HERACLEITUS
(b. c. 540,
Ephesus, Anatolia [now Selƈuk, Turk.]—d. 480 BCE)
Heracleitus was a
Greek philosopher known for his cosmology, in which fire forms the basic
material principle of an orderly universe. Little is known about his life, and
the one book he apparently wrote is lost. His views survive in the short
fragments quoted and attributed to him by later authors.
Though primarily concerned with
explanations of the world around him, Heracleitus also stressed the need for
people to live together in social harmony. He complained that most people
failed to comprehend the Logos (Greek: “reason”), the universal principle
through which all things are interrelated and all natural events occur, and
thus lived like dreamers with a false view of the world. A significant
manifestation of the logos, Heracleitus claimed, is the underlying connection between
opposites. For example, health and disease define each other. Good and evil,
hot and cold, and other opposites are similarly related. In addition, he noted
that a single substance may be perceived in varied ways—seawater is both
harmful (for human beings) and beneficial (for fishes). His understanding of
the relation of opposites to each other enabled him to overcome the chaotic and
divergent nature of the world, and he asserted that the world exists as a
coherent system in which a change in one direction is ultimately balanced by a
corresponding change in another. Between all things there is a hidden
connection, so that those that are apparently “tending apart” are actually
“being brought together.”
Viewing fire as the essential
material uniting all things, Heracleitus wrote that the world order is an
“everliving fire kindling in measures and being extinguished in measures.” He
extended the manifestations of fire to include not only fuel, flame, and smoke
but also the ether in the upper atmosphere. Part of this air, or pure fire,
“turns to” ocean, presumably as rain, and part of the ocean turns to earth.
Simultaneously, equal masses of earth and sea everywhere are returning to the
respective aspects of sea and fire. The resulting dynamic equilibrium maintains
an orderly balance in the world. This persistence of unity despite change is
illustrated by Heracleitus’ famous analogy of life to a river: “Upon those who
step into the same rivers different and ever different waters flow down.” Plato
later took this doctrine to mean that all things are in constant flux,
regardless of how they appear to the senses.
Heracleitus was unpopular in his time and was frequently
scorned by later biographers. His primary contribution lies in his apprehension
of the formal unity of the world of experience.
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