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         Heraclitus:     more books (100)
  1. Friend of Heraclitus by Patricia Beer, 1993-03-18
  2. Heraclitus: Webster's Timeline History, 500 BC - 2007 by Icon Group International, 2009-02-20
  3. Heraclitus by Aurobindo Ghose, 1968
  4. Chamber Works: Architectural Meditations on Themes from Heraclitus by Daniel Archer Libeskind, 1983-01
  5. The Fragments Of The Work Of Heraclitus Of Ephesus On Nature by Heraclitus, 2010-09-10
  6. First-century cynicism in the Epistles of Heraclitus (Harvard theological studies) by Harold W Attridge, 1976
  7. The Sceptical Road: Aenesidemus' Appropriation of Heraclitus (Philosophia Antiqua) by Roberto Polito, 2004-04-30
  8. Heraclitus in Sacramento by David Carl, 2006-05-17
  9. Heraclitus Of Ephesus: The Fragments Of The Work Of Heraclitus Of Ephesus On Nature And Heracliti Ephesii Reliquiae
  10. The Hidden Harmony: Discourses on the Fragments of Heraclitus by Osho, 1991-12
  11. Archaic Logic: Symbol and Structure in Heraclitus. Parmenides and Empedocles (De proprietatibus litterarum : Series practica) by Raymond Prier, 1976-06
  12. GREEK HISTORICAL THOUGHT. FROM HOMER TO THE AGE OF HERACLITUS. by ARNOLD TOYNBEE, 1952-01-01
  13. Heracliti Ephesii Reliquiae (1877) (Latin Edition) by Heraclitus, 2009-02-16
  14. Mythographi Graeci, Volume 3, part 1 by Apollodorus, Heraclitus, et all 2010-04-02

41. Panta Rei
heraclitus was born somewhere between 535 and 540 B.C. in Ephesos, heraclitus philosophy can be captured in just two words panta rei ,
http://optionality.net/heraclitus/
Panta rei
everything is changing!

Heraclitus

Heraclitus was born somewhere between 535 and 540 B.C. in Ephesos, and died 475 B.C. Very little of his work has been preserved - what is left are dozens of quotes, or rather fragments of text that have been quoted by others. The River
Heraclitus' philosophy can be captured in just two words: "panta rei", literally everything flows, meaning that everything is constantly changing, from the smallest grain of sand to the stars in the sky. Thus, every object ultimately is a figment of one's imagination. Only change itself is real, constant and eternal flux, like the continuous flow of the river which always renews itself.
those rivers one steps into are not the same. other and yet other waters keep flowing on.
into the same rivers we step and yet we do not step, we exist and at the same time we do not exist
after all, one does not step into the same river twice. waters disperse and come together again ... they keep flowing on and flowing away

42. "Heraclitus' Theory Of The Psyche" By Christopher D. Green
heraclitus was the most important philosopher between Pythagoras and Parmenides. He lived in the city of Ephesus, of which substantial ruins remain still on
http://www.yorku.ca/christo/papers/heraclit.htm
Heraclitus' Theory of the Psyche
Christopher D. Green
Department of Psychology
York University
christo@yorku.ca Heraclitus was the most important philosopher between Pythagoras and Parmenides. He lived in the city of Ephesus, of which substantial ruins remain still on the western coast of present-day Turkey. The region was then called Ionia. His exact dates are not known. McKirahan (1994) reports them as being 540-480 BC. Unlike Xenophanes and Pythagoras, he did not flee the Persian invasion of Ionia (546 BC) for Italy; he survived it, and even flourished under it. As with all other early pre-Socratics, none of Heraclitus' original writings remain, although he was said to have written, as was traditional for philosophers of his time, a treatise generally on nature ( physis ). What is known of Heraclitus' philosophy is contained in more than 100 fragmentary mentionings of him by his successors. Many of these fragments are obscure, enigmatic, and even bizarre. Diogenes Laertius, a biographer who lived about 300 AD, recounted a story (repeated by Barnes, 1987, pp. 57-58) that Socrates, upon reading a copy of Heraclitus' work (allegedly given to him by the great tragic playwright, Euripides), said "What I understood was good.... But it would take a Delian diver to get to the bottom of it." Heraclitus frequently asserted the unity of opposites: "the road up and down is one and the same road" (DK22 B60); "while changing, it rests" (DK22 B84a); "in the case of a circle, beginning and end are the same" (DK22 B103); "cold things become warm, a warm thing becomes cold..." (DK22B 126); and perhaps strangest of all, "immortals are mortals, mortals immortals: living their death, dying their life" (DK22 B62).

43. Heraclitus - Definition From The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
Definition of heraclitus from the MerriamWebster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/heraclitus
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44. Heraclitus >> Bringing Innovative Projects To Life
heraclitus is a project of Joanna Callaghan, working in the visual arts and contemporary culture on innovative curatorial and conference projects.
http://www.heraclitus.org.uk/
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45. Philosophical Dictionary: Hedonism-Heuristic
Although he identified fire as the original stuff {Gk. arch archê} of the universe, heraclitus supposed that its changeable nature results in the
http://www.philosophypages.com/dy/h2.htm
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hedonism
hdonh intrinsic value. Although commonly defended as a moral theory about the proper aim of human conduct, hedonism is usually grounded on the psychological claim that human beings simply do act in such ways as to maximize their own happiness Aristotle argued against any attempt to identify pleasure as the highest good, but Epicurus held that physical pleasure and freedom from pain are significant goals for human life. The utilitarianism of Bentham proposes a practical method for calculating hedonic value Recommended Reading: F. E. Peters, Greek Philosophical Terms: A Historical Lexicon at Amazon.com The Essential Epicurus at Amazon.com The Pursuit of Pleasure at Amazon.com Utilitarianism, Hedonism, and Desert: Essays in Moral Philosophy at Amazon.com Pleasures and Pains: A Theory of Qualitative Hedonism at Amazon.com Troubled Pleasures: Writings on Politics, Gender, and Hedonism at Amazon.com Also see IEP SEP Roberto Dante Flores ColE ... CE , and PP
Hegel, Georg W.F.
German philosopher who employed a dialectical logic (moving from thesis to antithesis to synthesis ) and its corollary analysis of historical inevitability in support of an idealism in which human culture is properly seen as a manifestation of the self-consciousness of the Absolute For a discussion of his life and works, see

46. [minstrels] Heraclitus -- William Johnson Cory
They told me, heraclitus, they told me you were dead; They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed; I wept, as I remembered, how often you
http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/380.html
[380] Heraclitus
Title : Heraclitus Poet : William Johnson Cory Date : 25 Mar 2000 They told me, Heracl... Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq Heraclitus They told me, Heraclitus, they told me you were dead; They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed; I wept, as I remembered, how often you and I Had tired the sun with talking, and sent him down the sky. And now that thou art lying, my dear old Carian guest, A handful of grey ashes, long, long ago at rest, Still are thy pleasant voices, thy nightingales, awake; For Death, he taketh all away, but them he cannot take. William Johnson Cory A poem that has 'classic' written all over it - the language, the images capture the feel of the original perfectly. There isn't a whole lot I can say about it - the poem and the original should both speak for themselves. Notes: Heraclitus: Greek philosopher (ca. 540-ca. 400 BC), pre-Socratic founder of an Ionian school, whose principal tenet was change in all things. Cory translates an epigram of Callimachus, which in A. W. Mair's translation of the Greek is as follows: "One told me, Heracleitus, of thy death and brought me to tears, and I remembered how often we two in talking put the sun to rest. Thou, methinks, Halicarnasian friend, art ashes long and long ago; but thy nightingales live still, whereon Hades, snatcher of all things, shall not lay his hand" Carian: of Caria, part of southwest Asia Minor. From

47. Heraclitus
heraclitus is in a real sense the founder of metaphysics. Starting from the physical standpoint of the Ionian physicists, he accepted their general idea of
http://www.nndb.com/people/838/000087577/
This is a beta version of NNDB Search: All Names Living people Dead people Band Names Book Titles Movie Titles Full Text for Heraclitus Born: c. 540 BC
Birthplace: Ephesus, Anatolia
Died: c. 480 BC
Location of death: Ephesus, Anatolia
Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Male
Race or Ethnicity: White
Occupation: Philosopher Nationality: Ancient Greece
Executive summary: Fire-centric theory of the universe Greek philosopher, born at Ephesus of distinguished parentage. Of his early life and education we know nothing; from the contempt with which he spoke of all his fellow philosophers and of his fellow citizens as a whole we may gather that he regarded himself as self-taught and a pioneer of wisdom. So intensely aristocratic was his temperament that he declined to exercise the regal-hieratic office which was hereditary in his family, and presented it to his brother. It is probable, however, that he did occasionally intervene in the affairs of the city at the period when the rule of Persia had given place to autonomy; it is said that he compelled the usurper Melancomas to abdicate. From the lonely life he led, and still more from the extreme profundity of his philosophy and his contempt for mankind in general, he was called the "Dark Philosopher", or the "Weeping Philosopher", in contrast to Democritus , the "Laughing Philosopher."

48. Heraclitus Of Ephesus
heraclitus of Ephesus (fl. 500480 BC), also known as the Riddler and the Obscure, was the eldest son of a leading aristocratic family.
http://faculty.evansville.edu/tb2/trip/heraclitus.htm
Miscellaneous Encyclopedia Articles by Anthony F. Beavers
Heraclitus of Ephesus
Heraclitus of Ephesus (fl. 500-480 BC), also known as "the Riddler" and "the Obscure," was the eldest son of a leading aristocratic family. He was a loner with a general distaste for mobs. Consequently, he had no pupils, though a small book that he wrote had a rich tradition of its own and attracted many followers; the Stoics recognized it as the source of their doctrines. All that survives of this book is a series of quotations that scholars have been able to extract from other sources see the Fragments of Heraclitus and that reveal an enigmatic and oracular style, perhaps adopted by Heraclitus to protect its true contents from commoners. Owing to its obscurity, the book engendered many anecdotes about its author, most of them intending to malign him, and so it is difficult to know much about his life and character that is reliable. It is equally difficult to discern the details of his true thought. Aristotle tells us about three of Heraclitus' ideas; the first is that, like earlier Milesian philosophers, he located the first principle of all things in a natural element, in this case, fire. (See

49. Heraclitus Quote - Quotation From Heraclitus - Change/Growth Quote - Wisdom Quot
heraclitus quotation - part of a larger collection of Wisdom Quotes to challenge and inspire.
http://www.wisdomquotes.com/000250.html
Wisdom Quotes
Quotations to inspire and challenge Main Heraclitus You cannot step twice into the same river, for other waters are continually flowing in. ca. 500 BCE This quote is found in the following categories: Change/Growth Quotes
Return to Main for a list of all categories
Web www.wisdomquotes.com
Please feel free to borrow a few quotations as you need them (that's what I did!). But please respect the creative work of compiling these quotations, and do not take larger sections. Main page
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50. Heraclitus Biosciences - Your Partner In Cell Culture Technology
Welcome to heraclitus Biosciences Imprint © 2007 heraclitus Biosciences · Sigmund Freud Str. 25 · D53105 Bonn · Tel 0049-228-2871 9162 · Fax
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51. Code Name: Heraclitus (1967) (TV)
Directed by James Goldstone. With Stanley Baker, Leslie Nielsen, Jack Weston. A man who dies on an operating table is brought back to life,
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061491/
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Code Name: Heraclitus ) (TV)
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Director: James Goldstone Writer: Alvin Sapinsley (writer) Release Date: 1 January 1967 (USA) more Genre: Thriller more Plot Outline: A man who dies on an operating table is brought back to life, but he has no memory of anything that happened before he wakes up. A government agent decides that he would make a perfect undercover operative.

52. HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS - The G.W.T. Patrick Translation. PART TWO - Athenaeum Lib
For God in his dispensation of all events, perfects them into a harmony of the whole, just as, indeed, heraclitus says that to God all things are beautiful
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HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS Heraclitus, son of Vloson, was born about 535 BCE in Ephesos, the second great Greek Ionian city.
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Part Two of Two
T
hey would not know the name of justice, were it not for these things. SOURCES Clement of Alex. Strom. iv. 3, p. 568. Context:For the Scripture says, the law is not made for the just man. And Heraclitus well says, "They would not know the name of justice, were it not for these things." Compare pseudo-Heraclitus, Epist. vii. Schol. B. in Iliad iv. 4, p. 120 :Bekk. They say that it is unfitting that the sight of wars should please the gods. But it is not so. For noble works delight them, and while wars and battles seem to us terrible, to God they do not seem so. For God in his dispensation of all events, perfects them into a harmony of the whole, just as, indeed, Heraclitus says that to God all things are beautiful and good and right, though men suppose that some are right and others wrong. SOURCES Compare Hippocrates

53. Dohiyi Mir: Eternity Is A Child Playing (Heraclitus)
Eternity Is A Child Playing (heraclitus). In which NTodd tries to learn the lesson complete in DC. (2325). Features Lenny Kravitz, Elvis Costello,
http://www.dohiyimir.org/2008/02/eternity-is-a-c.html
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A thus-far-only-once-divorced, vulgar, self-righteous, non-violent, independent, counter-dominant, left-liberal, possibly charismatic, not entirely insufferable, non-obnoxious, Tom Green-esque, quasi anarcho-libertarian Quaker who is rather full of himself shares his take on politics, bicycling, volleyball, and other esoterica.
Lo alecha ha-m'lacha ligmor, v'lo atah ben chorin l'hibateyl mimenah.
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54. Heraclitus The Obscure - Now Without Flash Animation!!! | MetaFilter
heraclitus of Ephesus, sometimes called heraclitus the Obscure We only know him through 100 gnomic quotes and aphorismsI loves me some gnomic aphorisms!
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Heraclitus of Ephesus , sometimes called Heraclitus the Obscure : We only know him through 100 gnomic quotes and aphorisms I loves me some gnomic aphorisms! all direct from or inferred in the comments of various authors of Classical literature, of which no one steps into the same river twice is the best known. Mark Cohen J. H. Lesher and Cynthia Freeman provide excellent introductions. John Burnett's 1920 translation is another academic standard. Jonathan Barnes. whose Penguin Classic The Early Greek Philosophers has the best contemporary translation, wrote Heraclitus attracts exegetes as an empty jampot wasps; and each new wasp discerns traces of his own favourite flavour. Here are the jampots of Friedrich Nietzsche Bertrand Russell and Martin Heidegger . And here, in passing, is a taste of the jampot of Jorge Luis Borges . Heraclitus coined the word enantiodromia . John William Corrington's Logos, Lex, And Law

55. Heraclitus's Profile - StumbleUpon
heraclitus, from Oklahoma, USA. See the 65 sites heraclitus liked and found through StumbleUpon. StumbleUpon discovers web sites based on your interests,
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heraclitus is a person from Oklahoma USA 8 fans 2 reviews Member since Sep 28, 2005
I have been accused of making Atilla the Hun look like a flaming liberal. This is untrue. I knew Atilla and his main problem was he picked a lousy PR man. Besides, what kind of person would you be if all you had to drink was soured, fermented mare's milk, especially as a baby? Atilla was quite progressive, saw the approaching population problems (plagues, etc) and tried, unsuccessfully, to help Europe avoid them but the Europeans just wouldn't listen.
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We do live in a noisy neighborhood! One might almost say it was spooky, but definitely interesting. Feb 25, 2006 6:42am

56. Heraclitus, Sri Aurobindo
What precisely is the keynote of heraclitus thinking, where has he found his starting-point, or what are the grand lines of his philosophy?
http://www.mirapuri-enterprises.com/Mirapuri-Verlag/English/Heraclitus.htm
HERACLITUS
Chapter II
What precisely is the key-note of Heraclitus' thinking, where has he found his starting-point, or what are the grand lines of his philosophy? For if his thought is not developed in the severe systematic method of later thinkers, if it does not come down to us in large streams of subtle reasoning and opulent imagery like Plato's but in detached aphoristic sentences aimed like arrows at truth, still they are not really scattered philosophical reflections. There is an inter-relation, an inter-dependence; they all start logically from his fundamental view of existence itself and go back to it for their constant justification. As in Indian, so in Greek philosophy the first question for thought was the problem of the One and the Many. We see everywhere a multiplicity of things and beings; is it real or only phenomenal or practical, maya, vyavahara Still, one question remains to be resolved before we can move a step farther. Since there is an eternal One, what is that? Is it Force, Mind, Matter, Soul? or, since Matter has many principles, is it some one principle of Matter which has evolved all the rest or which by some power of its own activity has changed into all that we see? The old Greek thinkers conceived of cosmic Substance as possessed of four elements, omitting or not having arrived at the fifth, Ether, in which Indian analysis found the first and original principle. In seeking the nature of the original substance they fixed then on one or other of these four as the primordial Nature, one finding it in Air, another in Water, while Heraclitus, as we have seen, describes or symbolises the source and reality of all things as an ever-living Fire. "No man or god", he says, "has created the universe, but ever there was and is and will be the ever-living Fire."

57. 365 Reasons To Cry — Counting Down To The Great National Pageant
Nov 10, 2007 heraclitus on 9Governor Mike Huckabee Chileno on 9-Governor Mike Huckabee Chileno on 8-The YouTube/CNN Republican Debates
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58. Heraclitus (philosopher) - Biography Research Guide
heraclitus heraclitus of Ephesus (Greek Herakleitos) (about 535 - 475 BC), known as The Obscure , was a pre-S.
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Heraclitus of Ephesus (Greek Herakleitos) (about 535 - 475 BC), known as "The Obscure", was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher from Ephesus in Asia Minor.
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  • Heraclitus, Heraclitus of Ephesus, Heraklitus, Heraclites, Heraklites, Heracletus, Heracleitus, Herakleitos, Heraklitos, Weeping Philosopher, Heracleitus of Ephesus, Panta rhei, Heraclitus the obscure

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59. Heraclitus - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
Research heraclitus at the Questia.com online library.
http://www.questia.com/library/philosophy/heraclitus.jsp

60. Heraclitus
Of heraclitus we have about 140 fragments, some of dubious authenticity, all of them seemingly obscure and open to endless interpretation.
http://www.albany.edu/~rn774/fall96/philos3.html
HERACLITUS AND PARMENIDES both ways . In his own words, "The way up and the way down are one and the same." This is his deepest insight: all becoming is circular (notice that, indeed, in a circle the way up and the way down are one and the same). The same is true of human life: "In us the living and the dead, wakefulness and sleep, youth and old age, are one and the same: for the ones are changed into the others, and reciprocally." Heraclitus apparently believed in the cyclic recurrence of all things, including our lives. The German philosopher Nietzsche tried to revive that doctrine at the end of the 19th century. The circular nature of becoming was to mark deeply another famous German philosopher, Hegel (beginnings of 19th century). Parmenides, on the other hand, has left us long fragments of a poem written in the same meter as the Homeric epics; although there is no lack in it of goddesses and mystical symbols, the main thrust is austerely logical. The poem has two parts: the first is "the way of Truth," the second, "the way of Opinion." Parmenides' main truth is: We cannot think nor say not-being . Thus, he rejects outright the possibility of what I called the horribly difficult thought of not-being. Let me explain how he does it. Suppose I say, "Dragons are not (i.e. they don't exist)." Parmenides would reply: either there are dragons out there, in which case you are uttering a lie, or there are not, in which case your word "dragon" (and your thought) are about nothing. But a thought or a word cannot be about nothing, words and thoughts are like arrows, or like wasp stings: they must hit a target. If you say, "But my word `dragon' hits an idea of dragon I have in my mind," he would reply, "Then you're changing the subject: your word means an idea, not an object out there, and in that case, when you say that dragons are not, you're uttering a lie, for you say that the idea

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