The
convention of terming those
philosophers who were active prior to the death of
Socrates as the
pre-Socratics gained currency with the 1903 publication of
Hermann Diels' Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, although the term did not originate with him. The term is considered useful because what came to be known as the "Athenian school" (composed of Socrates, Plato, and
Aristotle) signaled the rise of a new approach to philosophy;
Friedrich Nietzsche's thesis that this shift began with Plato rather than with Socrates (hence his nomenclature of "pre-Platonic philosophy") has not prevented the predominance of the "pre-Socratic" distinction. Since 2016, however, scholarly discourse has shifted from using the term
"pre-Socratic philosophy" to the more neutral
"Early Greek Philosophy". This change has been popularized in part by André Laks and Glenn W. Most through their comprehensive nine-volume
Loeb Classical Library edition of
Early Greek Philosophy. In the first volume, they distinguish their systematic approach from that of Hermann Diels, starting with the deliberate choice of terminology. They prefer
"Early Greek Philosophy" over
"pre-Socratic philosophy" primarily because Socrates was a contemporary of, and in some cases even preceded, thinkers traditionally labeled as "pre-Socratic" such as the Atomists. The early Greek philosophers (or "pre-Socratics") were primarily concerned with
cosmology,
ontology, and mathematics. They were distinguished from "non-philosophers" insofar as they rejected mythological explanations in favor of reasoned discourse.
Milesian school Thales of Miletus, regarded by
Aristotle as the first philosopher, held that all things arise from a single material substance, water. It is not because he gave a
cosmogony that
John Burnet calls him the "first man of science", but because he gave a naturalistic explanation of the
cosmos and supported it with reasons. According to tradition, Thales was able to predict an
eclipse and taught the Egyptians how to measure the height of the
pyramids. Thales inspired the
Milesian school of philosophy and was followed by
Anaximander, who argued that the substratum or
arche could not be water or any of the
classical elements but was instead something "unlimited" or "indefinite" (in Greek, the
apeiron). He began from the observation that the world seems to consist of opposites (e.g., hot and cold), yet a thing can become its opposite (e.g., a hot thing cold). Therefore, they cannot truly be opposites but rather must both be manifestations of some underlying unity that is neither. This underlying unity (substratum,
arche) could not be any of the classical elements, since they were one extreme or another. For example, water is wet, the opposite of dry, while fire is dry, the opposite of wet. This initial state is ageless and imperishable, and everything returns to it according to necessity.
Anaximenes in turn held that the
arche was air, although John Burnet argues that by this, he meant that it was a transparent mist, the
aether. Despite their varied answers, the Milesian school was searching for a natural substance that would remain unchanged despite appearing in different forms, and thus represents one of the first scientific attempts to answer the question that would lead to the development of modern atomic theory; "the Milesians," says Burnet, "asked for the
φύσις of all things."
Xenophanes Xenophanes was born in
Ionia, where the Milesian school was at its most powerful and may have picked up some of the Milesians' cosmological theories as a result. What is known is that he argued that each of the phenomena had a natural rather than divine explanation in a manner reminiscent of Anaximander's theories and that there was only one god, the world as a whole, and that he ridiculed the
anthropomorphism of the Greek religion by claiming that cattle would claim that the gods looked like cattle, horses like horses, and lions like lions, just as the Ethiopians claimed that the gods were snub-nosed and black and the Thracians claimed they were pale and red-haired. Xenophanes was highly influential to subsequent schools of philosophy. He was seen as the founder of a line of philosophy that culminated in
Pyrrhonism, possibly an influence on
Eleatic philosophy, and a precursor to
Epicurus' total break between science and religion.
Pythagoreanism Pythagoras lived at approximately the same time that Xenophanes did and, in contrast to the latter, the school that he founded sought to reconcile religious belief and reason. Little is known about his life with any reliability, however, and no writings of his survive, so it is possible that he was simply a
mystic whose successors introduced rationalism into Pythagoreanism, that he was simply a
rationalist whose successors are responsible for the mysticism in Pythagoreanism, or that he was actually the author of the doctrine; there is no way to know for certain. Pythagoras is said to have been a disciple of
Anaximander and to have imbibed the
cosmological concerns of the Ionians, including the idea that the cosmos is constructed of spheres, the importance of the infinite, and that air or aether is the
arche of everything. Pythagoreanism also incorporated
ascetic ideals, emphasizing purgation,
metempsychosis, and consequently a respect for all animal life; much was made of the correspondence between mathematics and the cosmos in a musical harmony. Pythagoras believed that behind the appearance of things, there was the permanent principle of mathematics, and that the forms were based on a transcendental mathematical relation.
Heraclitus Heraclitus must have lived after Xenophanes and Pythagoras, as he condemns them along with
Homer as proving that much learning cannot teach a man to think; since
Parmenides refers to him in the past tense, this would place him in the 5th century BC. Contrary to the
Milesian school, which posits one stable
element as the
arche, Heraclitus taught that
panta rhei ("everything flows"), the closest element to this eternal flux being fire. All things come to pass in accordance with
Logos, which must be considered as "plan" or "formula", and "the
Logos is common". He also posited a
unity of opposites, expressed through
dialectic, which structured this flux, such as that seeming opposites in fact are manifestations of a common substrate to good and evil itself. Heraclitus called the oppositional processes ἔρις (
eris), "strife", and hypothesized that the apparently stable state of δίκη (
dikê), or "justice", is the
harmonic unity of these opposites.
Eleatic philosophy Parmenides of Elea cast his philosophy against those who held "it is and is not the same, and all things travel in opposite directions,"—presumably referring to Heraclitus and those who followed him. Whereas the doctrines of the Milesian school, in suggesting that the substratum could appear in a variety of different guises, implied that everything that exists is corpuscular, Parmenides argued that the first principle of being was One, indivisible, and unchanging. Being, he argued, by definition implies eternality, while only that which
is can be thought; a thing which
is, moreover, cannot be more or less, and so the rarefaction and condensation of the Milesians is impossible regarding Being; lastly, as movement requires that something exist apart from the thing moving (viz. the space into which it moves), the One or Being cannot move, since this would require that "space" both exist and not exist. While this doctrine is at odds with ordinary sensory experience, where things do indeed change and move, the Eleatic school followed Parmenides in denying that sense phenomena revealed the world as it actually was; instead, the only thing with Being was thought, or the question of whether something exists or not is one of whether it can be thought. In support of this, Parmenides' pupil
Zeno of Elea attempted to prove that the concept of
motion was absurd and as such motion did not exist. He also attacked the subsequent development of pluralism, arguing that it was incompatible with Being. His arguments are known as
Zeno's paradoxes.
Pluralism and atomism The power of Parmenides' logic was such that some subsequent philosophers abandoned the
monism of the Milesians, Xenophanes, Heraclitus, and Parmenides, where one thing was the
arche. In place of this, they adopted
pluralism, such as
Empedocles and
Anaxagoras. There were, they said, multiple elements which were not reducible to one another and these were set in motion by love and strife (as in Empedocles) or by Mind (as in Anaxagoras). Agreeing with Parmenides that there is no coming into being or passing away, genesis or decay, they said that things appear to come into being and pass away because the elements out of which they are composed assemble or disassemble while themselves being unchanging.
Leucippus also proposed an ontological pluralism with a cosmogony based on two main elements: the vacuum and atoms. These, by means of their inherent movement, are crossing the void and creating the real material bodies. His theories were not well known by the time of
Plato, however, and they were ultimately incorporated into the work of his student,
Democritus.
Sophism Sophism arose from the juxtaposition of
physis (nature) and
nomos (law). John Burnet posits its origin in the scientific progress of the previous centuries which suggested that Being was radically different from what was experienced by the senses and, if comprehensible at all, was not comprehensible in terms of order; the world in which people lived, on the other hand, was one of law and order, albeit of humankind's own making. At the same time, nature was constant, while what was by law differed from one place to another and could be changed. The first person to call themselves a sophist, according to Plato, was
Protagoras, whom he presents as teaching that all
virtue is conventional. It was Protagoras who claimed that "man is the measure of all things, of the things that are, that they are, and of the things that are not, that they are not," which Plato interprets as a radical
perspectivism, where some things seem to be one way for one person (and so actually are that way) and another way for another person (and so actually are
that way as well); the conclusion being that one cannot look to nature for guidance regarding how to live one's life. Protagoras and subsequent sophists tended to teach
rhetoric as their primary vocation.
Prodicus,
Gorgias,
Hippias, and
Thrasymachus appear in various
dialogues, sometimes explicitly teaching that while nature provides no ethical guidance, the guidance that the laws provide is worthless, or that nature favors those who act against the laws. == Classical Greek philosophy ==