Firstphilosopher 00 Fairiala
Firstphilosopher 00 Fairiala
Firstphilosopher 00 Fairiala
THE
FIRST PHILOSOPHERS
OF GREECE
AN EDITION AND TRANSLATION OF THE
REMAINING FRAGMENTS OF THE PRE-SOKRATIC
PHILOSOPHERS, TOGETHER WITH A TRANSLATION OF THE
MORE IMPORTANT ACCOUNTS OF THEIR OPINIONS
CONTAINED IN THE EARLY EPITOMES
OF THEIR WORKS
BY
"
ARTHUR FAIRBANKS
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
1898
PEEFACE
THE Hegelian School, and in particular Zeller, have
shown us the place of the earlier thinkers in the history
of Greek thought, and the importance of a knowledge of
their work for all who wish to understand Plato and
Aristotle. Since Zeller's monumental work, several
writers (e.g. Benn, Greek Philosophers, vol. i. London
1883 Tannery, Science hellene, Paris 1887
; Burnet, ;
2052656
vi PREFACE
Appendix.
PREFACE Vll
ARTHUE FAIRBANKS.
YALE UNIVERSITY :
November 1897.
CONTENTS
PAGE
I. IONIC SCHOOL : THALES . . . . . . . 1
IV. HEKAKLEITOS 28
X. EMPEDOKLES 174
APPENDIX 263
Herm. = Hcrmiae
'
i.
THALES.
i.
pp. 34-42 V. also Acta Phil. iv. Lips. 1875,
;
and getting the idea also from the fact that the germs
of all beings are of a moist nature, while water is the
first principle of the nature of what is moist. And
there are some who think that the ancients, and they
who lived long before the present generation, and the
first students of the gods, had a similar idea in regard
to nature ;
for in their poems Okeanos and Tethys were
THALES 3
1
Cf. Herm. /. G. P. 10 (Dox. 653).
2
In references to Simpl. in Arist. de Anima and Physica, the first
numbers give folio and line, the second, page (and line) in the edition
published by the Berlin Academy.
B 2
4 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
one of the seven wise men, was the first to undertake the
study of physical philosophy. He said that the begin-
ning (the first principle) and the end of all things is water.
All things acquire firmness as this solidifies, and again
as it is melted their existence is threatened ; to this are
due earthquakes and whirlwinds and movements of the
stars. And all things are movable and in a fluid state,
the character of the compound being determined by /the
nature of the principle from which it springs. T*his
2
Epiphan. iii. 1 ; Dox. 589 Herm. I. G. P. 10
; ; Dox. 653.
6 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
II.
ANAXIMANDEOS.
ANAXIMANDROS of Miletos was a companion or pupil
of Thales. According to Apollodoros he was born in
the second or third year of the forty- second Olympiad
(611-610 B.C.). Of his life little is known Zeller infers
;
'
1
The fragment is discussed at length by Ziegler, Archiv f. d. Gesch.
d. Philos. i.
(1883) p. 16 ff.
-
Cf. Theophrastos (Dox. 478) under Anaxagoras, infra.
10 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
surround all and to direct all, as they say who think that
there are no other causes besides the infinite (such as
mind, or friendship), but that it itself is divine for it ;
l
says that they suffer punishment and give satisfaction
to one another for injustice according to the order of
Hipp. Phil. 6 ;
Dox. 559. Anaximandros was a pupil
of Thales. He was a Milesian, son of Praxiades. He
said that the first principle of things is of the nature of
the infinite, and from this the heavens and the worlds
in them arise. And this (first principle) is eternal and does
not grow old, and it surrounds all the worlds. He says of
time that in it generation and being and destruction are
determined. He said that the first principle and the
element of beings the infinite, a word which he was the
is
1
Aet. iii. 10 ; Dox. 376. Cf Plut. Strom. 2
.
;
Dox. 579.
2
KVK\OS, the circle or wheel in which the stars are set, and in which
they revolve. The circle of the moon is farther from the earth, and
last comes the circle of the sun.
3
Cf. Aet. ii. 15-25, infra.
14 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
1 2
Aet. iii. 6 ; Dox. 374. Cf. Aet. iii. 3 ; Dox. 367.
ANAXIMANDROS 15
1
things and return to this.
perish Accordingly, an
infinite number of worlds have been generated and
have perished again and returned to their source. So
he calls it infinite, in order that the generation which
takes place may not lessen it. But he fails to say what
the infinite is, whether it is air or water or earth or
some other thing. He fails to show what matter is,
and simply calls it the active cause. For the infinite is
nothing else but matter and matter cannot be energy,;
The sun isequal in size to the earth, but the circle from
which it sends forth its exhalations, and by which it is
borne through the heavens, is twenty- seven times as
large as the earth. 24 354. An eclipse takes place ;
as the earth, and like the circle of the sun is full of fire ;
28 ;
The moon shines by its own
358. light. 29 ;
359.
The moon is eclipsed when the hole in the wheel is
stopped.
Aet. iii. 3 ;
Dox. 367. Anaximandros said that
lightning is due to wind ; for when it is surrounded and
pressed together by a thick cloud and so driven out
by reason of its lightness and rarefaction, then the break-
ing makes a noise, while the separation makes a rift of
they became drier, and after the skin broke off from
them, they lived for a little while.
Cic. de Nat. Deor. i. 10 ;
Dox. 531. It was the
opinion of Anaximandros that gods have a beginning,
at long intervals rising and setting, and that they are
the innumerable worlds. But who of us can think of
god except as immortal ?
17
III.
ANAXIMENES.
Avaf ifj,svrjs rov dspa. \sysi yap OVTWS' syyvs scrriv 6 drjp
TOV dcrw^drov Kal on icar' eicpoiav rovrov yiv6fjL0a y
dvdyKtj avrov Kal airsipov slvai Kal 7T\ov(riov Sia TO-
1
Rhein. Mtis. xxxi. 27.
18 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
that the earth was wet, and when it dried it broke apart,
and that earthquakes are due to the breaking and falling
of hills ; accordingly earthquakes occur in droughts,
and in rainy seasons also ; they occur in drought, as has
been said, because the earth dries and breaks apart,
and it also crumbles when it is wet through with waters.
Arist. Metaph. i. 3 ; 984 a 5. Anaximenes regarded
air as the first principle.
1
For a discussion of the above fragment, v. Archiv f. d. Geschichte
d. Phil. i. 315.
ANAXIMENES 19
fire, when more condensed wind, and then cloud, and when
still more condensed water and earth and stone, and all
and are coming into existence, and the things that will be,
and gods and divine beings, while other things are pro-
duced from these. And the form of air is as follows :
'
Cf. Arist. Phys. i. 4 ;
and de Coelo iii. 5.
-
V. Epiph. adv. Haer. iii. 3 ; Dox. 589.
20 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
and the moon and the rest of the stars, being fiery
all
bodies,
2
are supported on the air by their breadth.
3
And
stars are made of earth, since exhalations arise from
-
1
Act. hi. 15 ;
Dox. 380. Aet. ii. 13 ;
342 ;
ii. 20 ;
348 ;
ii. 25 ;
3i(6.
3
Aet. ii. 22 ; 352. Aet. ii. 13 342.
;
5 6
Aet. ii. 16 ; 346. Aet. iii. 4 ; 370.
ANAXIMENES 21
and the moon and the rest of the stars were formed from
earth. He declared that the sun is earth because of
its swift motion, and it has the proper amount of heat.
table. 15 379.
; The dryness of the air, due to
drought, and its wetness, due to rainstorms, are the
causes of earthquakes.
Aet. iv. 3; 387. Anaximenes et al. : The soul is
like air in its nature.
23
IV.
HERAKLEITOS.
'
1. Hipp. Ref. haer. ix. 9 (cf. Philo, Leg. all. iii. 3, p. 88).
haer. ix. 9. In part Arist. Rhet. iii. 5, 1407 b 14 Clem. Al. Strom.
: ;
xi. 19, p. 540, (and elsewhere). Cf. Philo. Quis rer. div. haer. 43, p. 505 ;
TRANSLATION.
wise for you to accept the fact that all things are one.
vpl<ricovcn
9.
14. diria'TOvs
12. Plut. de pyth. or. 6,p. 397 A. Cf. Clem. Al. Strom, i. 15, p.
358 ; Iambi, de myst. iii. 8 ; Pseudo-Herald. Epist. viii.
13. Hipp. Ref. haer. ix. 9.
gold.
9. Controversy.
10. Nature loves to hide.
'
So we worship the creator of nature, because the
knowledge of him is difficult.'
20. Koapov < rov&s > rov avrov dirdvTwv ovr TIS Oswv
OVT dv0p(i)7ra>v 7TOLT ]a', f
d\X? rjv alsl real jSffTl teal sg-rai
16. Diog. Laer. ix. 1. First part : Aul. Gell. N. A. praef. 12 Clem. ;
Al. Strom, i. 19, p. 373 : Athen. xiii. p. 610 B : Julian, Or. vi. p. 187 D ;
Proklos in Tim. 31 F.
(Euseb. P. E. xiii. 13, p. 681) Cf Bernays, Rhcin. Mus. ix. 256. The;
.
24. xprjcrfjLoa-vwr)
. . .
Kopos.
27. TO IJLT)
ovvov Trors rrfas dv ris \d6oi ;
21. Clem. Al. Strom, v. 14, p. 712 (Euseb. P. E. xiii. 13, p. 676). Cf.
23. Clem. Al. Strom, v. 14, p. 712 (Euseb. P. E. xiii. 13, p. 676).
24. Philo, Leg. all. iii. 3, p. 88, de vict. 6, p. 242 ; Hipp. Ref. haer.
ix. 10. Cf. Plut. de El 9, p. 389 c.
25. Maxim. Tyr. xli. 4, p. 489. Cf. M. Antoninus, iv. 46. Plut. de
El 18, p. 392 c (Eus. P. E. xi. 11, p. 528) and de prim. frig. 10, p. 949 A,
27. Clem. Al. Paedag. ii. 10, p. 229. -m, TWO. Schleierm., TI Gataker.
28. Hipp. Ref. haer. ix. 10. Cf. Klean. H. Z. 10. Philodem. de
piet. p. 70, Gomp.
HERAKLEITOS 31
and of the sea one half is earth, and the other half is
lightning flash.
i. 647 n.
Zeller, 1, regards irprjorrrjp as identical with
/cepawos of Fr. 28. Burnett, Early Greek Philo-
sophy, p. 153 n. 53, suggests fiery stormcloud,
Seneca's igneus turbo.
22. All things are exchanged for fire, and fire for all
p. 416 A ;
M. Antonin. ix. 3.
35. Hipp. Ref. liaer. ix. 10. MSS. ev<ppo<ri>i'riv, corr. Miller.
36. Hipp. Ref. haer. ix. 10 (cf. v. 21).
* I
keep Bywater's numbers, though I omit some of his fragments.
Such omissions are referred to in the critical notes.
HERAKLEITOS 33
bright Zeus.
'
Time is not motion of a simple sort, but, so to speak ,
36. God
day and night, winter and summer, war
is
yap (frrjcn
iravra.
38. Plut. de fac. in orbc lun. 28, p. 943 E. Patin, Einheitslehre, p. 23,
points out that this so-called fragment is probably due to a misunder-
standing of the passage in Aristotle (Fr. 37).
39. Schol. Tzetz. ad Exeg. in Iliad, p. 126, Hermann. Cf. Hippo-
krates, trepl SIGU'TTJS 1, 21 Pseudo-Herakl. Epist. \.
;
Plato and Simpl. read e's rbv avrbv irora.fji.6v. Byw. inserts ica.1
42. Arius Didymus in Euseb. P. E. xv. 20, p. 821. [Cf. Sext. Emp.
Pyrrh. hyp. iii. 115.] irorafjioicri -rolffi avroitri f/j./3a.ivovffiv trtpa. Kal crepe
vSara tirippei.
43. Simpl. in Arist. Cat. p. 104 A ed. Basil. (Scholl. in Arist. 88 b 28) ;
Schol. Yen. ad II. xviii. 107, and Eustath. p. 1133, 56. Cf. Arist. Eth.
Eud. vii. l,p. 1235 a 26 ; Plutarch de Isid. 48, 370 D ; Numen. in Chalcid.
on Tim. 295.
44 Hipp. Eef. haer. ix. 9. First part Plut. de Iside 48, p. 370 D : ;
Arist.
'
Some think that odour is a smoky exhalation,
. . . and that every one is brought in contact with
this in smelling. So Herakleitos says that if all
things,' etc. The reference is originally to the
conflagration of the universe [exTrvpoxris].
for other and yet other waters are ever flowing on.
that strife might perish from among gods and men For ! i
D2
36 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
avrr).
51. ovoi cryp/xar' av s\oivro /jid\\ov rj %pvcr6i>.
52. 6d\a(Tcra vBcop KaOapforarov /cat
fjnapcorarov^
I'XJdvO'l /JiSV TTOTl/AOV KOL CTfOTIjplOV, dvdpUtTTOLS $5 CtTOTTOV
KOL o\sdptov,
58. Sues coeno, cohortales aves pulvere (vel cinere)
lavari. 54. /3op/36pw
45. Hipp. Ref. haer. ix. 9. Cf. Plato, Symp. 187 A, Soph. 242 D;
Plut. de anim. procr. 27, p. 1026 B.
K6fffJ.OV.
Arist. Eth. End. vii. 1 1235 a 13. ; These are rather summary
phrases than quotations.
47. Plut. de anim. procr. 27, p. 1026 c Hipp. Ref. Jiaer. ix. 9-10. ;
Pyrrh. hyp. i. 55 ;
Plotin. Enn. i. 6, p. 55.
HERAKLEITOS 37
45. Men
do not understand how that which draws
apart agrees with itself harmony lies in the bending
;
place by strife.
many things.
58. Hipp. Ref. haer. ix. 10. Cf. Xen. Mem. i. 2, 54 ; Plato, Gorg.
521 E, Polit. 293 B ; Simpl. in Epict. 13, p. 83 D, and 27 p. 178 A.
p. 964 ;
Laer. Diog. ix. 8.
from all things arises the one, and from the one all
things.
60. They would not have known the name of justice,
were it not for these things.
'
According to the context in Clement
'
these things
refers to injustice.
strife.
6B6v.
64. Clem. Al. Strom, iii. 3, p. 520. Of. Strom, v. 14, p. 712 ; Philo,.
de Joseph. 22, p. 59.
66. Schol. in II. i. 49 ; Cramer, A. P. iii. p. 122 Etym. Mag. under ;
&los ; Tzetz. Ex. in II. p. 101 ; Eust. in II. i. 49, p. 41. Cf Hippokr. de .
67. Hipp. Bef. haer. ix. 10 ; Herakl. Alleg. Horn. 24, p. 51 Maxim. ;
nymph. 10 Clem. Al. Paed. iii. 1, p. 251 Philo, Leg. alleg. i. 33, p. 65,
; ;
and Qu. in Gen. iv. 152, p. 360. Human and divine nature identical :
Dio Cass. Frr. i.-xxxv. Ch. 30, i. 40 Dihd. ; Stob. Eel. i. 39, p. 768.
68. Philo, de incorr. mundi 21, p. 509 ; Aristides Quint, ii. p. 106
Meib. ; Clem. Al. Strom, vi. 2, p. 746 ; Hipp. Ref. haer. v. 16 ; Julian,
Or. v. p. 165 D Prokl. in Tim. p. 36 c ; Olympiod. in Plat. Gorg. p. 357
;
p.fred>p<av i.
p. 75 Bak. ; Maximus Tyr. xli. 4, p. 489 ; Tertull. adv. Marc.
ii. 28 Diog. Laer. ix. 8 Plotin. Enn. iv. 8, p. 468 Iambi. Stob. Eel.
; ;
i. 41 Hippokr. IT. rpoQrjs 45; Philo, de incorr. mun. 21, p. 508; and de
;
somn. i. 24, p. 644 and de vit. Moys. i. 6, p. 85 Muson. Stob. Flor. cviii.
; ;
70. Porphyr. Schol. B. II. xiv. 200, p. 392 Bek. Cf. Hippokr. .
r6ir(av 1, it. Siairijs 1, 19, it. Tptxprjs 9. Philo, Leg. all. i. 3, p. 44 Plut. ;
de El 8, p. 388 c.
71. Diog. Laer. ix. 7; Tertull.de anima 2. Cf. Hipp. Bef. haer. v. 7.
HERAKLEITOS 41
65. v. 19.
death.
same.
orac. 41, p. 432 F Clem. Al. Paedag. ii. 2, p. 184 Galen, it.
; ;
78. Plut. Consol ad Apoll. 10, p. 106 E; and de El 18, p.392D. (Ber-
nays, Rhein. Mus. vii. p. 100, thinks that more of the contents of these
passages is drawn from Herakleitean sources.) Clem. Al. Strom, iv. 22,
p. 628; Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. iii. 230 Tzetz. Chil. ii. 722. ;
79. Hipp. Ref. hacr. ix. 9. Cf. Clem. Al. Paed. i. 5, p. Ill ; Iambi.
Stob. Eel. ii. 1, p. 12; Prokl. in Tim. 101 F; Plato, Legg. i. 644 D, x. 903o ;
Philo, de vit. Moys. i. 6,
p. 85 Plut. de El 21, p. 393 E Lucian, vit.
; ;
. auct. 14.
HERAKLEITOS 43
Fr. 76. Where the earth is dry, the soul is wisest and best.
80. Plut.adv. Colot. 20, p. 1118 c; Dio Chrys. Or. 55, p. 282; Tatian,
Or. ad Grace. ;Diog. Laer. ix. 5 ; Plotin. Enn. iv. 8, p. 468 ; Julian, Or.
vi. p. 185 A ; Prokl. on Tim. 106 E Suidas s. v. iroo-rovpos. Cf Clem.
;
.
81. Herakl. Alleg. Horn. 24 ; Seneca, Epist. 58. Cf. Epicharm. Fr.
B 40 Lorenz.
82. Plotin. .Ewn. ix. 8, p. 468; Iambi. Stob. Eel. i. 41, p. 906 ;
Aeneas
Gaz. Theophrast. p. 9 Barth. Cf. Hippokr. v. SICUTTJS i. 15 ; Philo, de
clierub. 26, p. 155.
83. Plotin. Enn. iv. 8, p. 468 and p. 473 Iambi. Stob. Eel. ;
i. 41, p.
906 and p. 894 ; Aeneas G. TJieophrasi. p. 9 and p. 11.
84. Theophrast. ir. l\iyywv 9, p. 138 Wim. ;
Alexand. Aphr. Probl.
p. 11 Usen. Cf. M. Antonin. iv. 27.
MSS. Alexander, n\>K\tv<av and IO-TOTOU :
Theophrast. begins the
sentence with n^, corr. Bernays.
p. 253) ; Julian, Or. vii. p. 226 c. Cf. Philo, de profug. ii. p. 555 ;
Plotin. Enn. v. 1, p. 483; Schol. V. ad II. xxiv. 54 ( = Eustath. ad II.
/// I8lr)v
1 1
1 /**.
93. u>
-r -
SVOVTSS (bpovricrw.
povrai.
94. ov Ssl &Q-7rsp KaQsvSovras TTOLSIV Kal \sjstv.
Trpbs dvBpos.
100. /j,d%so-6ai %pr) rov Sfjftov vTrsp TOV vbpov OKCOS
VTTSp
91. Stob. Flor. iii. 84. Cf. Kleanth. H. Zeus 24 ; Hippokr. IT.
15; Plut. de Isid. 45, p. 369 A; Plotin. Enn. vi. 5, p. 668 Empedokles,
;
v. 231 Stn.
92. Sext. Emp. Math. vii. 133, where the quotation is apparently
longer. Burnett, 140, n. 35, acutely suggests typovetiv for \6yov.
93. M. Anton in. iv. 46.
94. M. Antonin. iv. 46.
95. Plut. de supcrst. 3, p. 166 c. Cf. Hippolyt. Eef. liaer. vi. 26 ;
by man.
The translation is Burnett's, following the suggestion
of Petersen in Hermes xiv. 1879, p. 304.
101. Clem. Al. Strom, iv. 7, p. 586 Theodor. Ther. viii. p. 117, 33.
;
21, p. 497 ;
Theodor. Ther. xi. p. 152, 25.
105. Arist. Eth. Nik. ii. 2, p. 1105 a 8 and Eth. End. ii. 7, p. 1223 b
;
Erot. 11, p. 755 D Iambi. Protrep. p. 140 Arc. and Coriol. 22.
; ;
106. Stob. Flor. v. 119. Neither this nor the following fragment can
be regarded as genuine.
107. Stob. Flor. iii. 84.
108. Plut. qu. conv. iii. prooem. p. 644 F ; and de audien. 12, p. 43 D ;
<f)t,\Sl.
118. Bofcsovrcav 6 BoKifAOiTaros yivdtxrKSt, <j>v\dff<T8lv
/cal jbsvTOi ical SlK'T) Kara\^-rai suBewv rsKrovas Ka
pprvpas.
111. Clem. Al. Strom, v. 9, p. 682 and iv. 7, p. 586; Prokl. onAlkib.
;
p.255 Creuz, ii. 525 Cous. Clement omits first clause Proklos ends ;
with ayaOo I.
Some MSS. omit cw-riav, Prokl. alSovs f/iriJcoc re KO.\ 5i8a<r/caA.y
p. 34.
and Tetrastich, in Basil, i. (fol. K 2 vers. ed. Bas.) ; Diog. Laer. ix. 16 ;
Fkrr. xl. 9 ; Laer. Diog. ix. 2 Iambi, de vita Pyth. 30, p. 154 Arc.
; Cf.
Lucian vit. auct. 14.
115. Plut. An seni sit ger. resp. vii. p. 787.
116. Plut.'ConoZ. 38; Clem. Al. Strom, v. 13, p. 699. Clem, airiarln.
117. Plutarch, de audiendo 7, p. 4lA ; de and. poet., p. 28o.
118. Clem. Al. Strom, v. 1, p. 649. Bergk <t>\vdffa-fiv, Bernays By-
water ir\dfffffiv.
HERAKLEITOS 51
being known.
126 = 130Z>.
127. i
f*>r) jap AIOVIHTW 7ro/ji7rr)v STTOISVVTO Kal
Herakleides and compares Eust. p. 705, 60, and Achilles Tat. Isag. p.
124 B Petav.
120. Seneca, Ep. 12 Unus dies par omni est.'
'
The Greek cannot
be restored from Plutarch, Camill. 19 <f>ixnv Ji/j.epas airda-ris /j.iai> ofto-av.
129. atcsa.
f
130a. si 0soi slcri,, iva ri Qprjvssrs avrovs ; si 8s
SPURIOUS FEAGMENTS.
fJiSVOS.
Byw. 126, the last sentence, from Origen, c. Cels. i. 5, p. 6 (quoting Cel-
sus) ; and in part vii. 62, p. 384, Clem. Al. Prot. 4, p. 44. The whole
passage, lacking the last eight words, is published by Neumann, Hermes
xv. 1880, p. 605 (cf. also xvi. 159), from fol. 83 a of a MS. entitled
dfcav (containing also works ascribed to Justin Martyr) formerly
Xprj<7>tol
in the Strassburg library.
This same MS. gives the following fragment, the last clauses of
which Neumann joins to the passage as given in the text : 5ai/j.6vcav
/JLEVOIS.
134. Floril. Monac. 199, p. '283. Cf. Philo, ap. loan. Dam. S. P.
693 652 Mang. Stob. Flor.
E, fr. p. iv. 88 credits it to Bion ; Maxim.
Conf. Serin. 34, p. 624 Combef.
TEANSLATION.
progress.
137. The same one was wont to say that the shortest
ing that all things are one, but that they are nothing,
and that the same thing applies to such and to so much.
Phys. iii. 5 ; 205 a 3. As Herakleitos says that all
De ccelo i. 10
279 b 16. And others in their turn
;
.
- that all things are and are not, se'ems to make all things
) true.
Met. x. 5 ; 1062 a 32. For one might ask Herakleitos
himself after this speedily compel him to
manner and
agree that it is never possible for opposite statements to
be true about the same things. Cf. 1063 b 24.
Met. xii. 4 ; 1078 b 12. For the doctrine of ideas is
held by its supporters because they are convinced by
Herakleitos's words in regard to the truth, viz., that all
things perceived by the senses are always in a state
of flux ; so that if there is to be a science and a know-
and yet other waters are flowing on upon those who step
in the same rivers.'
Sim. in Phys. 6r ; Dox. 475. (Theophrastos says)
60 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
his third book says that the universe is one of the beings
endowed with sense, fellow-citizen with men and gods,
and that strife and Zeus are the same thing, as Hera-
kleitos says.
Hipp. Phil. 44 ;
Dox. 558. Herakleitos the Ephesian,
a philosopher of the physical school, was always lament-
ing, charging all men with ignorance of the whole of life,
but still he pitied the life of mortals. Eor he would say
that he himself knew all things, but that other men knew
nothing. His language agrees quite well with that of
Empedokles when he says that strife and love are the
first principles of all things, and that god is intelligent
fire, and that all things enter into a common motion
and do not stand still. And as Empedokles said that
the whole region occupied by man is full of evils, and
that the evils extend from the region about the earth as
far as the moon but do not go farther, inasmuch as all
all things, and that all things are resolved into fire
again.
Galen, His. Phil. 62 Dox. 626. Herakleitos says
;
that all things arise from fire and they all end by
becoming fire. As this is quenched all things come
into the order of the universe ; dense part
for first the
of contracting into itself
it becomes earth, then the
earth becoming relaxed by fire is rendered water in its
Aet. i. 7 ;
Dox. 303. Herakleitos says that the
[Trprjar-fjpas] by a burning
and a quenching of the clouds.
Aet. iv. 3 Dox. 338.
;
Parmenides and Hippasos
and Herakleitos call the soul a fiery substance. 7 Dox. ;
V.
*), corr. Killer. V. 3 Euseb. and Theod. nai ice Eus. DEFG
: :
Earst. o/j.o'ia.
* The text follows in the main the edition of Bergk-Hiller, Poet. Lyr.
Grace., Leipzig, 1890.
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL: XENOPHANES 67
TRANSLATION.
But without
3. effort he sets in motion all things by
mind and thought.
-
Zeller, 526, n. 1. No author is given in the context; Karsten
follows Fabricius in accrediting it to Xenophanes.
3
Zeller, 524, n. 2. Cf. Arist. Bhet. ii. 23 ; 1399 b 6.
1
F 2
68 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
first line also occurs in Stob. Fior. ed. Gais. iv. App. p. 6.
12. Achill. Tat. in Isagoge ad Aratum (Petavii Doctr. Tensor, iii.
13. Eustath. II. A 24, p. 827, 59 ; Schol. Vill. ad II. A 27 and Schol.
Leyd. in Valckenaer, Diatr. Eurip. p. 195.
THE ELEATIC SCIiOOL: XENOPHANES 69
8. For all things come from earth, and all things end
by becoming earth. 2
10. All things that come into being and grow are
earth and water.
and blow out from within them, except for the great sea,
nor would the streams of rivers nor the rain-water in
the sky exist but for the sea ;
but the great sea is the
begetter of clouds and winds and rivers.
1
Zeller, 525, n. 3. Of. Diog. Laer. ix. 18 ; Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. L 224.
-
Cf. Stob. Eel. Pliys. ii. 282, /c irvpbs yap ra iravra Kal fis irvp rn
iravra rftevrq, which Karsten does not assign to Xenophanes.
3
Zeller, 541, n. 1. Cf. Sext. Emp. Pyrrh. ii. 30.
4
Cf. Arist. dc Coelo ii. 13 ;
294 a 21.
70
14 KOI TO fj,sv ouv tracts ovns dvrjp yevsr' ov$s ris scnat
i8o)s dfAipl 6ewv rs KOI acrcra \sya) rrpl vrdvrwv r
14. Sext. Emp. Math. vii. 49 and 110, and viii. 326. Vv. 1-2 Hut. :
aud. poet. 17 E Laer. Diog. ix. 72. Vv. 3-4 Hipp. Phil. 14, Dox.
; :
565 Origen, Philos. xiv. vol. i. p. 892 Galen, de diff. puls. iii. 1, viii.
; ;
p. 78, &c.
V. 1 : Sext. Diog. 1$tv. V. 3 : Galen V 70^ KO! TO yueyitrra rvxy
rfTe\ffffjifva, Hipp. TWXJ?.
p. 345, ed. Bosch, prefixes two verses which Karsten assigns to Apollo-
doros on the evidence of Athen. 418 E.
V. 1 : MSS. vw ovv T', corr. Steph. V. 3 : Suidas Qwi 7'. V. 5 :
truth.
1 '
Zeller, 549, n. 2. Burnett, All are free to guess.'
72 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
and reads oft K lot &ws. V. 15 A Kaoiyiv er' tit], corr. Steph.
:
on the banks of the Pisas, for this does not fill with
Trdp/csivrai S'
aproi %avdol <yspapij TS rpaTrs^a
KOl fJLsXlTOS TTLOVOS d%6'o fASVr) '
10
S' avOs&iv dv TO /JLSCTOV Travrrj
'
alsv i
tfnQpoffvvris. V. 5 AE olvos fcrrlv erot/ixos, Karst. &\\y S' o7i/os eroiyuos. Text
:
after Trp^a-tretv and period at end of line. Meineke puts comma at end of
line, and colon after vfipis. Bergk reads ravra yap Sin vfipts as paren- . . .
7] fivr\tJLoffvvTH, KO.} T~bv t>s, Schneid. of nvrifjLoo-vvT] Kal ir6vos, Bergk of fj.vrifj.o-
21. For now the floor is clean, the hands of all and
the cups are clean ; one puts on the woven garlands,
and sweet, and pure ; the yellow loaves are near at hand,
28 e
dp^f)? KaO'"Oijir)pov STTSL fjLS^aOrjKaa'i, irdvrss.
(Herod, wepi Sixpoy. p. 367 Lehrs) Cram. An. Oxon. iv. p. 415 (Choerob.
;
(29). Herod, wfpl pov. Ae'f 41, 5. MSS. s,evo<puv, corr. Dind. Cf.
Etym. Magn. 235, 4. J%m. Gw<Z. 301, 15.
(30). Herod. Ibid. 30, 30. MSS. ical ^v, corr. Lehrs. Cf. irepi (fAttr.
23. Nor would any one first pour the wine into the
cup to mix it, but water first and the wine above it.
Hiller, Deut. Litt. Zeitg., 1886, Coll. 474-475, suggests (Men know
2 '
SAYINGS OF XENOPHANES.
really one.
De Coelo, ii. 13 ; 294 a 21. On this account some
assert that there is no limit to the earth underneath us,
saying that rooted in infinity, as, for instance,
it is
Two passages from the Ehet. ii. 23 are translated above, p. 78.
1
powerful and most excellent of all. ... If, then, there were several
beings, some stronger, some weaker, they would not be gods for it is ;
not the nature of god to be ruled. Nor would they have the nature of
god if they were equal, for god ought to be the most powerful but ;
were several parts, these would limit each other. The one is not like
not-being nor like a multiplicity of parts, since the one has nothing by
which it may be limited.
He Nothing, however, can be moved
3
Arist. X.Z.G. 977 b 13. adds :
into not-being, for not-being does not exist anywhere. But if there is
change of place among several parts, there would be parts of the one.
Therefore the two or more parts of the one may be moved ; but to remain
immovable and fixed is a characteristic of not-being. The one is
neither movable nor is it fixed for it is neither like not-being, nor like a
;
multiplicity of being.
82 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
1
X.Z.G. 977. Since god is a unity, he is
Arist.
homogeneous in all
his parts,and sees and hears and has other sensations in all his
parts.
Except for this some parts of god might rule and be ruled by one another,
a thing which is impossible.
Being homogeneous he is a
throughout
sphere in form; for it could not be spheroidal in
places but rather
throughout.
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL: XENOPHANES 83
knows.' l
And he
says that nothing comes into being,
nor anything destroyed, nor moved
is and that the ;
comes mud, and that the race will begin anew from the be-
ginning; and this transformation takes place for all worlds.
Plut. Strom. 4 Dox. 80. Xenophanes of Kolo-
;
phon, going his own way and differing from all those
that had gone before, did not admit e ther genesis or ;
1
Epiph. adv. Haer. iii. 9 ; Dox. 590.
2
Zeller, Vorsokr. Phil. 543, n. 1.
o 2
84 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
a god hears and sees in all his parts and not in some
things arise from earth and he says that the sun and
;
1
Zeller, Vorsokr. Phil. p. 526, n. 4 Arch. d. Gesch. d. Phil. ii.
; f.
1839, pp. 1-5.
-
Epiph. adv. Hacr. iii. 9 ; Dox. 590.
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL: XENOPHANES 85
time the disk of the sun comes into a region of the earth
not inhabited by us, and so it suffers eclipse as though
it had gone into a hole he adds that the sun goes on
;
VI.
V. 26 CR oKroi, G oSre.
: V. 27 : Stein rt)\ov for e/crbs. V.
28: CR ireiOeffOai. V. 29 : Prokl. eixpfyyeos, Simpl. eu/cufcA^ov :
Plut., Diog., Sext. L arpeices ;
text follows Prokl. and other MSS.
of Sext. Stein compares Sextus's explanation ap.tr aKivijTov 215 6.
V. 31 :
Stein'suggests rovro. V. 32: MSS. flvai, corr. Karsten.
TRANSLATION.
avral &'
aldspiai Tr\r)vrat /j,s<yd\oi(rt dvpsrpois.
TO)V 8s kiKV) 7rO\V7TOtVOS S%1 K\r)l8aS
15 rrjv 8rj Trap<f)d/jivat Kovpai pakaKolcri
e(t)S, u>s cr(f>iv f3a\avun
wcrsis irvKscav CLTTO. ral 8s Ovpsrpwv
?
d^avss Troirjcrav dvaTrrdfAsvai, 7ro\v%d\Kov?
a^ovas si'
crvpij^iv dfjuoifiaSov etX/^acrai,
20 yo^ois Kal Trspovrjcrtv dprjpOTS- rfj pa &' avrwv
1
ra Trpos a\r)0siav.
el 6'
ay, sywv spew, K6/jbi<rat 8s <rv fivdov a
anrep 68ol povvai 8i^a-ios slt7i vofja-ai.
35 17 pev OTTWS ea-nv rs Kal <as OVK scrn
fir} slvat
33-40. Prokl. Tim. 105 B. 35-40. Simpl. Phys. 25 r 116, 28. 40k
'lot. Enncad, v. 1, 8, p. 489 ; Clem. Al. Strom. 749.
V. 33 : MSS. frye rS> v , corr. Karsten. MSS.
Brandis.
*et,
V. 38: Prokl. 8'
^ tKT
a0
by,
^ovffai, corr.
6'a, Stein
text follows
Stem compares Simpl. D 109, 24 ; 111, 25.
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL: PARMENIDES 89
CONCEBNING TKUTH.
gvvbv 8s fji
avQis.
apfapai, roQi yap rrd\iv io/iat
slvai,
S' OVK slvai, rd cr'
700 (ppd^edai avwya,
45 Trpairrjs yap <r'
d<$>
6Sov ravrrjs Sityo'ios < sipyw >
avrap STTSLT drrb rijs, rjv Brj ftporol sl86rss ovSev
ir\d^ovrai bbcpavof OfJ/rfflavGr) yap sv avrwv
(rrijOsaiv lOvvei ir\ayKrbv voov ol 8s
53-58a follow 1-32 in Sext. Emp. 52-53. Plato, Soph. 237 A, 258 D;
Arist. Met. xiii.
1089 a Simpl. Phys. 29 v 135, 21 31 r 143, 31
; 53 v ; ;
244, 1. 53. Simpl. Phys. 11 r 78, 6; 152 v 650, 13. 54-56. Diog. Laer.
ix. 22.
V. 52 :
Plato, TOUT' ovtianfj, Arist. ToCro Sojjs Simpl. Sajurj, corr. Stein.
Karsten omits v. 52. V. 55 : Bergk efaKoirov. V. 56 : CRV
xpivf, O npivav L iroK-lnrtipov.
-.
1
course.
Stein, Symbol, p. ;
vii. ; Zeller,
and n. 1.
92 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
fjirj&s
d sOos 7ro\V7retpov oSov Kara rijv8s /3ui(T0ay
55 vw/jidv acTKOTTOv OPILCL Kal fyijscra-av d/covrjv
KOI. <y\)crcrav, tcpivai 8s \6<ycov 7ro\vSr)piv s\sy^ov
jrff
Trodsv av^rjOsv ; ovr* EK pr) sovros sacra
D7 (
= Cramer
A. P. 1388); Philop.
Phys. 5r: 65; Prokl. Farm. iv.
62. t
62-66. Simpl. Phys. 34 v 162, 18. 62-65. Simpl. de Caelo, 137, 1.
V. 57 Stein jud^j
: F8e TI, 8 TOJ, FG 8e 76.
:
CH
V. 60 Plut. :
5t^<rTai. : F
V. 66 D (31 E (31
:
145) /uTjSa^s :
Da :
(17 :
145) av^tvov : :
(K ye p.), &VTOS, DE
om. yt, Karst. e/c TOV Uvros, Stein IK ye
irt\ovTos. Corr. Diels,
paraphrasing Simpl. 78, 27. V. 70 :
V. 73 a.v6vnrov
: aDE
text follows F. V. 75 MSS. fireira. :
ire'Aoi TO, corr. Karsten, Stein a*6\ono ir4\ov : MSS. &v, corr.
Stein. V. 76: EF *yeW, D ? yeT ', corr.
Bergk
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL : PARMENIDES 93
55 along this path, thine eye careless, thine ear and thy
I have uttered.
Parm. ii. 62 and 120 Philop. B 5: 65. 82-89 (except 85). Simpl. Phys.
;
9 r 39, 26. 82-84. Ibid. 17 v 79, 32. 85-89. Ibid. 7 r 30, 6 9 r 40, 3. ;
raiirf, tavr6. Simpl. 30, 6 omits the last re. V. 86 C oi/x ovrws, :
90-93. Clem. Al. Strom, v. 2, 653. 90. Theod. Ther. Ser. i. 13.
V. 90 Stein suggests airf6v re v6ip ira.pt6v re
:
pefSaicp, V. 91 :
tiguous to being.
1
Following Karsten and Preller ; Stein rejects the interpretation.
96 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
svprjvsis
TO vosiv. ovosv xpeoy sanv TJ sarat
a\\o rrdps^ rov sovros, STTSI TO <ys fiolp' STrsSr)<rsv
ov\ov aKivrjTQV r efisvai. rq> ndvr bvop, sarat
oa-aa ftporol Karsdsvro, TTSTroiOorss slvai dXrjdrj.,
100 <ylvsa6al rs Kal o\\va6a^ slvai rs teal OVKL,
ical rorrov d\\dcraew oi,d re XP a <j>
av v dpsipsiv.
ra rrpos Bo^av.
94-112. Simpl. Phys. 31 v 146, 7. 94-98. Ibid. 19 r 87, 13 and 86, 31.
94-96. Ibid. 31 r 143, 22. 98. Plat. Theaet. 180 E, and from this Simpl.
Phys. 1 r 29, 18. 103-105. Plat. Soph. 244 E ; from Plato, Simpl. Phys.
12r52, 23; 19 v 89, 22; Stob. Eel. i. 15, p. 352. 103-104. Arist. de
X.Z.G. ch. 2 and 4; Prokl. Tim. 160 D; Simpl. Phys. 27 r 126,
22 and 127, 31 29 v 137, 16. 104-105. Prokl. Parm. iv. p. 62.
;
forty, (31 :
146) ou5' et XP^VOS la-riv, corr. Stein. V. 98 Text :
CONCERNING OPINIONS.
site ;
and on the other hand, opposed to the first, is
the other.
H 2
100 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
Kal /u'f tos
a
Trdvrrj yap <rrvyspoio roKov
130 TO r' svavnov avdis
Tre/iTTOuo-' apasvi QrjXv piysv
dpasv drjKvrspu).
rd IV irdvra
aldsplav rs fyvviv aiflept T'
sitrrj 8'
yap l/cacrror'
132. Plato, Symp. 178 B ; Arist. Met. i. 4, 984 b 26 ; Plut. Amat. 756 r ;
151-153. Simpl. de Coelo f. 138 ; Peyr. 55 sq., Gaisf. Poet. Min. 287.
V. 151 MSS. ?<K corr. Stein. MSS.
:
(ita.1)
vvv loo-i, Peyr. vvv re
Stein vvv Kal fa<ri. V. 153 Text follows Oxford MS.
tafft, : :
and do not unite into one, they will distress the sex
that is coming into existence, as the twofold seed is
Soph. 217
1
Cf. c.
J04 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
as not-being.
regards heat as being, its opposite
ii. 4 ; 1001 a 32. There is nothing different
Metaph.
from so
being, that it is necessary to agree with the
reasoning of Parmenides that all things are one, and that
this is being.
1
Karsten understands '
heat and cold,' Diels perceiving and think-
'
ing.'
108 THE FIKST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
one.
fire as agent and cause, and he says that the earth will
come to an end, but in what way he does not say. He
says that the all is eternal, and not generated, and
surrounded all was solid like a wall, and under this was
a crown of fire and the centre of all the crowns was
;
nature. The sun and the moon are separated from the
milky way, the one from the thinner mixture, which is
hot, the other from the denser, which is cold. 25 ;
moon is of the same size as the sun, and derives its light
from it. 30; 361. (The moon appears dark) because
darkness ismingled with its fiery nature, whence he
calls it the star that shines with a false light.
Aet. iii. 1 ; 365. The mixture of dense and thin
gives
its milk-like appearance to the milky way. 11; 377.
Parmenides first defined the inhabited parts of the earth
VII.
Literature Lohse,
: Halis 1794 Gerling,
;
de
Zenonis Paralogismis, Marburg 1825 Wellmann,
;
s^si peysOos Kal irpos^Si avTov TI. O/JLOIOV 8rj TOVTO a?raf
TS siTTslv Kal dsl \sysiv ov8sv yap avTov TOIOVTOV
Zeller, Vorsokr. Phil. 591, n. 2, strikes out 5e : F olovrai els : E gives oi>
I
114 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
there are always others between any two, and yet others
between each pair of these. So the number of things
is infinite.' So by the process of division he shows that
theirnumber is infinite. And as to magnitude, he begins
with this same argument. For first showing that (Fr..
'
3) i'f
being did not have magnitude, it would not exist
'
at he goes on, if anything exists, it is necessary
all,'
i 2
116 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
'
such a thing as place, it will be in some-
If there is
is in something, and that which is
thing, for all being
in something is in some place. Then this place will be
in a place, and so on indefinitely. Accordingly there is
no such thing as place.'
Ibid. 131 r 563, 17. Eudemos' account of Zeno's
problem seems to
'
Zeno's
opinion runs as follows
:
vi. 9 ;
239 b 5. And Zeno's reasoning is fallacious.
the middle ;
in which case he thinks half the time equal
to twice the time. The fallacy lies in the fact that while
he postulates that bodies of equal size move forward with
equal speed for an equal time, he compares the one with
something in motion, the other with something at rest.
Plut. Strom. 6 ;
Dox. 581. Zeno the Eleatic brought
out nothing peculiar to himself, but he started farther
difficulties about these things.
me, is
probably the source of the corruption irpoffra.vXvQfaeTai. The
Vatican vulgate combines both readings.
120 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
VIII.
'
STS\svTr)crs yap av TTOTS yivoasvov
'
/cal TsXsvTrjv si 8s
o TL fir) Trav sari,. 1. 31. (Fr. 8.) aAA' &<nrsp sariv dsl,
ovro) Kal TO jjusysOos aTrsipov dsl %pr) slvai. 1. 33. (Fr.
Cf. 19 r 87, 6.
Fr. 11. &F ylyvoiro. E ovKeri, omits kv. E omits 8 after rb. aD
(F) rpixi M?> E rpi ^ .
Vulg. from Brandis el TOIVVV
ereffi. F irap6vTi for iravri.
122 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
ov yap av TTCLVaX-ysov
e'lrj
ov yap av Svvairo asi su>ai
l
'ypfj/j,a
6/jLoiov SiT}, el
TrpocryivojjLsvov, KOVK
av STC OJAOIOV s'iij. ovB' av TO vytss
a\,yfj(rai Bvvairo" cnro yap av 6'Xotro TO vyiss Kal TO sov,
t, si KSVOV /Jt,r)
S(7TIV. si TOLVVV 7T\SCi)V SCTTIV, OV
KlVSlTai.
Aristokl. Euseb. Pr. Ev. xiv. 17. (Fr. 17.) JJLSJKTTOV fisv
ovv arjfjisiov OVTOS \6jos on, %v abvov SCTTIV. arap Kal
b
dr}p Kal aiorjpos Kal ^pvcrbs KOI Trvp Kal rb p-sv %wov TO 8s
Kal fjis\av Kal \SVKOV Kal TO, oera fyacrlv ol
sivai a\,Tjdr], si 8rj TavTa SCTTL Kal rj/jisls opdws
6pw/j,sv Kal aKovofisv, slvai %pr) SKUCTTOV TOIOVTOV olov
Fr. 17. Vulg. xp^J Simpl. fov, Aristokl. feov (twice) Aristokl. flvai
: :
rjv, Kal TO ebv TOIOVTOV, olov irpSiTov e5ofv rtfj.1v flvai, Simpl. omits
irdvTa and a\7)6i) Aristokl. erepoj/, a\\' elvai '6fJ.oiov, o16v irtp effTi ficaffTov,
:
case it < would simply be, and > would not have come
into existence. So then being
not generated beingis ;
was and always will be. (Fr. 2) But while that which
comes into existence has a beginning, that which does
not come into existence does not have a
beginning,
and being which did not come into existence would not
have a beginning. Farther, that which is
destroyed has
an end but if anything is not
;
subject to destruction, it
does not have an end ; and that which has neither begin-
ning nor end is of course infinite ; so being is infinite.
(Fr. 3) And if it is infinite, it is one ; for if being were
two, both parts could not be infinite, but each would
be limited by the other. But
being is infinite ; there
could not be several
beings ; is one.
accordingly being
(Fr. 4) Farther, if being is one it does not move for the ;
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL: MELISSOS 125
but the rare is more empty than the dense, and there
is no such thing as emptiness. It is necessary to judge
whether being is full or not by its capacity to receive
being ;
and that applies to being.
all Melissos puts it
as follows :
(Fr. 7) Since then it did not come into being
but is, it always was and always will be, and has
neither beginning nor end, but is infinite. For if it had
come into existence it would have had a beginning (for
that which once came into existence would have a begin-
ning) and an end (for that which once came into exist-
ence would come to an end) if it neither had a beginning ;
1
The paraphrase above (Fr. 3) gives the argument in fuller form.
THE ELEATIC SCHOOL: MELISSOS 127
24
111, 18. Melissos bringing his previous topic to
;
not full ;
if it does not have room for anything, or admit
If no void exists it must be
anything into it, it is full.
full if then it is
;
full it does not move. These are the
doctrines of Melissos.
34; 162, 24. (Fr. 6) What was, always was and
always will be ;
for if it had come into existence, it
Aristokl. Euseb. Pr. Ev. xiv. 17. (Fr. 17) This argument
isthe strongest proof that being is one only. And the
proofs are as follows For if a multiplicity of things
:
just such as I say the one is. For if earth exists, and
water and air and iron and gold and fire and the living
and the dead and black and white, and everything else
which men say is real, if these things exist and we see
and hear them correctly, it is necessary that each thing
should be such as we determined, namely, it should
first
that hot becomes cold and cold hot, that hard becomes
soft and soft hard, that the living being dies and life
comes from what is not living and that all these things ;
that are. And earth and rock arise from water. These
things then do not harmonise with each other. Though
we said that many things are eternal, and have forms
and strength, it seems that they all become different and
change their character each time they are seen. Evi-
dently we do not see correctly, nor is the appearance of
multiplicity correct for they would not change their
;
Pliys. i. 3 ;
6. Both Melissos and Parmenides
186 a
argue fallaciously, and they make false assumptions and
their reasonings are not logical but the argument of
;
potentially destructible.
Aet. Plac. i. 3 ; Dox. 285. Melissos of Miletos, son of
IX.
Gorg. 507 E. And the wise men say that one com-
munity embraces heaven and earth and gods and men
and friendship and order and temperance and righteous-
ness, and for that reason they call this whole a universe,
134 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
and this place that the fire occupies, they call the guard
of Zeus, as it is called simply the centre, that is, the
centre of space and the centre of matter and of nature.
iii. 1 ; 300 a 15. The same holds true for those who
construct the heaven out of numbers ;
for some con-
struct nature out of numbers, as do certain of the
Pythagoreans.
Metaplnjs. i. 5 ; 985 b 23-986 b 8. With these and
before them (Anaxagoras, Empedokles, Atomists) those
called Pythagoreans applying themselves to the sciences,
first developed them and being brought up in them
;
right and left, male and female, rest and motion, straight
and crooked, light and darkness, good and bad, square
and oblong. After this manner Alkmaeon of Kroton
seems to have conceived them, and either he received
this doctrine from them or they from him for Alkmaeon ;
one must delay a little longer over what they say. They
to the ques-
speak correctly and incorrectly in reference
tions now before us. Now
who are called Pytha-
those
form for everything, and the others are not forms and ;
sense are not separated from this, for they are com-
posed of it indeed, they construct the whole heaven
;
is quantity, as
'
The thrice-blessed Danaoi.' On this
account then he includes the triad. . . . And their
sect is called Italic because Pythagoras taught in Italy,
for he removed from Samos, his fatherland, because of
dissatisfaction with the tyranny of Polykrates.
Aet. i. 7 Dox. 302. Pythagoras held that one of the
;
L
146 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
of Pythagoras held
material], i. 14 ; 312. The followers
that the universe is a sphere according to the form of
the four elements but the highest fire alone is conical.
;
i. 15 ;
314. The Pythagoreans call colour the manifesta-
tion of matter, 314. Bodies are subject to change
i. 16 ;
has arisen from the cube, fire from the pyramid, air
from the octahedron, and water from the icosahedron,
and the sphere of the all from the dodecahedron, ii. 9 ;
co very. ii. 13 ;
343. Herakleides and the Pythagoreans
asserted that each world [/cocryaoy]
of the stars is air and
aether surrounding earth in the infinite aether. And
these doctrines are brought out in the Orphic writings,
for they construct each world of the stars, ii. 22 ; 352.
The Pythagoreans : The sun is spherical, ii. 23 ;
353.
Plato, Pythagoras, Aristotle The solstices lie along the
:
ii. 24 ;
354. An eclipse takes place when the moon comes
past. ii. 25 ;
357. Pythagoras The moon is a mirror-
:
said that the milky way is the burning of a star that fell
from its own foundation, setting on fire the region
through which it passed in a circle, as Phaethon was
burned. And
others say that the course of the sun-
arose in this manner at the first. And certain ones sav /
say that the comet is one of the stars that are not
always shining, but emit their light periodically through
a certain definite time; but others say that it is the
reflection of our vision into the sun, like reflected
the inhabited one [the one between the arctic and the
torrid zones] being well-tempered. . . .
four) held that the powers of the soul are of the same
number as these. And these they name intelligence
and wisdom and understanding and opinion and sense-
perception, iv. 5 391. Pythagoras The principle of
;
:
were mystae who were coming into the order of the all ;
and he set forth that in his view there were from the
beginning two causes of things, father and mother ;
destroy or even pollute the soul, for these are the essence
of all things. And it is said that Zaratas forbade men
1
Cf. Epiph. Haer. i. 1 ;
Dox. 589.
154 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
wise he took his money and was sent off. The esoteric
class were called Pythagoreans, and the others Pytha-
goristae. Andthose of the disciples who escaped the
conflagration were Lysis and Archippos and Zalmoxis
the slave of Pythagoras, who is said to have
taught the
Pythagorean philosophy to the Druids among the Celts.
1
X.
EMPEDOELES.
NOTE. I print Stein's numbers at the left of the Greek text, Karsten's
numbers at the right.
158 THE FIEST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
FRAGMENTS OF EMPEDOKLES.
IIEPI 4>TSEOS nPHTOS.
Hav<ravia, av 8s rc\vdi, Safypovos 'Ay^lrov vis. 54
l
fjisv <yap Tra\d/j,ai Kara yvta Ks^vvrai '
32
TO, T' dfA/3\vvovcri
e/j,7raia,
svpslv
ovrws oyr' STTiSsp/CTa raS' dvSpdaiv ouS' sjra-
Kovcrra
OVTS VOW TTSpiX-yTTTd. (7V S' OVV, STTsl w' \ld-
a-rjs,
TRANSLATION.
Book I.
not life, swift to meet their fate, they rise and are borne
away like smoke, persuaded only of that on which each
one chances as he is driven this way and that, but the
<f)dpfj,afca
S' o<rcra ysydai KCLKMV Kal
<yr)paos d\tcap
25 Trsva-rj, ami aol sja) Kpavsw rd&s Trdvra. 425
fjiovvw
Traverses 8' aKa^drwv dvsp.u>v psvos oi r' STTI
yalav
opvvfj-svot, TTVoialcrt Kara^Oivvdovcnv dpovpas'
xw ir^Ttv tr\tov\ 22. MSS. oTrdffrj, corr. Stein. 23. MSS. 6',
Karsten 5'.
where bpovpav. 28. Clem, tlr', others tfv K'. Diog., Clem.
iraKivrtra, corr. Stein. 29. Tzt. o-r^o-eis, Suidas a-ri,<rn.
30. Tzt. <rrr,fffis. 31. Diog. ra 5' tv 9tpei ar,ffavra, Hermann
rd T' aldtpi alQvffffovrai, corr. Stein.
33-35. Sext. Emp. Math. ix. 362, and x. 315; Plut. Mor. 878 A
(Eus. Pr. Evang. xiv. p. 749) ; Probus on Verg. Ed. vi. 31 Hipp. Eef.
;
EMPEDOKLES 161
1
Cf. Dox. p. 90, n. 3.
M
162 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
Diog. Laer. viii. 76; Herakl. Alleg. Horn. 443 o. Clem. Al. Strom.
p. 746 joins 33, 78, and 104.
33. TVV, Sext. 7&/>, Prob. 5)?. Last word Prob. IMTIV. 34. Plut.
Zus aiOfyp. 35. Diog. Laer. tviiriKpo? 5/tfto ^p6mov, Prob. 7*
iriKpols VW/JM (vuifiq, ? ) Qpfofiov yevos.
36-39. Plut. Mor. 1111 r, 885 D. 36 b, 38. Arist. Gen. Corr. I. 1 ;
into being ; and when they are separated, they call them
evil fate ;
this is the established practice, and I myself
(TTTSiV, 446
\Trstpara /j,vda)v~\ 87
8t7rX' spew TOTE /AW jap Iv riv^drf povov slvai
60. Plut. nonpos. suav. viv. 1103 F Sis yhp 6 Set ica\6i> firriv anovo-at,
Schol. Plat. Gorg. 124 Euhnk. 51s Kal rpls rb na\bv. . . 'E/xireS. rb eiros
" Kal Sis
yap t> 8T ica\6i> lanv fvfaireiv." Text from Sturz.
61-73. Simpl. in Arist. Phys. 34 r 158, 1 sq. 66-68. Tzetzes, Horn.
58 Sch. 67-73. Simpl. de caelo Peyr. p. 47 sq. 67-68. Simpl. Phys.
6v25, 29, and 310 r. Diog. Laer. viii. 76; Stob. Eel. i. 11, p. 290;
vit. Horn. p. 327 G'al. 69-73. Arist. Phys viii. 1 ; 250 b 30.
61. Karst. supplies veipara nvOuv from v. 75. 62. Cf. 104. 65. E
SpvQOe'iffa, MS. 66-67. Cf. 116-117. 68. Simpl. 158,
5/>jrHj.
8 Si'xa travra. Elsewhere as in text. 69. Om. Simpl. 158 b
1. 73. MSS. euciVrjTot corr. Bergk.
EMPEDOKLES 165
life, so long they exist and share what is evil and what
pledges of our Muse bid thee, and lay open her word to
elvai.
75 a>s
yap teal trplv eiira T
0(i>V,
'
77-80. Simpl. Phys. 6 v 26, 1 ; Sext. Emp. Math. ix. 10. 78. Plut.
de adult, p. 63 D; Clem. Al. Strom. 746 (with v. 33). 79-80. Sext.
Einp. Math. x. 317. Mor. 952 B. 80-81. Plut. Amat. 756 D.
79. Plut.
81. Clem. Al. Strom. 653 Simpl. Phys. 41 r 188, 26. 91. Cf. Stob. Eel.
;
has been wont to arise out of many and again with the
I shall speak ;
for at one time there grew to be the one
168 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
Ttfjifjs
S' aXX.'rjs aXXo /j,sBst,,7rdpa
8' r^Bos s Kacrry. 115
ov&ev yap Trpbs rois STnylyvsTai o^S' cnroKriyst,.
oaa T' effrai oiriffffai. 105. Simpl. 133, 15 SevSpa -re fiefi\dffTrjK<:-,
108. ED royov, Diels r6 y' 6v ? Hermes xv. 163 rtcrov :
E StaKpaffis, D SiaKptffis. Sturz. Sidirrv^is from Simpl. 34 v.
161, 20. Platt 5ii* Kuirpis- dpe//86j Journ. Philol. 48, p. 246.
I bracket 108-109 as another form of 94-95.
EMPEDOKLES 169
of my words. 1
. . .
1
Cf. Parmenides v. 112.
170 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
110 Kal yap Kal irdpos rjv re Kal fWerat, ovBe TTOT',
Did),
110. For they two (Love and Strife) were before and
shall be, nor yet, I think, will there ever be an unutterably
long time without them both.
[crfyalpov erjv^]
120. DEF &n<t>ta : F SfSacares. 122. MSS. op/uovi'ij : J fn'^avrfs > &
fiA^av Tt. 123. aF iraa-'
(va\iyKia. 124. D Kri&vrfs . . .
avepts.
127. F ov-rta juV airaxTj ; a us vv Ktv :
Bergk <pp4vas : Katvvrai
(Hesych. VIKO.TU) corr. Blass for MSS. KO.( vv TC?, 128. MSS.
yfydacriv fio-jrero, corr. Bergk.
130-133. Clem. Al. Strom. 674.
130. fl 5' &yt roi \fw, Pott, d 8' &yt rot i>.1v lyit. 131. Gomperz,
Hermes xxxi, 469 4aopiafj.tv airavra.
134. Simpl. Phys. 258 r /cal Bfbv eirovo^a^ei Kal ovStrfptas irore /caXe?
ffQaipov ti)v. Cf. \. 138.
135-138. Simpl. Phys. 272 v. 135-136. Plut. cfe fac. in lun. 926 E.
138. Simpl. de caelo, Peyr. 47 M. Antonin. xii. 3 Stob. Eel. Phys. i.
; ;
15, 354 ; Achilles (Tatius) IN ARAT. 77 Pet. and frag. Schol. p. 96 Prokl. ;
in Tim. 160.
in Arat. Kv/cAortpe? j
EMPEDOKLES 173
let not error overcome thy mind to make thee think there
130. But come, I will tell thee now the first principle
earth and billowy sea and damp mist and Titan aether
143. For all the heavy (he put) by itself, the light
by itself.
the all.
great heavens.
face.
176 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
77
Bs </>Xo i\dsipa (juvv0aBirjS rv-^sv avyrjs. 193
vv/CTOf spijf4,air)$
akawTTiSos. 198
a B'
svspd' sBsos Trvpa Kaisrai. 207
moon.
of her lord.
157. And she scatters his rays into the sky above,
of the lights.
tca/j,a<rrj-
vvv. 205
Kapira\Lfj,(0s
dvoTraiov. 202
169-185. Simpl. de caelo, Peyron p. 27 Gais. Poet. Min. Gr. ii. p. xlii;
;
the sun.
1
In Empedokles' verses, cdety regularly means air.
v 2
180 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
a 8' a'/
'
T KpcTl T KOI
drfda ical p.a\a \wypd
of perfect Love ;
and all at once what before I learned
were immortal were coming into being as mortal things, 1
behold.
-\
' '
1
6i/T]rd, perishable things in contrast with the elements, might
almost be rendered '
Tscra-apa 8'
'H^ala-roio- ra 8' oarsa
aptjpora
)
8e j(6(av TOVTOtcriv crvvKvpa- yLtaXtcrra
icrrj
215
T' "Op/Spy re /cat A.i6fpt
. . . 208
197. Arist. irvpl yap atfei rt> irvp, corr. Karst. 198. jevos H, 5e/j.as.
199. Simpl. &EF fi>rvKrois, D and Arist. fvyrtpvois. 200. &F TO,
DE ray, Diels T& : &F ntpwv, DE noipdwv.
203-207. Simpl. Phys. 1 v 32, 6. 203. 74 v, 331, 5.
205. &DE 6pnijff8e'i<ra, F dpnurOe'tira. 206. MS. irXe'ov Iffriv, corr.
Panz. 287. &F dinar' tytvovro, D aT/xa Tfjevro, E cu^ar'
tyevTO.
Harmony.
208. . . .
glueing barley-meal together with water.
210-213. Simpl. de caelo, Peyr. p. 28 ; Gaisf. Poet. Min. Or. II. xliii.
Brand. Schol. Arist. 507 a.
210. A 8' f-ri ffoi, B (IStrt a-oi, Taur. el Se TJO-J. 212. MS. ftS?;
T jfvolaTo xpoidffTf, corr. Bitschl.
Book II.
sun (fire) when they are mixed, arose such colours and
214. How both tall trees and fishes of the sea (arose).
219. And thus tall trees bear fruit (lit. eggs), first
of all olives.
/jivpia
Bei\d TreXovrat, rd r' dpl3\vvov<Ti p.spip.-
vas,
f
230 <r<f>a>v
avT&v irodsovra <f>i\r)v ETTI ysvvav iK<rdai f
jrdvTa yap ta-Qi <ppovr)(riv e%eiv Kal vca^aros
alcrav.
p. 165.
222. MS. ical ec, corr. Mill. MS. ffQaSirqfftv . . . corr. Schneid.
223. MS. broTrrtvfts, corr. Schneid. 224. MS. ravra. 5, corr.
Schneid. 225. MS. KT. . . Schneid.
KartpxAftfv, corr. Stein.
227. MS. TJAA.' olStv t-riptets, corr. Schneid. 228. MS. Srj\a.
Te'Xovrou . . . fj.fptu.vai, Schneid. $ti\' cnrz\au.va. . . .
(itplft-va,^ .
229. MS. OTJS, Schneid. la\ 231. Cf. Sext. E. Math. viii. 286.
MS. of Hippol. Kal yvufjunoffiffov.
234. Quaest. conv. Kal /tV, de fac. lun. ical T^V, Stein pouvwv, Diels
KaAxw", comparing Nicander, Alexipharm. 393 and Schol.
Schneid. p. 98 for the interpretation of a fish furnishing a
dye. Also Arist. Hist. anim. viii. 13 ; 599 a 10 trop^vpan *ca>.
EMPEDOKLES 187
share of intelligence.
the surface.
1
f v<ns here seems to mean '
nature,' and not '
origin.'
188 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
240-242. Simpl. de caelo, Peyr. 28; Gaisford xliii. Brand. Schol. 512 a.
The three lines are cited separately.
242. A v/j.irp(t>T\ B tvnirpurais, corr. Karst.
strong limbs.
on their backs.
untiring.
Aphrodite.
BrjpCTL
T Opl\^(T(TCV I8e 7TTpofidfJ,Oiai KVfJ.-
fiais.
ovro,
fiovysvr) dvSpoTrpwpa, ra 8' sfiTraXiv s^avsrs\\ov 239
dv$po<f)vrj fiov/cpava, fj,fj,iy^sva rfj pJev air av-
Sp&v,
260 TJ} & yvvaiKO(f>vf), <TTipoi? r}<TK,rniva yvlois.
yvvaiicwv 248
< r
sp,p,v)(jiovs opirrjKas dvtj ya y Kptvofisvov Trup,
/cXu' ov <yap fj,vdos dTrocr/coTros ouS' d
on wings.
members.
'
TW
'
siri Kal iroOos r)\6s Bi o^frios a^i-^Qsvri. 256
'
sv 8' e'xydrj KaOapoiai ra /ASV rs\edova-i yvvaiKEs 259
^rv^os dvrtdcravTa.
275 \tfisvas a^tcTTovs 'A^poBlTtjs. 261
275. Schol. Eur. Phoen. p. 600 Valck. Stein transposes first two
words.
276-278. Galen in Hippokr. Epidem. iv. 2.
282. MS. niv M y\vt<v, corr. Macrob. 283. MS. omits ?? and
ends $a\epov XajSeVoi, corr. Karst.
EMPEDOKLES 193
(body).
uxrrrep orav
295
sure fiev av\ov iropOpJov JTT' svsiSst %spl
els vSaTos ftaTTTrjcri rspsv BsfMas dpyvfpsoio, 285
ov TOT' ss ayyocrB' Ofj,{3po$ ia-sp^rai, d\\d ^iv
eipyst
aldepos O<Y%OS aa>6 TTSCTMV sjrl rprj^ara rrvKva,
compressed stream ;
but then when the air gives way
the determined amount of water enters. (302.) And so
in the same way when the water occupies the depths
of the bronze vessel, as long as the narrow opening
psvvwv.
VKTijpaiv 300
T X.\6y%ao'i iravra KGLI
301
315 (rdpKtvov o^ov.
toy 8'ore rts Trpoobov vo^cov a)7rXtcro"aTO
drive back every sort of wind, for they scatter the breath
of the winds as they blow and the light darting out,
825 -jrvp
f&> SiaOpwcncov, ocrov ravawTSpov r)v. . .
330. Some MSS. <W|Teu. 330. MS. omits r\ 331. MS. *al rb
v, corr. Karst.
Emp. Math. i. 303, vii. 92, 121. Philop. on Arist. de Gen. et corr. 59 b ;
338-341. Hipp. Ref. haer. vii. 31 ; 254. Cf. Schneid. Philol. vi. 167-
338. MS. flKapai $>rj,ufpfcoj', corr. Mill. MS. ni/bs, corr. Schneid.
339. MS. fipfrepas /ufAe'ras, corr. Schn. 340. MS. tv^o^vutv ,
347. Ammon. otrre ykp di/Spo/ue'jj *cf>aAfi, Tzt. ov futv yap Pporir)
Jce^oAfi. 348. Tzt. ow ft.fv airal, Hippol. ou yap curb, Ammon.
Tzt. vd>T<ov 76 ... a.!ffaovffiv. Text from Hippol. 349.
Hippol. yovvar' ov ju^Seo yevfievra. (349a. Hippol. adds after
349 the following d\Aa <T<j>cupos tr^v al loos fff-rlv airy, Schneid.
alpos ceix /cal vdvroBfv T<ros
EMPEDOKLE8 201
Book III.
mind of man ;
for he has no human head fitted to a
body, nor do two shoots branch out from the trunk, nor
KA6APMOI
*fl <j>i\oi, o't
fis^a da-TV Kara adov'Afcpd<yavTos 889
isr' av dxpa TroXet/y, dyaOwv /j,s\sSri povs
vovcrcov,
352-363. Diog. Laer. viii. 62. Omitting 354, 362, Anthol. Bosch, i.
86. 352-353, 355-356. Anth. gr. Jacobs ix. 569. 352-353. Diog. Laer.
viii. 54 (cited as
beginning of Book on Purifications). 354 inserted by
Stz. from Diod. Sic', xiii. 83. 355. Diog. Laer. viii. 66 ; Sext. Emp. Math.
i. 302
Philost. vit. Apoll.
; i. 1. ; Lucian, pro laps, inter salut. i. 496 ;
ON PUKIFICATIONS.
avyds
rjsXiov aKa^avros, 6 8'
alOspos /x/3aXs Sivais.
380 d\\os B' et; dXXov Several, arvysovat Bs
81; 468 c.
369. Plut. tcrrt TTJJ (rt), Hippol. ecrrt rl :
Simpl. ff<f>pdytffv.a.
371. Panz. Schneid. <ppft>av. 372. MS. &s Kal tiriopKov o^op-
T^cray firo/j.<i>fffi, corr. Schneid. Schneid. alpua-tv, Stein
OU>OTOS. Knatz rejects 372 from Hesiod Theog.
as a gloss
793. 373. Plut. Sa fj.ov(s o'lrt p.a,Kpaliavfs \t\6yx aal &ioio, Hippol.
!
jealousy.
one of those spirits who are heir to long life, thrice ten
Air ;
one receives him from the other, and all hate him.
awvos
383. Hippol. Philos. 3 V\TOI /j.ev yap, Cedren. Chron. i. 157 tfroi /j.fv
KpatTa, Often Kovpri re Kopos Tf. 384. Cedren. Kal 6^p K.9. e'^ aAbs
ffjiirvovs IxQvsKal tv 'O\v/j.iria /3ovs, Diog. Laer. f/j.irvpos, Athen.
f/j,iropos, Clem, (\\oiros. Others &/j.(f>opos, v-fixvros, <paiStfj,os.
385-388. 385. Clem. Al. Strom. 516. 385b-386. Hierocl. carm. aur.
254. 386, 388. Synesius de prov. i. 89 D. 386-387. Prokl. on Kratyl.
103 ; 386. Philo vol. ii. 638 Mang. 388. Synes. epist. 147 ; Julian. Imp.
oral. &c.
and fluxes.
of Ate.
400-401. Clem. Al. Strom. 516-517. Timon Phlias. in Euseb. Pr. eu.
xiv. 18.
400. MS. *) 5, corr. Scalig. 401. MS. ol<av, corr. Stein. Cf. Timon
and Porphyr. de abstin. ii. 27.
flesh.
405. Nor had they any god Ares, nor Kydoimos (Up-
roar), nor king Zeus, nor Kronos, nor Poseidon, but queen-
SsvBpsa 8'
f/ATTsSo^fXXa KOI
Biav . . .
f>ivrovTs. 412. Porphyr. Cyrill. aKpiroiffi, Euseb.
aroiffi, corr. Scalig. Porphyr. Several. 413. Cyrill. earxov.
414. Porphyr. airoppeVavres . . .
e\/j.t>cu, corr. Stein and Viger.
415-420. lamblich. Vit. Pyth. 67. Porphyr. Vit. Pyth. 30. 415,
417. Diog. Laer. viii. 54.
Order of verses in MS. 415, 17, 16.
421-424. 421-422. Schol. Nicand. Theriac. 423-424.
p. 81 Schn.
Theophrast. de cans, plant, i. 13, 2. Cf. Plut. Quaest. conv. 649 c.
422. MS. $i\o<ppoffvvn, corr. Stz. 423-424. a.ti<pv\\a. Kal 6>7re8o-
Kapira. <f>ri<n 6d\\eiv ttapircav a(j>dovlri<ri /car' T/e'p
a irdvr' tviavrbv
restored by Hermann. Herm. aiei<f>v\\a, corr. Karst. from
Plutarch. Stz. war' iff pa, Lobeck.
KarTjopo.
425-427. Arist. Rhet. i. 13 1373 b 15.
425. Arist. rovro yap ov ritrl ov Si/caiov, Karst.
ptv Slicaiov, -riffi 8'
beheld each one of all the things that are, even for ten
light.
mind?
p 2
212 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
\KTO-6fjiSVOi 6 B'
Satra.
cr<f)d%as sv ftEydpoia-i Ka/crjv dXsyvvaro
MS B' avrws Trarep' vios sXwv teal fjLTjrspa
435 dv/j,ov aTTOppaicravrs <pi\as Kara adptcas s
oil/tot,
or' ov irpocrOev JAS BicoXsas vr)\sss TJ/
/,
r
7ravBi\oi, /cvdpwv CUTTO
-^slpas e^sadai.
418
MSS. TTJS Sd(j>v7)s rSiv tpv\\aiv diri ird/jLvav ex<rOot XP^* corr. Stein.
441. Aul. Gell. N.A. iv. 11 ; Didym. Geopon. ii. 35, 8.
442-443. Theo. Smyrn. Arith. i. 19 Bull, p. 15, 9 Hill.
MS. Kpyvdaiv etiro irevr' lunpftm, <f>ij(riv, areipet x a ^ K V ^fif airoppv-
infffBai, Arist.poei.xxi. 1457 b 13 Ta^v ortipe'i x a*- K V- Text
;
from Diels.
450-451. Clem. Al. Strom, p. 722; Euseb. Praep. evang. xiii. 13.
MSS. t6vr(s d. 'Axoiaiv dn-JKXijpoi dirrjpf'is corr. Scaliger.
are dead, and the body our tomb, and that that part of the
soul, it so happens, in which desires are, is open to per-
suasion and moves upward and downward. And indeed
a clever man perhaps some inhabitant of Sicily or
Italy speaking allegorically, and taking the word from
' ' '
(indavos) and
'
credible persuadable (TTKTTIKOS), called
it a jar (Tridos). And those without intelligence he called
uninitiated, and that part of the soul of the uninitiated
where the desires are, he called its intemperateness, and
said it was not watertight, as a
jar might be pierced with
holes using the simile because of its insatiate desires.
Meno 76 c. Do you
say, with Empedokles, that there
are certain effluences from
things ? Certainly.
And pores, into which and through which the
effluences go ? Yes indeed.
Cf.
Empedocles animum esse censet cordi
'
Cicero, Tusc. I. 9 :
suffusum sanguinem.'
EMPEDOKLES 215
And
that some of the effluences match certain of the
pores, and others are smaller or larger ? It is true.
And there is such a thing as vision ? Yes.
And . the effluence of forms in agree-
. . colour is
Pliys. i. 3 ;
187 a 20. And others say that the opposites
existing in the unity are separated out of it, as Anaximan-
dros says, and as those say who hold that things are
both one and many, as Empedokles and Anaxagoras.
i. 4 188 a 18. But it is better to assume elements
;
things and move them part of the time, and that they
are at rest during the intervening time.
216 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
do not define
carefully light and heavy, as Anaxagoras
and Empedokles.
EMPEDOKLES 217
Gen. corr. i. 1 ;
314 b 7. Wherefore Enipedokles
speaks after this manner, saying that nothing comes
into being, but there is only mixture and separation of
the mixed.
i. 1 ; 315 a 3. Empedokles seemed both to contradict
sion was received through certain pores from the last and
could not arise, nor yet could unity arise from what is
truly manifold, for this is impossible but as Ernpe- ;
i. 1 ;
64'2 a 18. And from time to time Empedokles
chances on this, guided by the truth itself, and is com-
they all are brought together into one by love, parts are
four but only as two, fire by itself, and the rest opposed
to fire as being one in nature, earth and air and water.
i. 8 ;
989 a 20. And the same thing is true if one
asserts that these are more numerous than one, as
think none the less that even this causes generation out
of the unity for all other things
;
are from this as their
know all the elements for he does not have strife, and
;
mixture.
Ethic, vii. 5 ; 1147 b 12. He has the power to speak
EMPEDOKLES 223
'
water gushed forth; and from this the air arose as vapour,
and the heavens arose from the aether, the sun from the
fire,and bodies on the earth were compressed out of the
others, ii. 7 336. Empedokles Things are not in
; :
fixed position throughout the all, nor yet are the places
of the elements defined, but all things partake of one
another, Empedokles When the air gives
ii. 8 ; 338. :
the air runs back and enters into the fine openings that
are scattered through the blood, it is the breathing in.
And he mentions the instance of the clepsydra.
419. Empedokles : Male or female
Aet. Plac. v. 7 ;
Q 2
228 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
time of conception ;
for oftentimes women fall in love with
'
being all united by Love into one, now each borne apart
'
there were many out of the one ; fire and water and
earth and boundless height of air, and baneful Strife
apart from these, balancing each of them, and Love
among them, their equal in length and breadth.'
Fr. 23 ; Dox. 495. Some say that the sea is as it
were a sort of sweat from the earth for when the earth ;
is warmed
by the sun it gives forth moisture accord- ;
for some the fire is within and for others it is on the out-
to, it ran up from under the ice that was around the air.
And there are two hemispheres moving in a circle around
the earth, the one of pure fire, the. other of air and a
little fire mixed, which he thinks is night. And motion
234 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
up by fire, for this becomes solid like hail ; and its light it
-
^_/)(gets
from the sun. The
ruling part is not in the head
or in the breast, but in the blood ; wherefore in whatever
part of the body the more of this is spread, in that part
men excel.
XI.
ANAXAGOBA8.
FRAGMENTS OF ANAXAGORAS.
1. O/JLOV iravra r\v aTrstpa Kal 7T\rj0os teal
vpij/jLara
aXX^Xots .
172, 2.)
34, 20 and 172, 2 irav-ra xp-n^ra. 155, 28. &D fV3r)Xov, Text
from DE.
2. Simpl. Phys. 33 v 155, 31.
155, 31. aD & a-fip re Kal 6 alQtip, Text follows EF.
4. Simpl. Phys. 33 v 156, 4. (8 r 34, 21 substitutes for the last
line a paraphrase of Fr. 3.)
34, 21 inserts ravra after airoKpidrjvai. 34, 24 Kal rris, Text from
356,7.
3. Simpl. Phys. 8 r 34, 29. 33 v 156, 2. 33 v 157, 9. (Cf.
p. 34, 25 at end of Fr. 4.)
ANAXAGORAS 237
TRANSLATION.
rounding mass ;
and the surrounding (mass) is infinite
in quantity.
of moist and dry, of the warm and the cold, and of the
176, 32 (37 r 174, 16). Phys. 156, 19 cf. 38 v 176, 34. Phys. 156, 24
cf. 35 v 165, 31 and 37 r
174, 7. Phys. 157, 2 cf. 37 r 175. 11 and 38
ANAXAGORAS 239
crv^JifiSfjiij/jisva,
&<rrs fjLrjSsvbs ^prj/j,aros Kparstv opolcas cos
<' savrov.
teal fiovov sovra s'crri
jap \S7rrdrarov rs
irdvrwv %pr)p,dra)v Kal Kadapwrarov Kal yvwfArjv <ys Trspl
iravros frdaav ttr^ei Kal lar^ysi fAsjicrrov, Kal oaa <ys "^rv^ijv
Kal fjLsi^a) Kal eXa(7cr&), Trdvratv vovs KparsL Kal rrjs
vovs sKparr/asv, ware jrspi-
/jioipac
os 7ro\\al 7ro\\wv slcrt. TravraTracn Ss ovBsv
2
TrtpiXupfaeus, Text from aZ) F. 177, 3 omits fierre eVi
TT\(OV. 156, 23. E omits rov before ff/juKpov. &F irfpixwpri<Tou,
Text from DE. 156, 26. 165, 33 Kal 6w6<ra vvv e<rri Kal
tffrat, 177, 5. affffa vvv /UTJ earn. 157, 3. 165, 15. After fyotov
ovSevl the words ert'py uvrcav should
aireipfav probably be
ascribed to Simpl. 157, 4. DE a\\' orai, F oAAco ra ra: F
*\ti<jra. (also 165,
3), Text from &DE.
ANAXAGORAS 241
thing ;
for a portion of everything exists in everything,
power ;
over all that has life, both greater and less, mind I
the rare, the warm from the cold, the bright from the
dark, the dry from the moist. And there are many
portions of many things. Nothing is absolutely separated
ttTTOKpiOsta-i
Kal ev rots aTTOKpivopsvois.
rw ov&s
18. ov KS^picrrai, aXX^Xwv ra sv svl Koa-fiw
TO 0SpfAOV aTTO
TOU ^VXPOV
aTTOKSKOTTTat TTS\SKt OVT
ovrs TO tyv%pbv arro rov 0p/J<ov.
aXX'
15. OUTS <yap rov a-piKpov sen TO y eXaxto-TOV,
asi. TO sbv OVK sari TO pr) OVK dvai.
<yap
irepic'xom, corr.
Diels ;
cf. p. 155, 31 :
irpoffKpiQ^i . . .
AHcpj^J,
corr. Diels ;
cf. 156, 28.
12 beginning with ovSe. To ireAe'/cei, 38 v
fhys. 37
13. Simpl. r 175,
176, 29.
Cf. 35 r 166, 15.
15. Simpl. Phys. 35 v 164, 17.
4
MS. -rb Zeller, Phil. Or. i. 884 n. 3 TO/AT). After
164, 17. nit, ,
ANAXAGORAS 243
in whatever
object there are the most, each
single object
is and was most
distinctly these things.
1
& 2
244 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
a Kal rov fj,syd\ov dsi sari ftsi^ov. Kal icrov scrrl ra>
16. /cat ors 8s laat, fjuoipai slcri rov rs ftsyakov KOI rov
<r/j,iKpov rr\ridos,
Kal ovrws av strj sv rcavri irdvra. ovos
'
into being and perishing.' For nothing comes into
'
perishing separation.'
(18.) For how could hair coma from what is not
hair ? Or flesh from what is not flesh ?
being; for this is why they say, as they do, that all
248 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
void does not exist, do not prove this of what men are
wont to call a void, but they make the mistake Anaxa-
goras did and those who attempted to prove it after this
manner. For they show that air is something, blowing
skins up tight, and showing how strong air is, and shut-
ting it up in clepsydrae.
Phys. viii. 1 250 b 24. For Anaxagoras says that
;
when all things were together and had been at rest for
an infinite time, mind introduced motion and caused
1
separation.
Phys. viii. 5 ; 256 b 24. So Anaxagoras is right in
1
Cf. 265 b 22.
AXAXAGOEAS 249
men.
De anima i. 2 ; 405 a 13. Anaxagoras seems to say
that soul and mind
are different, as we said before, but
he treats both as one in nature, except that he regards
mind especially as the first principle of all things ; for
he says that this alone of all things is simple and un-
mixed and pure. And he assigns both to the same
first principle, both
knowledge and motion, saying that
mind moves the all. 1
self on this point, was satisfied with saying that the void
does not exist, nevertheless he says beings move, though
there is no void.
Meta. i. 3 ; 984 all. Anaxagoras of Klazomenae,
who preceded him (Empedokles) in point of age and
followed him in his works, says that the first principles
are infinite in number for nearly all things being made
;
sitions, so that all things are false ; for when they are
mixed together, the mixture is neither good nor not-
good, so that there is nothing true to be said.
1
shapes, i. 17 ; 315.
Anaxagoras and Demokritos The :
place.
Aet. Plac. v. 7 420. Anaxagoras, Parmenides
; :
Males are conceived when seed from the right side enters
the right side of the womb, or seed from the left side
the left side of the womb but if its course is changed
;
thin air has the stronger odour, since warm and rarefied
air has an odour. And when a large animal breathes, it
draws in the thick with the rarefied, but the small animal
only the rarefied, so that large animals have a better
sense of smell. For an odour near at hand is stronger
than one far off, because that is thicker, and what is
scattered is weakened. It comes about to this, large
opposite to these, the warm, the bright, the dry, and the
light move out beyondthe aether. The earth is flat in
form, and keeps its place in the heavens because of its
size and because there is no void and on this account
;
away from the earth and they are not warm in the
;
same way that the sun is, because they are in a colder
region. The moon is below the sun and nearer us. The
sun is larger than the Peloponnesos. The moon does
not have its own light, but light from the sun. The
revolution of the stars takes them beneath the earth.
The moon is eclipsed when the earth goes in front of it,
and sometimes when the bodies beneath the moon go in
front of it and the sun is eclipsed when the new moon
;
1. We find in Plato 1
scarcely any quotations, since the literary
character of the dialogue excludes anything that might seem
pedantic. There are allusions to certain phrases of Herakleitos
which had already become all but proverbs the Herakleitean :
' '
' 2
ape is also given as the teaching of Herakleitos. Similarly
'
1
Cf the consideration of this topic by Zeller in the Archiv f. d.
.
1
Farm. 52, 53 ap. Soph. 237 A, 258 D 98 ap. TJieact. 180 E
; ;
103-
105 ap. Soph, 244 E 132 ap.
2
Symp. 178 B.
;
1
See supra, p. 133 f. also Phileb. 16 c, 23 c, Pol. 530
;
D, 600 A.
-
Die Einheitslehre Heraklits, p. 17 f.
3
See I. Index of Sources, under 'Aristotle.'
266 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
(e.g. Meta. 1015 a 1), or finally only the substance of the line is
is natural that the early thinkers who first set forth charac-
teristic views with force and
vigour should receive the fullest
consideration, for indeed this position is still due to them in
the history of philosophy.
APPENDIX 267
2
philosophy : the latter a word introduced
into philosophy by
Plato, the former probably not used in this sense before Aris-
totle himself.
3. This tendency, however, is not limited to the use of
question
= being, and cold=earth=Mo-Z>emg 1
.
not be blotted
supra p. 10 in order that other things may
'
'
2
E.g. Emped. 272 ap. Moral. 917 c 369 ap. Moral. 996 B.
;
3
Emped. 232 ap. Moral. 745 c ; 154-155 ap. Moral. 925 B;
farmen. 29-30 ap. Moral. 1114 D.
APPENDIX 273
retained in quotations for the purpose of embellishment. I
may add that Plutarch rarely neglects to give the name of the
author from whom he quotes. As to the source of these
poetic
quotations, we cannot doubt that Plutarch sometimes quotes
Enipedokles from the original. A literary man could hardly
fail to be acquainted with his poems, and it is
by no means
likely that the quotations Moral. 607c, 1111 F, 1113 are taken
from an intermediate source'. Five of the quotations from Par-
menides, on the other hand* were not new to the readers of
Plato and Aristotle, and the two remaining ones, together
with some of the lines from Enipedokles, as I have tried to
show elsewhere, were probably drawn from a collection of
1
Stromata
Paedagogos and the first and fourth books of the
there are scattered quotations most of which bear clear marks
of their secondary origin book II contains several quotations
;
a difference in the
regard the difference in accuracy as wholly
accuracy of one man's copying.
The quotations from Empedokles, as indeed from other
poets, show that Hippolytos
was often very careless. The
justify this supposition. Lines 33-35 are quoted twice (p. 246
and p. 813), and the last line differs in the two cases ;
read, say that he mentioned the two gates in his Physika (de
antr. w?/ra.xxiii.). Only the ^addp/jara of Empedokles is quoted,
but here Porphyry knows the subjects treated in the work (de
abst. II. xxi.), and sometimes the full context of the passage
he quotes (e.g. de antr. nym. viii.). In the case of lines
415-420 we are not sure that Porphyry was right in applying
the verses to Parmenides still, the quotations would seem
;
accuracy.
lamblichos draws a few quotations from his predecessors
in the neo-Platonic school (Empedokles, lines 415-420 from
lines 52, 53 ap. 135, 21, and 122 ap. 39, 18 were also taken from Plato.
APPENDIX 283
1
Four out of the six quotations from Herakleitos are given either in
Plato or Aristotle, or both Frag. 20 comes directly or indirectly from a
;
Stoic source.
284 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
II.
the two are printed side by side, as the reader finds them in
the text of Diels, the likeness of the two is most striking. At
the same time the two books are not identical, and each gives
much material that the other omits. Stobaeos cannot have
copied from the work attributed to Plutarch, for even in pas-
sages that occur in the Placita Stobaeos not infrequently
gives the fuller form nor can the writer of the Placita have
;
copied from Stobaeos, for his work can be traced back nearly
three centuries before the time of Stobaeos. It was used by
286 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
'
Successions of the philosophers,' as they were often called,
the later doxographic writers based their work. Even in
Diogenes Laertios there is material from both sources, and we
can define some fragments almost in Theophrastos' own words.
In the Philosophumena of Hippolytos the two sources are
pretty clearly distinguished chapters 1-4 and 10 (on Thales,
:
and Dox. pp. 579 f.) are like the last-mentioned chapters of
Hippolytos, though the language is often more careless.
A comparison of Aetios with Hippolytos, the Stromateis,
and the doxographic material in Cicero and Censorinus (from
288 THE FIRST PHILOSOPHERS OF GREECE
Varro) makes, it clear that the Placita of Aetios are not based
directly on the work of Theophrastos. Indeed (Dox. p. 100,
and pp. 178 f.) it is evident from an examination of the work
of Aetios by itself that much of his material is drawn from
Stoic and Epicurean sources. As the main source for what
remains after Stoic and Epicurean passages have been cut
out, Diels postulates an earlier Placita (Vetusta placita, pp.
215 f.). He finds traces of this in the work of Varro as used by
Censorinus, in Cicero's Tusculan Disputations, and in some
later writers.
17. Resume. The doxographic tradition starts with
the work of Theophrastos on the opinions of his predecessors.
On this work is based immediately the Vetusta placita on ;
I. INDEX OF SOURCES
The references are to the critical notes. Anaximandros (Ad.), Herakleitos (H.),
Zeno (Z.), Melissos (M.), and Anaxagoras are referred to by fragments ; Par-
(A..),
menides (P.) and Empedokles (E.) by lines. Other references are by pages (p.)
Z. 12, 25; P. 52-53, 103-104, E. 26-28, 33, 55-57, 74, 78, 81,
132, 146-149 ; E. 36-39, 48-50, 130-133, 147-148, 165, 342-343,
69-73, 92, 98, 100, 104-107, 344-346,366-368, 383-384, 385,
139-141, 145, 146-148, 165, 390-391, 400-401, 404, 445-446,
166-167, 168, 175, 182-183, 447-451
290 INDEX OF SOURCES
17 P. 60 ; E. 33-35, 377-380,
; Johannes Lydus de mensibus, ed.
412-414, 450-451 Bekker. Berlin 1837, in Corpus
Eustathius, Commentaries on scriptorum historiae Byzantinae.
Homer. H. 43, 66, 74, 119; H. 87
Z. 13, 17; E. 168, 182-183, lohannes Siceliotas in Walz,
405-407 Rhetores Graeci. Stuttgart
1836. H. 2
Florilegium Monacense , ed.
Meineke. H. 132, 134, 135 Julian, Orations, ed. Spanheim.
Lips. 1696. H. 10, 16, 68, 80, 85
E. 388
Gaisford, Poetae minores Graeci.
P. 151-153; E. 169-185, 210-
213, 240-242, 244-246 Kleanthes' Hymn to Zeus, in
Galen, in Scriptores medici, ed. Heeren's Stobaei Eclogae Phy-
Kuhn. H. 53, 74, 113 Z. 14 ; ; sicae. 1792. H. 19, 28, 91
P. 150; E. 91, 98, 100, 151, Kleomedes irtpl /jitTewpwv, ed.
276-278 Bakius. Lips. 1832. H. 69
INDEX OF SOURCES 291
Linos (pseudo-) in Mullach, Frag- 115, 116, 117, 120, 121, 122, 127,
menta Philos. Graec. vol. i. 138; Z. 14, 15; P. 60, 132,144,
H. 19 145; E. 5, 8-9, 33-35, 36-39,
Lucian, Dialogues. H. 14, 44, 67, 40-44, 45-47, 51-54, 58-59, 60,
79, 114 E. 355
; 78, 79, 80-81, 98, 100, 135-136,
143-144, 149, 151, 153, 155,
.
Macrobius, on Somnium Scipionis, 157-159, 160, 161, 163, 165,
and Saturnalia. H. 31 E. 150 ; 208, 209, 220, 221, 238-239,
Marcus Antoninus, Commentaries. 243, 257-260, 261, 272, 279,281,
H. 25, 34, 69, 73, 84, 90 E. 138 ; 282-283, 313, 373-381, 390, 393-
Maximus Confessor, Sermones, ed. 396, 402, 403, 423-424, 430-431,
Combefisius. Paris 1675. H. 34, 440, 444
136, 137 Pollux, Onomasticon. H. 85
Maximus Tyrius, Dissertationcs. Polybios, Historia. H. 14-15
H. 25, 67, 69 Porphyry, de antro nympharum,
Musonius in Stobaeos, Florilcgium. &c. H. 67, 70, 74 P. (1-30) ;
;
H. 69, 74, 114 (Cf. H. 27, 67, 74 Z. 10; E. 165-392, 401, 405-
in Clement, Paidagogos) 420, 436-437
Probus, Comment, in Virgilii Bu-
.Numenius in Chalcidius on the col. et Gcor. E. 33 35
Timaeos, in Mullach, Fragmenta Proklos, Commentaries on Plato.
Philos. Graec. vol. ii. H. 43 H. 16, 32, 44, 68, 79, 80, 111 ;
386-387
Olympiodoros (cf. p. 17), Commen-
taries on Plato and Aristotle. Satyros in Diogenes Laertios. E.
H. 20, 32, 68 24-32
Origen contra Celsum. H. 62, 85, Scholia to Aristophanes. Z. 27
130 Z. 74 E. 374-375
; ; Scholia to Aristotle. P. 140-143 ;
Orphica, ed. G. Hermann. Lips. M. 17; E. 169-185, 210-213,
1805. E. 438-439 244, 246, 240-242, 381-382
Scholia to Euripides. H. 138 ;
Philo Judaeus, Opera, ed. Mangey. Z. 13; E. 275
H. 1, 2, 10, 22, 24, 64, 67, 68, Scholia to Homer. H. 39, 43, 61,
69, 70, 74, 79, 82, 85, 87, 134 ; 66, 85, 119 ; Z. 8, 11, 13 E. 168,
;
138, 139, 141, 152, 171-185, phrases Arist. libr. ed. Spengel.
186-194, 195-196, 199-202, 203- Lips. 1866. H. 122; E. 330
207, 218, 247-253, 262-269 Theodoret, Ecclesiastica historia.
Stobaeos, Florilegium and Eclogae H. 3, 7, 8, 101, 102, 104, 122 ;
Herakleitos (H.), Xenophanes (X.), Zeuo (Z.), Melissos (M.), and Anaxagoras (A.), by
the number of the fragment in which the word occurs. Occasional references to
pages are indicated by p.
M. 7, 8, 9, 11 Sat(ppt0i>, E. 1
airoyii>ofj.ai, Z. 1 $fl\aios, E. 446
aTroKpivofj.ai, E. 43 ;
A. 2, 4, 6, 9, 10, Sei\6s, E. 3, 53, 228, 343, 400, 441
11, 12, 16 5e>as, P. 115, 119 E. 198, 268 ;
cucdxpiffts, A. 10 Sri/j.iovpy6s, p. 61
air6\fityis, E. 63 Sfjjtoy, H. 100
aWAAt/A", M. 11, 12, 17; A. 17; SiaKorrue'u.', A. 6
E. 93 8id.KOfffj.os, P. 120
E. 281-
airoppori, $ia.Kpii>o/j.ai, A. 6, 7, 14, 17
&paios, p. 102 M. 14 ; ;
E. (196) ; 8idAAa|t*, E. 38
A. 6, 8 Sidnopcpa, E. 102
&p6pov, E. 82 5(a4>e>>, H. 45, 46, 59, 93
&P/CTOS, H. 30 Si'Cw, H. 80 P. 62 ;
apx-fi, H. 70; M. 7, 9 ;
E. 130; SIKTJ, H. 60, 62, 118; P. 14, 28, 70;
A. 16 E. 5
&o"irfTos, E. Ill, 128 SiVrj, E. 378
d(rreM<H*> E. 398 SoAixaiW, E. 107, (126)
airf, E. 99, 152, 153, 157, 427 5o'|rj, H. 133 P. 30, (31), 111, 151
; ;
poTTJj, A. 6 E. 343
s, P. 123
X ot, H. 124 X. 27
/3a/c ;
ftdppapos H. 4, Mos, P. 54
/Wcw'^a), H. 58 eiSos, M. 17 ;
E. 123, 135, 192, 207,
.os, H. 66, 67 E. 249, 251, 373 ; 266, 375
P\TKrrplw, X. 24 f!u.apuva, H. 63, p. 60
P6p&opos, H. 53-54 <?/cirW, E. 287, 294, 311
frporeios, P. Ill E. 10, 35 ; eAe7xos, P. 56
Pporos, X. 5 ; P. 46, 99, 109, 121 ; eniraios, E. 3
E. 54, 147, 247, 303, 347 eV, H. 19, 59, 91 M. 11, 17 ; ; E. 62,
fr^ds, X. 21 ; E. 412 67, 118, 70, 76, 248
<T|ai/aTe'AAa>, E. 258, 265
7W, P. 77, 83
62
;
i)(i.epil,
H. 32, 35, 36 KpoiW/uct,E. 35
?lpas, H. 130 Kvfcpvdu, Ad. 1 ;
H. 19 ;
P. 128
KVKeAv, H. 84
ed\affffa, H. 21,23; X. 11 ;
E. 136, /cwcAos.P. 7; E. 73, 112, 133, 153,
187 178
edfj-vos, E. 41, 252, 384 KIHOV, H. 115
6a.va.Tos, H. 25,
68 64, Kta<p6s, H. 3 ; P. 49
0(\-nnd, E. (101), 174
0e>is, P. 28, 88 E. 14, 44 :
\a/j.Trds, P. 135
Of flirts, E. 425 Xfffxnvefa, H. 130
e*6s, H.
12, 43, 44, 61, 67, (91), (96), \-hyw, E. 66, 72, (89)
102, 130, 130a ; X. 1, 5, 6, 7, 16, \yvcu, H. 124, (127)
21, 29 ;
P. 22 ; E. 11, 107, 129, AtjSavomk, X. 21
142, 341, 343, 355, 369, 405, \l6os, A. 9
449 \oyos, H. 1, 2, 92, 116, 117 ; X. 18 ;
flHjcncw, H. 78 P. 15, 56, 110 M. 12, 17 ; E. 57,
;
/j.ovvoyfvf]s, P. 60 irfpi(-)(<a, A. 2, 12
fj.v6os, P. 33, 57 ; E. 58, 74, 75, 129, irtpiX<ap4(a, A. 7, 11
264, 367 irepix<apTfiffis, A. 6
/KWTTTJ, H. 124 irfffffevta, H. 79
/J.V(Trrjpia, H. 125 iT7)A.ds, H. 130
viOavos, pp. 133, 214
vflKos, E. 68, 79, (117), 139, 171, Tridos, pp. 133, 214
175, 177, 194, 335, 382 TclffTts,P. 30, 68, 84 ;
E. 20, 23,
vtxp6s, H. 123 210, 368
vfKvs, H. 85 wiffTtana, E. 56
voea, X. 2 P. 34, 40, 43, 64, 94,
; viffvvos, E. 382
96; E. 22, 23, 316, p. 250 irAtifeo, E. 251
P. 47 ;
otTios, E. 12, 17 A. 6, 10
otrrea, E. 201 o-rjua, P. 58, 115, 134
iro0oj, M. 16 <rirfpfj.a, A. 3,
4
iroi'Cw, H. 79 E. 295 <rirAa-yx i os E. 57
'
!
;
TfXevr-fi, M. 7 E. 37
; <t>v(a, X. 10 P. 66, 138, 151
; E. ;
T'PM, E. 178
rifj.'fi, E. 16, 88 Xp, H. 136
TiVis, Ad. 2 Xe/p, P. 22 ; E. 296, 306, 345, 441,
T(J|OI>, H. 45 443
roW, P. 101 Z. 4 ; xMv, E. 166, 187, 198, 199, 203,
rp-ftfj.ara, E. 299 215, 235, 378, 403
rux^J, E. 195 Xtavos, E. 199
Xptos, P. 65, 96
8j3pt9, H. 103 X. 21 ; XpeAv, Ad. 2 P. 28, 37, 67, 105, 116
;
Achilles argument, the, 116, 118 All, the, 78, 105, 108 one, 57 ;
Aether, 110, 149, 183, 223, 237, Anaxagoras, 18, 215, 216, 220,
261 *235 f.
Aetios, 5, 6, 7, 14 ff., 21 f., 83 f., Anaximandros, *8, 215, 257
109 f ., 119, 129, 143, 146 f ., 223 f ., Anaximenes, *17, 81
253 f. Animals, 13, 171 origin of, 189, ;
God, 33, 39, 47, 65, 79, 147, 151, Lightning, 14, 16, 20, 31, 63, 84,
173, 201, 222, 254 226, 256, 261
Gods, 2, 3, 7, 21, 41, 58, 201, 233 ; Lipara, fire at, 78
anthropomorphic, 67, 77 are ; Loadstone, 3
born, 16, 171 Homeric treat-
; Love and strife, 167, 171, 179,
ment of, 67; goddess of Par- 215 f., 218, 221, 224, 230
menides, 89 Luxury, 73
Good and bad, 39, 57 Lysis, 132, 154
truth, 187
Law, 47, 49 Opposites, 35, 37, 58, 138, 247;
Leukippos, 217, 249 separation of, 12
ENGLISH INDEX 299
Stones, 19
Perception by pores, 230 by likes, ;
of, 18, 20
Pisas, the, 71
Place, 146 ; existence of, 115 ;
Tortoise, 116
Treatise, first philosophical, 8
Rainbow, 21, 69, 149, 256 Truth, 69, 89 f. vs. opinion, 106
;
209
Sacrifice, 53, 155, God, 79
Samian 120fleet, Universe, the, 60, 62, 146 f., 153,
Science, 58, 145 of numbers, 143
; 224, 255, 262 structure of, 109
;
OCT 04 1994