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41. Greek Philosophers
Democritus, One of the solutions to the problem postulated by Parmenides, wasthe hypothesis of democritus of abdera matter is made up from atoms.
http://www.livius.org/gi-gr/greeks/philosophers.html
home index ancient Greece portrait gallery Greek philosophers Authors Historians Philosophers Politicians Scientists We know almost nothing about Thales of Miletus . Later generations told many anecdotes about this wise man, but it is difficult to verify the reliability of these stories. What seems certain, however, is that he predicted the solar eclipse of 28 May 585, which was remembered because the Lydian king Alyattes and the Median leader Cyaxares were fighting a battle on that day. Another reliable bit of information is that he did geometrical research, which enabled him to measure the pyramids. However, his most important contribution to European civilization is his attempt to give rational explanations for physical phenomena. Behind the phenomena was not a catalogue of deities, but one single, first principle. Although his identification of this principle with water is rather unfortunate, his idea to look for deeper causes was the true beginning of philosophy and science. Thales died after 547. Thales was not the only one who was looking for a first cause.

42. Quotations Page
democritus of abdera. *. Of pleasures, those that come most rarely give the democritus of abdera. *. If one does not hope one will not find the
http://www.adamantius.net/Quotations.htm
Quotations " For those whom God to ruin has design’d, He fits for fate, and first destroys their mind. " John Dryden, Hind and the Panther. Part iii. Line 2387. " Quos Deus vult perdere prius dementat " (Whom God wishes to destroy he first deprives of reason) -anonymous " 'Trends' in the Church are ...serious, especially to those accustomed to find in it a solace and a 'pax' in times of temporal trouble, and not just another arena of strife and change." J.R.R. Tolkien "I have undertaken a labor, a labor out of love for the world and to comfort noble hearts: those that I hold dear, and the world to which my heart goes out. Not the common world do I mean, of those who (as I have heard) cannot bear grief and desire but to bathe in bliss. (May God then let them dwell in bliss!) Their world and manner of life my tale does not regard: its life and mine lie apart. Another world do I hold in mind which bears together in one heart and its bitter sweetness and its dear grief, its heart's delight and its pain of longing , dear life and sorrowful death, dear death and sorrowful life. In this world let me have my world, to be damned with it , or to be saved." - Gottfried von Stassburg "It is better to deliberate before action than to repent afterwards." Democritus of Abdera

43. 430s BC: Information From Answers.com
democritus of abdera b. Abdera, Thrace, c. 470 bce, dc 380 bce is reputed to be democritus of abdera expands the concept, introduced by his teacher
http://www.answers.com/topic/430s-bc
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping 430s BC In the year bce Communication An optical telegraph using torches to signal from hilltop to hilltop operates in Greece. It uses combinations of 5 torches to indicate each letter of the Greek alphabet. See also ce Communication Earth science Democritus of Abdera [b. Abdera, Thrace, c. 470 bce , d. c. 380 bce ] is reputed to be able to predict the weather. See also bce Earth science Mathematics Hippocrates of Chios [b. Chios (Greek island), c. 470 bce , d. c. 410 bce ] writes his Elements of Geometry, which predates Euclid's more famous Elements by more than a century. Since the work has been lost, it is not clear what it contained. However, his most famous discovery is the method of squaring a figure with two sides that are each segments of circles. The figure is called the lune because of its resemblance to the crescent Moon. He is also credited with introducing indirect proof, a method in which the opposite of what is to be proved is shown to be impossible. See also bce Mathematics bce Mathematics . (See essay Physics Democritus of Abdera expands the concept, introduced by his teacher Leucippus, of the atom as an indivisible body and shows how every form of matter can be explained by his version of the atom.

44. Atomism
435 BCE) and democritus of abdera (ca. 410 BCE) developed the atomic hypothesis.According to them matter can be subdivided only to a certain point,
http://www.chemsoc.org/timeline/pages/0450.html
" Leucippus of Miletus (ca. 435 BCE) and Democritus of Abdera (ca. 410 BCE) developed the atomic hypothesis. According to them matter can be subdivided only to a certain point, at which only atoms (that which cannot be cut) remain. The world is made up of atoms moving in the void. Atoms differed from each other only in size and shape, and different substances with their distinct qualities were made up of different shapes, arrangements, and positions of atoms. Atoms were in continuous motion in the infinite void and constantly collided with each other. During these collisions they could rebound or stick together because of hooks and barbs on their surfaces. Thus, underlying the changes in the perceptible world, there was constancy (atoms were neither created nor destroyed); change was caused by the combinations and dissociations of the atoms."
Albert Van Helden, Atomism , The Galileo Project, Rice University.
This timeline entry suggestion courtesy of
Lynn Mackenzie, Editor,
Cutting Teeth Magazine, Scotland.

45. Foundations Of Hippocratic Medicine THE DOCTORS AND THE
democritus of abdera in Thrace posited that only indivisible elements, The man of Abdera Democritus says the differentiation of female and male is in
http://www.indiana.edu/~ancmed/foundations.htm
Foundations Of Hippocratic Medicine
THE DOCTORS AND THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS
In order to give their new ideas a firmer foundation, and to be persuasive to their patients, many of the writers of the Hippocratic treatises turned to the writings of the Presocratic philosophers, men who sought to explain the nature of the cosmos and the things in it in terms of natural entities and non-personal forces (today we would call these men natural scientists). Other Hippocratic writers vehemently opposed this trend, holding to what they saw as an uncompromising empiricism, based solely on experience, not on theory. Their debate underlies many of the Hippocratic treatises, influencing not only content but also the form of argumentation, which makes it important to consider this philosophical background briefly.
In the following discussion, the fragments of the Presocratics are translated from the Greek text found in the standard source, H.Diels and W.Kranz, Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, 6th edition, 1954, and identified with their Diels-Kranz number, abbreviated as DK). A useful source book for further background is G.S.Kirk, J.E.Raven and M. Schofield, The Presocratic Philosophers, 1983.
THALES OF MILETUS
According to tradition, Thales, a native of the Ionian east Greek city of Miletus (in modern Turkey), was the first of the Presocratic philosophers. Miletus was a large and cosmopolitan city, with long-standing trading connections with the states of the ancient Near East. He himself was probably of mixed ancestry (his family is said to have been originally Phoenician, and, like many Ionians, he probably also had an admixture of local Carians in his family tree). He is reported to have assisted the Lydian king Croesus in his war against the Persians, and predicted an eclipse that put an end to a great battle in 585. Thus he was probably active not much before the beginning of the seventh century.

46. EXplorations In Medicine
(Aristotle, Generation of Animals, 763b3035) democritus of abdera The manof Abdera Democritus says the differentiation of female and male is in the
http://interzone.com/~cheung/SUM.dir/med1.html
visit the Asclepion visit the Asclepion Foundations Of Hippocratic Medicine THE DOCTORS AND THE PRESOCRATIC PHILOSOPHERS In order to give their new ideas a firmer foundation, and to be persuasive to their patients, many of the writers of the Hippocratic treatises turned to the writings of the Presocratic philosophers, men who sought to explain the nature of the cosmos and the things in it in terms of natural entities and non-personal forces (today we would call these men natural scientists). Other Hippocratic writers vehemently opposed this trend, holding to what they saw as an uncompromising empiricism, based solely on experience, not on theory. Their debate underlies many of the Hippocratic treatises, influencing not only content but also the form of argumentation, which makes it important to consider this philosophical background briefly. In the following discussion, the fragments of the Presocratics are translated from the Greek text found in the standard source, H.Diels and W.Kranz, Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, 6th edition, 1954, and identified with their Diels-Kranz number, abbreviated as DK). A useful source book for further background is G.S.Kirk, J.E.Raven and M. Schofield, The Presocratic Philosophers, 1983. THALES OF MILETUS According to tradition, Thales, a native of the Ionian east Greek city of Miletus (in modern Turkey), was the first of the Presocratic philosophers. Miletus was a large and cosmopolitan city, with long-standing trading connections with the states of the ancient Near East. He himself was probably of mixed ancestry (his family is said to have been originally Phoenician, and, like many Ionians, he probably also had an admixture of local Carians in his family tree). He is reported to have assisted the Lydian king Croesus in his war against the Persians, and predicted an eclipse that put an end to a great battle in 585. Thus he was probably active not much before the beginning of the seventh century. None of Thales' own writings have survived, but later writers say that he held that the earth floats on water, which is in some way the source of all other things. This may reflect Egyptian and other Near Eastern influences (Kirk, Raven and Schofield, 92). Since our reports of his work come from a later period, it is possible that the idea of water as a source of all things was anachronistic, reflecting directions taken by later philosophers. Nonetheless, it seems reasonable to suppose that Thales' was, as tradition holds, the first of these innovative thinkers who sought a new way of explaining the cosmos in natural terms. ANAXIMANDER OF MILETUS Anaxamander of Miletus was said to have been the pupil of Thales. If Thales in fact predicted the eclipse of 585, his pupil must have lived in the mid-sixth century (the presumption of a pupil-teacher series of philosophers was the basis of the ancient dating of their lives, which thus remains very uncertain). He is the first of the Presocratics whose own words we have: 1. "The beginning of all things was the Apeiron [the unlimited, unbounded, undefined] ... from which coming-to-be was for all things, and their destruction was of necessity into the same. For they suffer punishment and make reparation to each other for injustice according to the order of time." (B1 DK) 2. "For this (the nature of the Apeiron) is everlasting and undying." (B2 DK). 3. A sort of evolutionary process was involved: "living creatures came to be from moisture evaporated by the sun. Man was like another creature, a fish, in the beginning." (Frag. 11.6 DK) Existing things were formed by a separation off from an undefined, undifferentiated being (the Apeiron), and over the course of time were balanced out so that no one form of being came to dominate the others, but all were bound to take their turns by a sort of natural justice. Anaximander's conception of a cosmic balance operating over time expressed an idea that was fundamental in the development of Greek medicine: human beings are a part of the natural world, and the natural world tends toward a balance. ANAXIMENES OF MILETUS The third of the Milesian monists (proponents of one elementary substance) was Anaximenes, who is traditionally considered to have been a pupil of Anaximander. He identified the unlimited substance (the Apeiron of Anaximander) as Aer/Air. He provided an analogical argument: 1. "Just as our soul, being air, holds us together, so also breath (pneuma) and air encompass the whole cosmos." (B2 DK). Anaximenes' views were described by the second-century Roman church commentator Hippolytus: 2. "Anaximenes said that limitless (apeiron ) Aer (air) was the Arche (first principle), from which arise the things that are, and those that were, and those that will be, and gods and goddesses, and the rest arises from these. The form of Aer is the following: whenever it is most uniform it is invisible to the sight, but it is revealed by cold, heat, moisture, and movement. It is always moving, for nothing that changes changes if it is not moved. Through becoming denser or rarer, it becomes different. For whenever it is changed into the rarer, it becomes fire; when condensed, it becomes winds; when condensed further (felted), it becomes clouds; becoming yet more condensed, it changes into water; and still more, earth; and, when thickest of all, stone. So that the most effective elements of generation are opposites, cold and hot." (B7 DK) In the fifth century, the theory of Aer seems to have become rather popular. Another philosopher, Diogenes of Apollonia, adopted it as his first principle (see below), and it is attributed to the character representing the philosopher Socrates in Aristophanes' comedy, the Clouds. The author of the Hippocratic treatise, On Breaths, also adopted the Aer theory. HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS Another Ionian philosopher whose ideas influenced the Hippocratic writers was Heraclitus, a native of the city of Ephesus, not far from Miletus. He is sometimes classified as a monist whose first principle was fire, but it is not clear whether he meant this to be taken literally or metaphorically. His style was intentionally enigmatic and obscure, intriguing his audience by paradoxes and leading them into fresh ways of thinking. Heraclitus' obscure style found some imitators among the Hippocratic authors. 1. "Nature loves to hide." (B123 DK) "The lord to whom belongs the oracle at Delphi neither speaks out nor hides his meaning, but gives a sign." (B93 DK) 2. "The way up and the way down are one and the same." (B60 DK) 3. "Sea water is the purest and foulest. For fish it is drinkable and life-preserving, for men it is undrinable and deadly." (B61 DK) 4. "It is not possible to step into the same river twice." (B91 DK) 5. "And good and evil are the same. For doctors, cutting and burning and torturing sick men in every way, still complain that they do not receive as much pay as they deserve from the sick, producing the same things, goods and sicknesses." (B58 DK) Some fragments suggest that Heraclitus saw Fire is the first principle of all things, in much the same way that Anaximenes saw Aer:: 6. "This cosmos is the same for all, neither any of the gods nor of men made it, but it ever was and is and shall be everliving Fire, kindled by measures and extinguished by measures." (B30 DK) 7. "The forms of Fire are, first sea; half of sea is earth, and half is thunderbolt." (B31 DK) 8. "All things are exchanged for Fire and Fire for all things, as goods for gold and gold for goods." (B90 DK) 9. "Fire lives the death of Air, and Air the death of Fire: Water lives the death of earth, and Earth of Water." (B76 DK) 10. "A man when he is drunk is led by an ungrown boy, stumbling, not knowing where he is going, having a wet soul." (B117 DK) 11. "A dry soul is the wisest and best." (B118 DK) Yet fire also encompasses the nature of strife and opposition, and may be a metaphor to convey the inexpressible nature of the changing world: 12. "All things come into being by conflict of opposites, and the sum of things flows like a stream . . . . Of the opposites that which tends to birth or creation is called war and strife, and that which tends to destruction by fire is called concord and peace." (Diogenes Laertes, On the Lives of Philosophers, 4.9.9-12) PARMENIDES OF ELEA AND THE PROBLEM OF CHANGE Parmenides of Elea, a Greek colony in Southern Italy, took Monism to its logical conclusion when he argued that only being could be: 1. "For this is impossible to maintain, that not-being is" (Fr.7 DK) 2. "It [being] never ever was nor will it be, since it is now, all together, one, continuous. For what birth will you find for it? In what way, and from what, did it grow?" (Fr.8 DK) 3. "Nor is it divided, since it is all alike; nor is any part of it greater, which would make it constrained, nor any part stronger, but it all is filled full of being, the whole of it is continuous: for being draws near to being." (B8 DK) Since only being exists, the world of change and difference that we perceive through the senses must be an illusion, or so Parmenides held. Others followed his lead, either accepting his arguments (Zeno, with his paradoxes; Melissus), or finding some way to accommodate them while still maintaining the reality of the perceived world of change. The solutions offered all posited a plurality of Parmenidean beings, each one unchanging and everlasting, by whose interchange and intermixture the perceptible world could arise. EMPEDOCLES Empedocles of Akragas in Sicily was especially important in the development of medical thinking, in fart, perhaps, because he himself practiced medicine (but not exactly of the Hippocratic type). He described the cosmic processes as the operation of four eternal and unchangeable elements or Roots: earth, air, water, and fire: 1. "For hear first the four roots of all things: bright Zeus, and lifegiving Hera, and Hades, and Nestis, who moistens with her tears the springs of mortals (fire, air, earth and water)." (B6 DK) The four elements were brought together and separated in great cycles of change by the cosmic forces of Love and Strife, thus alternatively creating and destroying the world that we perceive: 2. "But I tell you another thing: there is no birth of all mortal beings, nor any end in baneful death, but only mixture and separation of what is mixed, but mortals call this birth." (B8 DK) We see the influence of Parmenidean reasoning in one of his arguments: 3. "All these things are equal and of the same age, and each gives heed to the privilege of the other, and each has its own character, and they rule in turn as time revolves. And in addition to them, nothing comes into being or passes away. For if they perished utterly, they would no longer be. Why would this whole cease to be? and from whence would it come? Into what would it be destroyed, since nothing is empty of these things? But these things are all there is, and through exchanging places they become at once different and (yet) continuously alike." (B 17 DK, 27-35) Like Anaximander, Empedocles reasoned that the beings of this world evolved. He posited a sort of "preservation of the fittest," since things that were brought into contact in the eternal coming-together and separating-off sometimes didn't "work": 4. "But many came into being with double faces and double chests, human-headed ox-creatures, and others again ox-headed with human bodies, and creatures with male and female natures mingled, fashioned with unclear parts." (B 61 DK) Empedocles composed his works in epic meter, which has survived only in fragments. Most of what has survived belonged to two poems, On Nature and Purifications, but there are some fragments of a lost work on medicine, in which we see empirical interests similar to those of the Hippocratics: 5. "[The heart] is turned in a sea of surging blood, in which that which is called thought by men exists, for the blood about the heart is thought for men." (B105 DK) 6. "Thus all things breath in and out; in all things bloodless pipes of flesh are stretched to the uttermost body, and upon their openings at the periphery of skin they are pierced through with close-packed slits so that the blood is kept concealed and easy-flowing passages are cut for air. Thence whenever smooth blood rushes down, air bubbles in in a raging swell, and whenever blood rebounds, air breaths back out again, just as when a child plays with a klepsydra of shining metal...." (B100 DK) 7. "Empedocles holds that seed coming into a warm womb becomes male, that into a cold female, and that the cause of heat and cold is the flow of the menses, being hotter or colder, older or more recent." (A81 DK) In Empedocles, however, we see not only a man interested in the physical workings of the body, but also the charismatic, magical healer who is condemned by the Hippocratics: 8. "But you will know all the drugs against evils and the safeguards against age, since for you alone will I accomplish all this. And you will stop the might of the restless winds ... and if you wish you will bring back avenging winds in turn. You will ordain after dark rain a season of drought for men, and after the hot drought tree-nourishing floods. And you will lead back from Hades the strength of a dead man." (B111 DK) 9. "... And I am an immortal god to you, no longer mortal. I go about honored among all, as it fitting, wreathed with fillets and blooming crowns. And when I come to the flourishing towns, I am honored by men and by women. And the crowds inquire where is the path to profit; and some are in need of prophecies, and others wish to hear words of healing against all sorts of sicknesses, pierced through for a long time by grievous pains." (B112 DK) ANAXAGORAS OF CLAZOMENAE Another important post-Parmenidean philosopher was Anaxagoras of Clazomenae in Ionia, who went to Athens along with the army of Xerxes in 480. He apparently stayed on for thirty years, until he fell victim to political feuding aimed at the associates of Pericles and, condemned to death, fled to Lampsacus in Ionia. Anaxagoras held that the ultimate elements were seeds that contained a bit of everything that exists (bread, bone, blood, rock, etc.). Since each thing thus had within itself bits of everything, there was the potential for change (bread that we eat can become blood and flesh). The seeds were originally set in motion by Mind, but they came together in a mechanical sort of way to create the things of our world. According to Aristotle, Anaxagoras held that the sperm came only from the male, and that it determined the sex of the embryo, the female providing only a place and nurture for its development (The "incubator theory," also put forward by Apollo in the Eumenides of Aeschylus, 658ff.). For Anaxagoras, sex was determined by the origins of the male seed: males came from the right testes, females from the left. (Aristotle, Generation of Animals, 763b30-35) DEMOCRITUS OF ABDERA Democritus of Abdera in Thrace posited that only indivisible elements, or atoms (the Greek word means "uncut"), and the void exist. Atoms have size, shape (including projections or "hooks" which can connect with other atoms), and density; they neither come into being nor pass out of existence, but are forever in constant motion throughout the void. Individual things are created and pass out of existence by the random collision and subsequent attachment or separation of various atoms. This leads to a position of extreme relativism: 1. By convention sweet, by convention bitter, by convention hot, by convention cold, by convention color; in reality atoms and the void. (B9 DK, also B125, quoted from Galen). Democritus also took part in the popular debate about sex-determination, maintaining that both male and female contributed seed and that either may determine the sex of the embryo: 2. "The man of Abdera [Democritus] says the differentiation of female and male is in the womb, not through heat and cold, but from whichever parent the small part of the sperm which differentiates the male from the female comes in most strength." (A141 DK) DIOGENES OF APOLLONIA One of the last of the Presocratic Philosophers, Diogenes of Apollonia on the Black Sea coast, returned to monism, but his writings can best be described as eclectic. For example, for the basic element of his natural philosophy he combined elements of Anaximenes and Anaxagoras in order to produce the idea that the universe was made up of all-knowing air. Two of the most remarkable fragments of Diogenes, however, contain detailed descriptions of the blood vessels of the human body (B6 DK) and of how air effects mentality (A19 DK). CONCLUSION Early Greek physicians shared with the Presocratic philosophers the belief that man was part of the nature world and was subject to the same laws as the rest of the cosmos. They joined in the debates of the Presocratics and made use of their work in a number of rather specific ways. (For instance, the humoral theory which became the basis of most Hippocratic medicine, was interpreted in terms of Empedicles' four elements. Both philosophers and doctors took part in the debate about reproduction.) Beyond the actual theories set forth by the Presocratics, however, the early doctors were also influenced by the philosophers' use of rational thought. Greek physicians influenced by the Presocratics began to make careful observations of medical problems and to apply logic to medical treatments. Ultimately, the influence of the Presocratics encouraged early physicians to employ reason in order to progressively develop medical knowledge, rather than resorting to supernatural explanations. The Sophists Originally the term "Sophist" could be applied to any wise man or expert of some craft. By the fifth century BCE, however, the term became specially attached to itinerant teachers of rhetoric who traveled from city to city lecturing and educating pupils for a fee. While the Sophists specialized in persuasive speech, they also taught many other subjects and claimed to be able to teach their students how to have the greatest success in life. Beyond merely lecturing, many of the Sophists composed essays either explaining or demonstrating some aspect of their teaching. some of these lectures illustrated how to argue both sides of a question. Since the Sophists were the preeminent teachers of the day, many early Greek physicians used these Sophistic texts as a model when they began to write about their own craft. As a result, many of the Hippocratic treatises contain elements of Sophistic argumentation. This influence generally manifests itself in the text by the Hippocratic writers making use of various forms of logical arguments, and by imitating the tricks of rhetorical style (antithesis, rhythm and rhyme, paired and balanced clauses). Hippocratic Writings Although Hippocrates of Cos (c.460-380 BCE) is considered to be the "Father of Medicine" little is known about him. It is generally accepted that he was roughly a contemporary of Socrates and was a practicing physician. It also seems likely that Hippocrates would have been an Asclepiad. The Asclepiads were members of a guild of physicians which traced its origins to Asclepius, the god of healing. Tradition also tells us that Hippocrates was the most famous physician and teacher of medicine of his time. Over 60 medical treatises that have traditionally been attributed to him. These treatises are collectively referred to as the Hippocratic Corpus. Most of these treatises, however, were not written by Hippocrates himself. In fact, several of the existent treatises were written well after the life of Hippocrates. The treatises themselves were written over about a two hundred year period and range in date from c.510-c.300 BCE, so clearly one man could not have authored all of them. Although It is likely that Hippocrates did compose some of the treatises, none of the 60 treatises can positively be attributed to Hippocrates. Therefor at times they contain conflicting materials and different ideas. In the main, however, they are similar in looking for natural explanations and treatments of illness and rejecting sorcery and magic. Back to the Asclepion

47. Democritus Of Abdera (ca. 470-ca. 380 BC) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scie
The Philosophy of the Early Greek Naturalists Page 2Leucippus probably of Miletus and democritus of abdera (picture) werephysicians. Leucippus was the founder of the Atomist School; but his disciple
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~eww6n/bios/Democritus.html
Branch of Science Philosophers Nationality Greek
Democritus of Abdera (ca. 470-ca. 380 BC)

Greek philosopher who was a pupil of Leucippus and extended his mentor's atomic theory. He tried to account for the observable properties of matters in terms of the shapes of their constituent atoms, which he believed to be eternal, indestructible, and unchanging. He also pursued studies in physics, astronomy, zoology, botany, and medicine. In another example of amazing insight, he maintained that the Milky Way galaxy was a conglomeration of stars. Leucippus
Additional biographies: MacTutor (St. Andrews) Bonn Greek and Roman Science and Technology

48. Adventures In Philosophy: Classical Essay
by democritus of abdera. In truth we know nothing about anything, but every manshares the generally prevailing opinion.
http://radicalacademy.com/adiphiloessay31.htm
Adventures in Philosophy CLASSICAL ESSAY Select a Category... Ancient Philosophy Medieval Philosophy Modern Philosophy Recent Philosophy American Philosophy Islamic Philosophy Jewish Philosophy Political Philosophy Eastern Philosophy Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Philosophy Search Engine Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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for Powell's Books FREE newsletter and you may win $100 worth of books. The Symmetry of Life by Democritus of Abdera In truth we know nothing about anything, but every man shares the generally prevailing opinion. minimum sensible of hearing, smell, taste, and touch, and when the investigation must be carried farther into that which is still finer, then arises the genuine way of knowing, which has a finer organ of thought.

49. Pre-Socratic Philosophers Quiz
democritus of abdera. Empedocles of Acragas. Anaximenes of Miletus Anaximander ofMiletus. Heraclitus of Ephesus. democritus of abdera
http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz.cfm?qid=173842&origin=

50. Democritus - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
democritus of abdera biography page by the School of Mathematics and Statisticsat the University of St Andrews, Scotland. Democritus article in The
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democritus
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Democritus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Bust of Democritus Democritus was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher (born at Abdera in Thrace around 460 BC ; died in 370 BC ). Democritus was a student of Leucippus , and co-originator of the belief that all matter is made up of various imperishable indivisible elements which he called "atomos", from which we get the English word atom . It is virtually impossible to tell which of these ideas were unique to Democritus, and which are attributable to Leucippus. Democritus is also the first philosopher we know who realized that what we perceive as the Milky Way is the light of distant stars. Other philosophers, including later Aristotle , argued against this. Democritus was among the first to propose that the universe contains many worlds, some of them inhabited:
"In some worlds there is no Sun and Moon, in others they are larger than in our world, and in others more numerous. In some parts there are more worlds, in others fewer (...); in some parts they are arising, in others failing. There are some worlds devoid of living creatures or plants or any moisture."
Hendrick ter Brugghen , "Democritus Laughing" (1629) He was also a pioneer of mathematics and geometry in particular. We only know this through citations of his works (titled

51. The Stereoscope And The Stereograph
democritus of abdera, commonly known as the Laughing Philosopher, probably because he If a man had handed a metallic speculum to democritus of abdera,
http://www.cis.yale.edu/amstud/inforev/stereo.html
The Stereoscope and the Stereograph
Oliver Wendell Holmes
  • Democritus of Abdera, commonly known as the Laughing Philosopher, probably because he did not consider the study of truth inconsistent with a cheerful countenance, believed and taught that all bodies were continually throwing off certain images like themselves, which subtle emanations, striking on our bodily organs, gave rise to our sensations. Epicurus borrowed the idea from him, and incorporated it into the famous system, of which Lucretius has given us the most popular version. Those who are curious on the matter will find the poet's description at the beginning of his fourth book. Forms, effigies, membranes, or films are the nearest representatives of the terms applied to these effluences. They are perpetually shed from the surfaces of solids, as bark is shed by trees. Cortex is indeed, one of the names applied to them by Lucretius.
  • These evanescent films may be seen in one of their aspects in any clear, calm sheet of water, in a mirror, in the eye of an animal by one who looks at it in front, but better still by the consciousness behind the eye in the ordinary act of vision. They must be packed like the leaves of a closed book; for suppose a mirror to give an image of an object a mile off, it will give one at every point less than a mile, though this were subdivided into a million parts. Yet the images will not be the same; for the one taken a mile off will be very small, at half a mile as large again, at a hundred feet fifty times as large, and so on, as long as the mirror can contain the image.
  • 52. ChemTeam: Atomic Structure - Greeks
    He and his pupil, Democritus (c460371 BC) of Abdera, refined and extended For example, democritus of abdera said that there is no end to the universe,
    http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/webdocs/AtomicStructure/Greeks.html
    The Greek Concept of Atomos : The Indivisible Atom
    Return to Atomic structure menu. Page references are to S. Sambursky (1956) "The Physical World of the Greeks" Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-02411-1. I continue to grow in my knowledge. Atomistic theory is prominent in some of the Hindu teachings in India. Around 440 BC, Leucippus of Miletus originated the atom concept. He and his pupil, Democritus (c460-371 BC) of Abdera, refined and extended it in future years. There are five major points to their atomic idea. Almost all of the original writings of Leucippus and Democritus are lost. About the only sources we have for their atomistic ideas are found in quotations of other writers. Democritus [16K GIF] is known as the "Laughing Philosopher" because of his joyous spirit. He was a big man (relatively speaking) and enjoyed life tremendously. He also was very widely traveled.
    This map [16K GIF] shows the important towns of Greece around the time the atom concept was developed. It is about 250 miles as the crow flies between the Abdera and Miletus.
    At this time Greek philosophy was about 150 years old, having emerged early in the sixth century BC, centered in the city of Miletus on the Ionian coast in Asia Minor (now Turkey). The earliest known Greek philosopher was Thales of Miletus.

    53. M. Luz Presocratics 9
    democritus of abdera (c. 500428 BC). Democritus propounded a unified philosophicaltheory examining the following aspects
    http://research.haifa.ac.il/~mluz/Access/PhilLect9.html
    Dr Menahem Luz,
    Presocratic Philosophers
    Summary 9
    The Pluralist Reply to Parmenides:
    Empedocles, Anaxagoras, Democritus
    next summary 10 [Sophists, Protagoras, Gorgias, Dissoi Logoi]
    return
    to index of summaries Contents
  • Background
  • Empedocles of Agrigentum
  • Anaxagoras
  • Atomism general remarks
  • Background
    Even before Zeno formulated his paradoxes, some pluralists were preparing an answer for Parmenides' monism with a justification of a plurality of substances. Others were Zeno's contemporary, but took his criticism into account.
    • The Pythagoreans envisioned a pluralistic numerical cosmos derived and generated from a geometric unit, very much like that of Parmenides.
    • Opposed to this conceptual pluralistic account of the world, there is that of Empedocles who combined the old Ionic materialistic accounts of the world with a new conceptual account of cosmic forces. He accepted Parmenides' denial of the conversion of reality to non-reality in the sense that he denied the absolute destruction of substance or its absolute creation from nothing.
    • Anaxagoras' account answers Parmenides' monism by eliminating the elements altogether.
  • 54. The History Of The Atom
    His pupil, democritus of abdera developed five major points that their theorywas based democritus of abdera said that there is no end to the universe,
    http://northspringer.tripod.com/HistoryofAtom/
    document.isTrellix = 1; setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Dating Search Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Quantum Model The History of the Atom "We might as well attempt to introduce a new planet into the solar system, or to annihilate one already in existence, as to create or destroy a particle of hydrogen."
    -John Dalton (A New System of Chemical Philosophy, 1808)
    Welcome to the web site dedicated to education regarding the history of the discovery of the atom and the evolution of atomic theory. From ancient Greek times of philosophy to today's technological era of quantum physics, scientists have been mesmerized by what is thought to be the smallest particle - the atom. In Greek, the prefix "a" means "not" and the word "tomos" means cut. Thus, atomos or atom means uncuttable or undividable.
    Browse the site and learn about what theories have shaped how we view molecules and matter on Earth.
    Greek Beginnings
    The concept of the smallest particle was concieved in the 5th centruy BC by Leucippus of Miletus. His pupil, Democritus of Abdera developed five major points that their theory was based upon. Historians have discovered this from the quotations of other Greeks (most of the original documents by Leucippus and Democritus have been lost). In the 4th centruy BC, the well known philosopher Aristotle vehemetly argued that the atomic theory was completely incorrect and was therefore dismissed by scientists for many decades. In fact, the Catholic Church agreed with Aristotle's position and annouced that atomistic ideas were equivalent to those of Godlessness. "Democritus of Abdera said that there is no end to the universe, since it was not created by any outside power."

    55. Greciaheroica2
    democritus of abdera (460 BC). As well as being known as a materialistic for his atomic doctrine, democritus of abdera was also a reputed geometer.
    http://descartes.cnice.mecd.es/ingles/maths_workshop/A_history_of_Mathematics/Gr
    THE GREEK HEROIC AGE II History HIPPIAS OF ELIS Unlike the Pythagoreans, Hippias de Elis (460 B.C.) was a Sophist ; in other words he earned his living by teaching his disciples. This is mentioned in Plato's Dialogues , where he is described as having little substance, earning more money than his peers and somewhat proud in character. Proclus ascribed to him the invention of the first curve, which is different to the circumference , known as the trisectrix or quadratrix of Hippias, which allows the angle to be divided into three equal parts. It can also be used to square the circle although Dinostratus gave a clear demonstration of this in the following century. Hippias' trisectrix Whilst a moves around the circle at constant velocity b moves along the segment at constant velocity too. Each point on the curve represents the point where the arc and segment coincide as we move along them at the same time. In this window you can see how Hippias' trisectrix is used to trisect the angle in three equal parts.

    56. Quotes4
    democritus of abdera, ca. 400 BC. Strength of body is nobility in beasts ofburden, strength of character is nobility in men. democritus of abdera, ca.
    http://reductionism.net.seanic.net/brucegary3/Quotes/quotes4.html

    57. JCA: Education: Physics 316 (Lecture 1)
    (Anaxagoras of Clazomenae, c.430BCE). Universe is a purely mechanical systemobeying fixed laws (democritus of abdera, c.400BCE).
    http://www.jca.umbc.edu/~george/html/courses/2002_phys316/lect1/lect1.html
    [4097] Physics 316: Extragalactic Astronomy and Cosmology (Summary of Lectures)
    Lecture 1
    Summary of Topics covered in this Lecture

    58. BBC - H2g2 - Democritus - The Laughing Philosopher
    Once back in Abdera, Democritus spent much of his time in study and in writingmany dozens of 2 democritus of abdera , by JJ O Connor and EF Robertson.
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A3936026
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    Guide ID: A3936026 (Edited)
    Edited Guide Entry SEARCH h2g2 Advanced Search New visitors: Returning members: BBC Homepage The Guide to Life The Universe and Everything 3. Everything Deep Thought Philosophy Created: 9th June 2005 Democritus - The Laughing Philosopher Front Page What is h2g2? Who's Online Write an Entry ... Help Like this page? Send it to a friend! Democritus was a man of vision who, in the 5th Century BC, developed an atomic theory that anticipated modern principles of matter and energy, who recognised the Milky Way as light from other stars, and who didn't believe in the gods but thought man was responsible for his own future. The origin of his nickname, the 'Laughing Philosopher', is subject to debate. Some sources suggest that it derives from his theory that man's highest ethical goal is 'cheerfulness'. A less flattering explanation, expressed by the Roman philosopher Seneca (4BC - 65AD), is that Democritus was prone to displaying his contempt of human absurdity by laughing at his fellow-citizens, who in turn, called him 'the mocker'. Perhaps because he had problems with his people skills, or more likely because he held beliefs that were unpopular with many of his more influential contemporaries such as Plato (427 - 347 BC), Democritus remained a relatively obscure Greek

    59. Physics Central Writers Gallery -- L. M. Lederman
    democritus of abdera. IN THE VERY BEGINNING there was a void—a curious form About two hundred years later, democritus of abdera proposed a-toms as the
    http://www.physicscentral.com/writers/writers-01-3.html
    Our Writers' Gallery features short pieces about physics by authors who are both renowned physicists and prize-winning writers. Some of these are original contributions and others are excerpts from longer works. Many are linked to more information about the authors and their works. h.c. von baeyer c.m. will l.m. krauss a. zee ... j. s. rigden
    Leon M. Lederman The following is an excerpt from The God Particle . Reprinted by permission of the author. Nothing exists except atoms and empty space; everything else is opinion.
    -Democritus of Abdera Wait a minute. Before the boulder falls, I should explain that I really don't know what I'm talking about. A story logically begins at the beginning. But this story is about the universe, and unfortunately there are no data for the Very Beginning. None, zero. We don't know anything about the universe until it reaches the mature age of a billionth of a trillionth of a second—that is, some very short time after creation in the Big Bang. When you read or hear anything about the birth of the universe, someone is making it up. We are in the realm of philosophy. Only God knows what happened at the Very Beginning (and so far She hasn't let on). Now, where were we? Oh yes…

    60. A Planetary Delight
    His name was democritus of abdera. At the time, Abdera was considered to be muchof a joke, and the people of Abdera were considered by many to be slow and
    http://www.tmclark.com/Starwatch/2_28_99.html
    Star date: 02:28:99
    A Planetary Delight
    Throughout the history of mankind, the human race has always been fascinated by the planets. These objects seem to move in relation to the so called "fixed" background stars. The ancients, seeing the planets as just bright lights looking much like the stars themselves, did not realize the essential differences between stars and the planets. The only difference they saw was that the planets moved, and at least over the course of a human lifetime, the background stars did not. Thus, many ancient people believed that these planets were Gods, or at least magical. The word planet itself means wanderer. There were a few exceptions to this rule. One of the most brilliant minds in the ancient world was a fellow who lived in Ionia (the islands surronding Greece) in the sixth century BC. His name was Democritus of Abdera. At the time, Abdera was considered to be much of a joke, and the people of Abdera were considered by many to be slow and dimwitted. Democritus was to prove them wrong. In an age when the motions of planets were considered the magical movement of stars, Democritus stated that the planets were other worlds much like the Earth. He also believed that stars were suns much like our own, only very far away. If this were not enough, he further made the bold statement that some of these other suns were also surronded by planets, some of them habitable, and some not. Perhaps this was the first mention of aliens. He believed in life amongst the stars, and not as angels or Gods, but as biological beings. He became known as the "laughing philosopher" because he tried to laugh at the foblies of the human race, believing that he would cry about them otherwise.

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