, and, although Pericles managed to save him, Anaxagoras was compelled to leave Athens. He spent his last years in retirement at Lampsacus. Only a few fragments of Anaxagoras' writings have been preserved, and several different interpretations of his work have been made. The basic features, however, are clear. His cosmology grows out of the efforts of earlier Greek thinkers who had tried to explain the physical universe by an assumption of a single fundamental element. Parmenides i.e.

85. Anaxagoras At PhilosophyClassics.com -- Essays, Resources
anaxagoras, Greek philosopher, was born probably about the year 500 BC At his native town of clazomenae in Asia Minor, he had, it appears, some amount of
http://www.philosophyclassics.com/philosophers/Anaxagoras/
Start your day with a thought-provoking quote from the world's greatest thinkers and writers. Sign up to The Daily Muse for free. Anaxagoras 500 BC - 428 BC influential pre-Socratic philosopher
ANAXAGORAS, Greek philosopher, was born probably about the year 500 B.C. At his native town of Clazomenae in Asia Minor, he had, it appears, some amount of property and prospects of political influence, both of which he surrendered, from a fear that they would hinder his search after knowledge. Nothing is known of his teachers; there is no reason for the theory that he studied under Hermotimus of Clazomenae, the ancient miracle-worker. In early manhood (c. 464-462 B.C.) he went to Athens, which was rapidly becoming the headquarters of Greek culture. There he is said to have remained for thirty... [ read entire biography Source Public Domain
These essays offer analysis of the author's life and works. Many of them have been submitted by users, and are assigned an Editorial Rating on a scale from one to five stars to assist you in evaluating their worth. See also: Note on Essays Editorial Policy No essays about this philosopher have been added yet. Our database is growing rapidly check back soon!

86. Welcome To LAMPSACUS
The philosopher anaxagoras, b. clazomenae, in Anatolia (presentday Turkey), c.500 BC, d. Lampsacus, 428, went to Athens to teach at the invitation of PERICLES
http://www.cs.wayne.edu/~kjz/lampsacus/
LAMPSACUS
Lampsacus is a project in which everyone can participate . It can be the hometown of the nation of the Internet. It could be every person's hometown. It is free of charge, and it does its best to fulfill all "informational needs" of all inhabitants (users).
Therefore it contains houses, a cathedral, a game park, a museum, a postoffice, a town hall, a newspaper, an encyclopedic library, a school and a university The university is called Earth-Moon University since the inhabitants of moontown, planned for the next decade in both Japan and the U.S., will of course be included. All degrees can be earned in the form of EM points that are recognized worldwide. Original work done gives an identity (and a point). Work is needed in the frontiers of science and in the frontiers of the pyramid of mind. The pyramid is the solution to the access problem. Any level of previous informedness or lack of it is optimally catered to. Here the largest amount of work will enter Lampsacus. All medical information, all trouble-shooting will be provided as well as all opportunities to set up services to cater to "material needs." Although no advertisements are permitted, sponsor-related information and achievement-related information is, of course, available and visible (as in PBS productions, for example).

87. Astronomi: Perjalanan Menembus Tapal Batas
Adalah anaxagoras dari clazomenae yang dengan lantangnya menyatakan bahwa sinar Bulan yang sampai ke mata kita adalah pantulan cahaya Matahari yang diterima
http://www.as.itb.ac.id/~ferry/Articles/Astronomy/Astronomy.html
Ferry's Astronomy Page
Astronomi: Perjalanan Menembus Tapal Batas
Judhistira Aria Utama Sudah sejak dulu manusia memandang langit dengan penuh ketakjuban. Bagi mereka semesta mempunyai daya magis yang memberi pengharapan maupun mendatangkan kecemasan. Tak heran karenanya semua fenomena langit lantas diterjemahkan sebagai pekabaran dari para dewa kepada umat manusia di Bumi. Sebagai sebuah pekabaran, berarti gejala alam tersebut terkait dengan bencana maupun keberuntungan yang akan di alami oleh suatu bangsa. Catatan sejarah tentang hal ini misalnya, bertepatan dengan saat Komet Halley menampakkan diri pada abad ke-11 M. Kala itu Bangsa Norman yang tengah menghadapi peperangan memperoleh gairah dan semangat bertempur sebab mengartikan penampakan bintang berekor ini sebagai pertanda kemenangan, dan memang pada akhirnya Bangsa Norman berhasil mengalahkan musuhnya. Seiring dengan berjalannya waktu, timbul pengertian dalam diri manusia-dulu untuk mengatasi desakan kebutuhannya dengan memanfaatkan keteraturan yang teramati di langit. Kebutuhan itu menyangkut penanggalan untuk penentuan pesta atau upacara keagamaan, penentuan waktu untuk mulai menabur benih dan waktu panen saat pola hidup menetap ( food gathering
Era Yunani Kuno
Meskipun demikian, tidak bisa dipungkiri bahwa peradaban kuno di atas telah memberi andil besar dalam meletakkan ide dasar bagi pemahaman kita tentang semesta. Perenungan yang lebih dalam atas fenomena langit dimulai pada era Yunani Kuno. Berangkat dari kekaguman atas keindahan geometri lingkaran, orang-orang Yunani memandang bentuk ini sebagai suatu bangun yang sempurna. "

88. Theosophy Library Online - Great Teacher Series - ANAXAGORAS
anaxagoras was born in the port city of clazomenae in Ionia around 500 BC, though almost nothing is known about his life or the order of happenings.
http://theosophy.org/tlodocs/teachers/Anaxagoras.htm
ANAXAGORAS
Who appointed their path to sun and stars?
Who but Thou is it through whom the moon waxes and wanes?
Who set the earth in its place below and the cloudy sky
that it shall not fall?
Who established the waters and the plants?
Who yoked the steeds to wind and clouds?
Who, O Wise One, is the creator of Good Mind?
What artificer made light and darkness?
What artificer sleeping and waking?
Who made morning, midday and night,
to remind the wise man of his task? Is it as Good Mind that thou hast founded thy Dominion? Who created Devotion, sacred with Dominion?
ZARATHUSHTRA All other things have a portion of everything, but Mind is infinite and self-ruled. . . . For it is the finest of all things and the purest; it has all knowledge about everything and the greatest power. And Mind controls all things, both the greater and the smaller, that have life. ANAXAGORAS Anaxagoras taught in Athens throughout his adult life. Sometime during that period he became the focus of opponents of Periclean political reform. Satyrus wrote that Thucydides, a long-standing enemy of Pericles, found it impossible to confront his opponent successfully, and so attacked him indirectly by bringing charges of asebeia Anaxagoras followed the tradition of his day and taught students who came to hear him discourse, but he did not establish a permanent school. Nevertheless, like Parmenides, he wrote one book outlining his methodology and explanations of nature. Since Parmenides had taught that change was logically impossible, the work of Anaxagoras, taking change as fundamental to nature, became the standard text for nascent Athenian science. Socrates is made to refer to this work in Plato's

89. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Clazomenae
quarantine hospital. clazomenae is the birthplace of the philosophers Hermotimus and anaxagoras. The see was a suffragan Ephesus. Lequien
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04010b.htm
Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... C > Clazomenae A B C D ... Z
Clazomenae
A titular see
Transcribed by Joseph P. Thomas The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IV
Nihil Obstat.
Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York If an ad appears here that contradicts Catholic teachings, please click here to notify the webmaster. Praise Jesus Christ in His Angels and in His Saints
New Advent is dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

90. Anaxagoras
anaxagoras was born in clazomenae in Asia Minor c. 500 BCE; c. 48079 BCE he came to Athens, where he became the first Athenian philosopher of note.
http://www.abu.nb.ca/Courses/GrPhil/Anaxagoras.htm
Anaxagoras
1. Introduction Anaxagoras attempts to explain how there can be becoming while maintaining Parmenides's position that what is, cannot come into being or perish. Like Empedocles, he adopts what one may call a type of Eleatic pluralism. Of all the pre-Socratic philosophers, he comes the closest to positing the existence of a spiritual or immaterial principle, which he calls Nous (Mind), as that which acts upon inert matter.
2. Biographical Information Anaxagoras was born in Clazomenae in Asia Minor c. 500 BCE; c. 480-79 BCE he came to Athens, where he became the first Athenian philosopher of note. Plato relates that Anaxagoras had a close association with Pericles, the famous Athenian statesman, orator and general: Phaedrus , 270a). According to Diogenes, when someone lamented the fact that Anaxagoras would die in a foreign land, he replied, "The descent to Hades is much the same from whatever place we start" ( Lives , 2. 11). While in Athens, Anaxagoras was indicted for holding that the sun was actually a mass of red-hot metal, and not a god, presumably, and for treasonable correspondence with Persia; he was condemned to death. Pericles, however, intervened on his behalf and the death sentence was commuted ( Lives Diogenes says that Anaxagoras wrote only one one philosophical work ( Lives 1. 16), which, unfortunately has not survived except in fragments as quoted by others, in particular, Simplicius. Later writers also summarize Anaxagoras's philosophical view, which is useful in interpreting the surviving fragments.

91. Ancient
anaxagoras (of clazomenae perhaps 500 to 428 BC) suggested the world is essentially complex and divisible seeds controlled by mind (Nus) The component seeds of
http://homepage.mac.com/dtrapp/periodic.f/greek.html
Development of the Periodic Chart
the Greeks
The Greeks were the first to propose physical explanations for materials. Thales (of Miletos 624-546 B.C.) developed a Babalonian idea that the world was created from the waters. He suggested that every substance is but a single reality, water , but appearing in different forms. Water exhibits all the known states of matter, solid, liquid, and gaseous, and is clearly essential to life as well. Anaximandros (of Miletos 610 to 545 B.C.) agreed with Thales that the world is made of some basic element. But Anaximandros thought that element was some undetermined material: apeiron Anaximenes (of Miletos about 590 to 526 B.C.) claimed that air (pneuma) is the elemental material. Variety of substance is due to thickening or thinning. Heracleitos (flourishing in Ephesos in 484 B.C.) suggested everything consists of fire or some other single material and that is changed by eternal flux (then meaning up and down motion Anaxagoras (of Clazomenae perhaps 500 to 428 B.C.) suggested the world is essentially complex and divisible seeds controlled by mind (Nus) The component seeds of everything are the same nature as the thing itself.

92. Anaxagoras
anaxagoras. Fragments and Commentary. Arthur Page 235 anaxagoras of Klazomenae, son of Hegesiboulos, was that the books of anaxagoras of Klazomenae are full of these doctrines
http://history.hanover.edu/texts/presoc/anaxagor.htm
Anaxagoras
Fragments and Commentary

Arthur Fairbanks, ed. and trans.
The First Philosophers of Greece
(London: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1898), 235-262.
Hanover Historical Texts Project

Scanned and proofread by Aaron Gulyas, May 1998.
Proofread and pages added by Jonathan Perry, March 2001.
Fairbanks's Introduction

The Fragments of Anaxagoras

Ancient Authors' Commentaries on Anaxagoras
Footnotes
Fairbanks's Introduction
[Page 235] Anaxagoras of Klazomenae, son of Hegesiboulos, was born in the seventh Olympiad (500-497) and died in the first year of the eighty-eighth Olympiad (428), according to the chronicles of Apollodoros. it is said that he neglected his possessions in his pursuit of philosophy; he began to teach philosophy in the archonship of Kallias at Athens (480). The fall of metoeoric stone at Aegos Potamoi (467 or 469) influenced profoundly his views of the heavenly bodies. Perikles brought him to Athens, and tradition says he remained there thirty years. His exile (434-432) was brought about by enemies of Perikles, and he died at Lampsakos. He wrote but one book, according to Diogenes, and the same authority says this was written in a pleasing and lofty style.
The Fragments of Anaxagoras
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.

93. Anaxagoras
The Fragments of anaxagoras. Ancient Authors Commentaries on anaxagoras. LiteratureShaubach, Anax. Claz. Frag. Lips. 1827; W. Schorn, Anax. Claz. et Diog.
http://history.hanover.edu/texts/presoc/anaxagor.html
Anaxagoras
Fragments and Commentary

Arthur Fairbanks, ed. and trans.
The First Philosophers of Greece
(London: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1898), 235-262.
Hanover Historical Texts Project

Scanned and proofread by Aaron Gulyas, May 1998.
Proofread and pages added by Jonathan Perry, March 2001.
Fairbanks's Introduction

The Fragments of Anaxagoras

Ancient Authors' Commentaries on Anaxagoras
Footnotes
Fairbanks's Introduction
[Page 235] Anaxagoras of Klazomenae, son of Hegesiboulos, was born in the seventh Olympiad (500-497) and died in the first year of the eighty-eighth Olympiad (428), according to the chronicles of Apollodoros. it is said that he neglected his possessions in his pursuit of philosophy; he began to teach philosophy in the archonship of Kallias at Athens (480). The fall of metoeoric stone at Aegos Potamoi (467 or 469) influenced profoundly his views of the heavenly bodies. Perikles brought him to Athens, and tradition says he remained there thirty years. His exile (434-432) was brought about by enemies of Perikles, and he died at Lampsakos. He wrote but one book, according to Diogenes, and the same authority says this was written in a pleasing and lofty style.
The Fragments of Anaxagoras
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.

94. Map Of Philosophy ­õ ¾Ç ¹Ï ¶H
The summary for this Chinese (Traditional) page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://philosophers.org/MapofPhilosophy.html
In Project:
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    ¦è ¤è ­õ ¾Ç ¥v ( History of Western Philosophy ) §Æ ¾ ­õ ¾Ç ( Greek Philosophy )
    ¥ý Ĭ ®æ ©Ô ©³ ­õ ¾Ç ®a( Pre-Socratic Philosophers )
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  • ´´ ¬¥ ¦Ñ ´µ ( Philolaos, ¤½ ¤¸ «e ¤­ ¥@ ¬ö ) ¡G ¤j ¦a »P ¤Ó ¶§ ¡B ¤ë «G ¤Î ¬P ¨° ¤@ °_ ¶ µÛ ¡u ¥@ ¬É ¤§ ¤õ ¡v ±Û Âà ¡C
  • 95. Laurentiu Vasiliu - Personal Web Page -
    Name Laurentiu Alexandru Vasiliu. Birthday 21st March, 1974.
    http://sws.deri.ie/team/laurentiu/main.html
    Name: Laurentiu Alexandru Vasiliu Birthday: 21st March, 1974 Birthplace: Bucharest Romania Nationality: Romanian Address: http://www.deri.org e-mail Abstract: I am a post-doctoral researcher at the Digital Enterprise Research Institute DERI . I hold a Bachelors and Masters degree in Industrial Engineering from Bucharest Polytechnic University. My PhD is in the area of extended enterprise / virtual enterprise modelling and design. I have previously worked with Nortel Networks on the MOTTO project and with Raufoss ASA and KPMG Norway on the MOMENT project. I have a keen interest in the application of semantic web services, artificial intelligence and mathematical modelling in the area of B2B and other industrial applications. Education: National University of Ireland , Galway, Ireland, Ph.D, Industrial Engineering
    Title of the PhD thesis: Modelling Negotiation in Extended Enterprise
    Committee: Prof. Dr. Jim Browne ( NUIG, Ireland), Prof. Dr. Harinder Jagdev (UMIST, Manchester, UK) Bucharest Politechnic University , Romania, M.Eng.Sc. - Computer integrated manufacturing.

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