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'''Parmenides of [[Elea]]''' (c. 515 – 450 B.C.E.) was a Greek [[Pre-Socratic philosophy|pre-Socratic philosopher]], born in [[Elea]], a Greek city on the southern coast of [[Italy]]. He is reported to have been a student of [[Xenophanes]], a teacher of [[Zeno of Elea]], and a major thinker of the Eleatic school.
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Earlier pre-Socratic philosophers identified the ultimate [[principle]] of the world with its elements (“water” in [[Thales]]; “air” in [[Anaximenes of Miletus|Anaximenes]]; “number” in [[Pythagoras]]) or an unspecified element “undetermined” in [[Anaximander]]). Parmenides comprehended both [[Being and Existence|existential]] and [[logic|logical]] characteristics of the principle, and formulated them as a philosophical doctrine. Earlier pre-Socratics presupposed that the principle was logically identical with itself (the principle of [[self-identity]]) and it exists by itself (self-subsistence) as an immutable, immobile, [[Eternity|eternal]] being. Although earlier thinkers implicitly presupposed these [[ontology|ontological]] and logical characteristics of the principle, they never conceptualized and presented them in explicit form.
  
'''Parmenides of [[Elea]]''' ([[5th century B.C.E.]]) was an [[Hellenic Greece|ancient Greek]] [[philosophy|philosopher]] born in [[Elea]], a Greek city on the southern coast of [[Italy]]. He is reported to have been a student of [[Xenophanes]]. He is one of the most significant of the [[pre-Socratic]] philosophers. He argued that the every-day [[perception]] of [[reality]] of the [[physical]] world (the "Way of Seeming") is mistaken, and that the reality of the world is 'One Being' (the "Way of Truth"): an unchanging, ungenerated, indestructible whole.
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Parmenides conceptualized self-existence and logical self-identity as the first principle of philosophy. In other words, Parmenides established self-reflexivity and self-sufficiency of truth. That is truth exists by itself without change for eternity. He ascribed [[perfection]] and [[permanence]] as the qualifications to the true being or existence. Evaluating from this criteria, Parmenides disqualified all beings subject to change and alternation as non-being or mere appearance, not true existence.
  
He was the founder of the [[Eleatic school]], which also included [[Zeno of Elea]] and [[Melissus]].
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He characterized the ultimate reality as “one” and “whole.” Individuals and diversity we experience in the phenomenal world are, according to Parmenides, the illusory perception of mortals. His insight to the self-subsistence of eternal being as the ultimate reality may also be comparable to the idea of [[God]] as a self-subsisting being in [[monotheism|monotheistic]] traditions.  
  
When one says that Parmenides "argued" something, one cannot think about "argue" in the modern sense. Parmenides was a [[prophet]], [[magic]]ian and [[healer]] (just like [[Pythagoras]], [[Empedocles]] and many others), and his philosophy is presented in [[verse]], through [[mythology]] and obscure [[mysticism|mystic]] visions. The philosophy he argued was, he says, given to him by the Goddess of the [[underworld]] ([[Tartaros]]):
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Parmenides divided philosophical inquiries into two ways: “the Way of Truth” and “the Way of Seeming or Opinion.” The former is the sphere of ontology and logic, permanent and unchanging, accessible by reason alone. The latter is the sphere of phenomena, change, and alteration, accessible by senses and ordinary perception. Only the “Way of Truth” is a path to truth and the “Way of Seeming” leads to false beliefs, illusion, and deception. Parmenides interpreted previous philosophers as belonging to the latter path.
  
:''Welcome, youth, who come attended by immortal charioteers and mares which bear you on your journey to our dwelling. For it is no evil fate that has set you to travel on this road, far from the beaten paths of men, but right and justice. It is meet that you learn all things - both the unshakable heart of well-rounded truth and the opinions of mortals in which there is not true belief.''
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The sharp distinction between the world of unchanging true reality and that of changing phenomena was succeeded by philosophers such as [[Plato]] and [[Democritus]]. Plato identified immutable, permanent true reality with [[ideas]], and Democritus with [[atoms]]. Parmenides’ concept of existence as permanence is a sharp contrast to that of [[Heraclitus]] who conceived existence as flux, or a process. His thought is quite one-sided and radical, but it is also challenging and provocative. [[Aristotle]] later tried to clarify various senses of being, which led him to the formation of [[metaphysics]] whose central theme is the question of being.
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{{toc}}
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Parmenides is known as the first philosopher who brought the question of [[ontology]] and logic into the foreground of philosophical investigations.  
  
Under 'way of seeming', in the same work, he set out a contrasting but more conventional view of the world, thereby becoming an early exponent of the [[dualism|duality]] of [[appearance]] and reality. For him and his pupils the [[phenomena]] of movement and change are simply appearances of a static, [[eternity|eternal]] reality.
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==Life and works==
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Much of Parmenides’ life is unknown. In ''[[Parmenides (dialogue)|Parmenides]],'' [[Plato]] portrayed Parmenides visiting [[Athens]] and having a dialogue with young [[Socrates]].
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The historical accuracy of the account is uncertain. In ''[[Theaetetus]],'' Plato described Parmenides as noble and reverend. [[Diogenes Laertius]] and [[Plutarch]] also reported that Parmenides legislated for the city of Elea (Diels and Kranz 28A1). Plutarch wrote:
  
In [[Plato]]'s [[dialogue]] ''[[Parmenides (dialogue)|''Parmenides'']]'' the Eleatic philosopher and [[Socrates]] argue about [[dialectic]].  In the ''[[Theaetetus (Plato)|Theaetetus]]'', Socrates says that Parmenides alone among the wise ([[Protagoras]], [[Heraclitus]], [[Empedocles]], [[Epicharmus]], and [[Homer]]) denied that everything is change and motion.
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<blockquote>
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Parmenides set his own state in order with such admirable laws that the government yearly wears its citizens to abide by the laws of Parmenides.
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</blockquote>
  
==Metaphysics==
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Parmenides wrote ''On Nature,'' and presented his philosophy in an epic poem written in [[hexameter]] verse, the same poetic form as the works of [[Homer]] and [[Hesiod]]. The poem consists of three parts: the prologue, the ''Way of Truth,'' and the ''Way of Seeming or Opinion.'' All of 155 lines survive in [[Simplicius]]’ commentary to [[Aristotle]]’s physics. Diels and Kranz estimated 90 percent of the ''Way of Truth'' and 10 percent of the ''Way of Seeming'' survived. The poem describes a mythical story of Parmenides’ journey to the world of light and the message a goddess revealed to him. Commentators agree on the difficulty of interpreting and translating Parmenides’ poem.
His work ''On [[Nature]]'' exists only in fragments and is made up of two parts as well as an introductory discourse. The ''Way of Truth'' discusses that which is real and the ''Way of Seeming'' discusses that which is illusory. Under the ''Way of Truth'', he stated that there are two ways of inquiry: that it ''is'', that it ''is not''. He said that the latter argument is never feasible because nothing can ''not be'' and be an object of speech and thought:
 
  
:''For never shall this prevail, that things that are not '''are'''.''
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==Philosophy==
  
:''Thinking and the thought that it is are the same; for you will not find thought apart from what is, in relation to which it is uttered.''
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===Reality and Appearance===
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The distinction between the ''Way of Truth'' and the ''Way of Seeming'' is the first attempt in Greek philosophy to distinguish between reality and appearance, or essence and phenomena, which had lasting effects on the subsequent history of Western philosophy.  
  
:''For thought and being are the same.''
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In the ''Way of Truth,'' Parmenides presented his ontology: a real being is timeless, immobile, immutable, permanent, unborn, imperishable, one, and whole. Parmenides did not discuss ''what'' that was, which exists permanently, but highlighted the fact of existence as the truth.
  
:''It is necessary to speak and to think what is; for being is, but nothing is not.''
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<blockquote>
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There is only one other description of the way remaining, namely, that ''What Is.'' To this way there are very many sign-posts: that [[Being]] has no coming-into-being and no destruction, for it is whole of limb, without motion, and without end. And it never Was, nor Will be, because it Is now, a Whole all together, One, continuous; for what creation of it will you look for?
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</blockquote>
  
:''Helplessness guides the wandering thought in their breasts; they are carried along deaf and blind alike, dazed, beasts without judgment, convinced that to be and not to be are the same and not the same, and that the road of all things is a backward-turning one.''
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<blockquote>
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One should both say and think that Being Is; for To Be is possible, and Nothingness is not possible.
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</blockquote>
  
Furthermore, he implied that it could not have "come into being" because "[[nothing comes from nothing]]."
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Parmenides represented the real being as a sphere, a symbol of perfection for the Greeks.
  
Moreover he argued that movement was impossible because it requires moving into "the void", and Parmenides identified "the void" with nothing, and therefore (by definition) it does not exist. That which does exist is ''The Parmenidean One'' which is timeless, uniform, and unchanging:
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<blockquote>
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But since there is a (spatial) Limit, it is complete on every side, like the mass of a well rounded sphere, equally balanced from its center in every direction; for it is not bound to be at all either greater or less in this direction or that.
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</blockquote>
  
:''How could what is perish?  How could it have come to be?  For if it came into being, it is not; nor is it if ever it is going to beThus coming into being is extinguished, and destruction unknown.''
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In the ''Way of Seeming,'' Parmenides dismissed changes and motion as illusory, which we experience as ''real'' in everyday life. In everyday parlance, we speak of absence, void, and non-being or non-existence as if they are ''real.'' Coming into being is perceived as a process from non-being to being, and disappearance from being to non-being. For Parmenides, non-being in a genuine sense is a total absence or a sheer nothing that cannot be in principle an object of thought. What we can think of has existence by the fact of being thought. The moment one thinks something, an object of thought is posited as a being. Thinking inherently involves positing an object of thought.  
 +
   
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<blockquote>
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To think is the same as the thought that It Is; for you will not find thinking without Being, in (regard to) which there is an expression.
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</blockquote>
  
:''Nor was [it] once, nor will [it] be, since [it] is, now, all together, / One, continuous; for what coming-to-be of it will you seek? / In what way, whence, did [it] grow? Neither from what-is-not shall I allow / You to say or think; for it is not to be said or thought / That [''it''] ''is not''. And what need could have impelled it to grow / Later or sooner, if it began from nothing? Thus [it] must either be completely or not at all.''
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=== Being and Knowledge: a correspondence theory of truth: ===
  
:''[''What exists''] is now, all at once, one and continuous... Nor is it divisible, since it is all alike; nor is there any more or less of it in one place which might prevent it from holding together, but all is full of what is.''
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Parmenides presented a view of [[truth]], which is known as a correspondence theory of truth. In this view, truth is defined as the accordance of idea with reality. Since Parmenides conceived the eternal and unchanging being as the sole reality, true knowledge is a realization of this being and this knowledge is attainable not by senses but by reason alone.  
  
:''And it is all one to me / Where I am to begin; for I shall return there again.''
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<blockquote>
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For this (view) can never predominate, that That Which I Not exists. You must debar your thought from this way of search, nor let ordinary experience in its variety force you along this way, (namely, that of allowing) the eyes, sightless as it is, and the ear, full of sound, and the tongue, to rule; but (you must) judge by means of the Reason (Logos) the much-contested proof which is expounded by me.
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</blockquote>
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In our everyday discourse, we distinguish beings according to their kind, mode, and sense of existence. Diversity of beings is established based upon differences in these existential characteristics. What is common to all beings is the fact of existence. Parmenides conceived the fact of existence as the common denominator to all beings and conceptualized it as the One. True knowledge is the realization of the fact of to-be as the first principle of being. Our perception of diversity among beings is, for Parmenides, merely a view of mortals in the ''World of Seeming.''
  
 
== Works ==
 
== Works ==
*''On Nature'' (written between 480 and 470 BC) [http://home.ican.net/~arandall/Parmenides/ ]
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*''On Nature'' (written between 480 and 470 b.c.e.)  
 +
Preferred text (listed in reference):
 +
:*Diels, H., and W. Kranz, eds. ''Die Fragmente der Vorsocratiker''
 +
:*Freeman, K., ed. ''Ancilla to the pre-Socratic philosophers''
 +
 
 +
Online text:
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*[http://www.abu.nb.ca/Courses/GrPhil/OnNature.htm Ancient Greek Philosophy by Alan D. Smith, Atlantic Baptist University]
 +
*[http://www.tphta.ws/TPH_ONPP.HTM Extracts from ''On Nature'']
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
*{{Book reference | Author=Melchert, Norman | Title=The Great Conversation: A Historical Introduction to Philosophy | Publisher=McGraw Hill | Year=2002 | ID=ISBN 0195175107}}
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===Text===
 +
*Diels, H., and W. Kranz, eds. ''Die Fragmente der Vorsocratiker'' Berlin: Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1960.
 +
*Freeman, K., ed. ''Ancilla to the pre-Socratic philosophers.'' Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983.
 +
*Kirk, G.S., J.E. Raven, and M. Schofield. ''The Presocratic Philosophers,'' 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
 +
*Hicks, R.D., ''Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers,'' 2 vols. Loeb Classical Library, 1925.
 +
 
 +
===Secondary Sources===
 +
*Barnes, Jonathan. ''The Presocratic Philosophers,'' vol. 1. London: Routledge, 1979.
 +
*Emlyn-Jones, C. ''The Ionians and Hellenism.'' London: Routledge, 1980.
 +
*Furley, David, and R.E. Allen, eds. ''Studies in Presocratic Philosophy,'' vol. 1. New York: Humanities Press, 1970.
 +
*Guthrie, W.K.C. ''A History of Greek Philosophy,'' 6 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986.
 +
*Taran, L. ''Parmenides.'' Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965.
 +
*Taylor, A.E. ''Aristotle on his predecessors.'' La Salle: Open Court, 1977.
  
 
== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/p/parmenid.htm ''Parmenides'', The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
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All links retrieved November 18, 2022.
*[http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/320/parm1.htm "Lecture Notes: Parmenides", Mark Cohen, University of Washighton]
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*[http://history.hanover.edu/texts/presoc/parmends.html Parmenides: Fragments and Commentary, Hanover Historical Texts Project]
 
*[http://www.formalontology.it/parmenides.htm Parmenides' Way of Truth]
 
*[http://www.formalontology.it/parmenides.htm Parmenides' Way of Truth]
 +
*[http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/320/parm1.htm "Lecture Notes: Parmenides", Mark Cohen, University of Washington]
  
 +
===General Philosophy Sources===
 +
*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
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*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online]
 +
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
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*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg]
  
 
[[Category:Ancient Greek philosophers]]
 
[[Category:Ancient Greek philosophers]]
 
[[Category:Presocratic philosophers]]
 
[[Category:Presocratic philosophers]]
[[Category|Philosophy and religion]]
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[[Category:Philosophy and religion]]
 
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{{credit|25722207}}

Latest revision as of 08:52, 18 November 2022


Parmenides of Elea (c. 515 – 450 B.C.E.) was a Greek pre-Socratic philosopher, born in Elea, a Greek city on the southern coast of Italy. He is reported to have been a student of Xenophanes, a teacher of Zeno of Elea, and a major thinker of the Eleatic school.

Earlier pre-Socratic philosophers identified the ultimate principle of the world with its elements (“water” in Thales; “air” in Anaximenes; “number” in Pythagoras) or an unspecified element “undetermined” in Anaximander). Parmenides comprehended both existential and logical characteristics of the principle, and formulated them as a philosophical doctrine. Earlier pre-Socratics presupposed that the principle was logically identical with itself (the principle of self-identity) and it exists by itself (self-subsistence) as an immutable, immobile, eternal being. Although earlier thinkers implicitly presupposed these ontological and logical characteristics of the principle, they never conceptualized and presented them in explicit form.

Parmenides conceptualized self-existence and logical self-identity as the first principle of philosophy. In other words, Parmenides established self-reflexivity and self-sufficiency of truth. That is truth exists by itself without change for eternity. He ascribed perfection and permanence as the qualifications to the true being or existence. Evaluating from this criteria, Parmenides disqualified all beings subject to change and alternation as non-being or mere appearance, not true existence.

He characterized the ultimate reality as “one” and “whole.” Individuals and diversity we experience in the phenomenal world are, according to Parmenides, the illusory perception of mortals. His insight to the self-subsistence of eternal being as the ultimate reality may also be comparable to the idea of God as a self-subsisting being in monotheistic traditions.

Parmenides divided philosophical inquiries into two ways: “the Way of Truth” and “the Way of Seeming or Opinion.” The former is the sphere of ontology and logic, permanent and unchanging, accessible by reason alone. The latter is the sphere of phenomena, change, and alteration, accessible by senses and ordinary perception. Only the “Way of Truth” is a path to truth and the “Way of Seeming” leads to false beliefs, illusion, and deception. Parmenides interpreted previous philosophers as belonging to the latter path.

The sharp distinction between the world of unchanging true reality and that of changing phenomena was succeeded by philosophers such as Plato and Democritus. Plato identified immutable, permanent true reality with ideas, and Democritus with atoms. Parmenides’ concept of existence as permanence is a sharp contrast to that of Heraclitus who conceived existence as flux, or a process. His thought is quite one-sided and radical, but it is also challenging and provocative. Aristotle later tried to clarify various senses of being, which led him to the formation of metaphysics whose central theme is the question of being.

Parmenides is known as the first philosopher who brought the question of ontology and logic into the foreground of philosophical investigations.

Life and works

Much of Parmenides’ life is unknown. In Parmenides, Plato portrayed Parmenides visiting Athens and having a dialogue with young Socrates. The historical accuracy of the account is uncertain. In Theaetetus, Plato described Parmenides as noble and reverend. Diogenes Laertius and Plutarch also reported that Parmenides legislated for the city of Elea (Diels and Kranz 28A1). Plutarch wrote:

Parmenides set his own state in order with such admirable laws that the government yearly wears its citizens to abide by the laws of Parmenides.

Parmenides wrote On Nature, and presented his philosophy in an epic poem written in hexameter verse, the same poetic form as the works of Homer and Hesiod. The poem consists of three parts: the prologue, the Way of Truth, and the Way of Seeming or Opinion. All of 155 lines survive in Simplicius’ commentary to Aristotle’s physics. Diels and Kranz estimated 90 percent of the Way of Truth and 10 percent of the Way of Seeming survived. The poem describes a mythical story of Parmenides’ journey to the world of light and the message a goddess revealed to him. Commentators agree on the difficulty of interpreting and translating Parmenides’ poem.

Philosophy

Reality and Appearance

The distinction between the Way of Truth and the Way of Seeming is the first attempt in Greek philosophy to distinguish between reality and appearance, or essence and phenomena, which had lasting effects on the subsequent history of Western philosophy.

In the Way of Truth, Parmenides presented his ontology: a real being is timeless, immobile, immutable, permanent, unborn, imperishable, one, and whole. Parmenides did not discuss what that was, which exists permanently, but highlighted the fact of existence as the truth.

There is only one other description of the way remaining, namely, that What Is. To this way there are very many sign-posts: that Being has no coming-into-being and no destruction, for it is whole of limb, without motion, and without end. And it never Was, nor Will be, because it Is now, a Whole all together, One, continuous; for what creation of it will you look for?

One should both say and think that Being Is; for To Be is possible, and Nothingness is not possible.

Parmenides represented the real being as a sphere, a symbol of perfection for the Greeks.

But since there is a (spatial) Limit, it is complete on every side, like the mass of a well rounded sphere, equally balanced from its center in every direction; for it is not bound to be at all either greater or less in this direction or that.

In the Way of Seeming, Parmenides dismissed changes and motion as illusory, which we experience as real in everyday life. In everyday parlance, we speak of absence, void, and non-being or non-existence as if they are real. Coming into being is perceived as a process from non-being to being, and disappearance from being to non-being. For Parmenides, non-being in a genuine sense is a total absence or a sheer nothing that cannot be in principle an object of thought. What we can think of has existence by the fact of being thought. The moment one thinks something, an object of thought is posited as a being. Thinking inherently involves positing an object of thought.

To think is the same as the thought that It Is; for you will not find thinking without Being, in (regard to) which there is an expression.

Being and Knowledge: a correspondence theory of truth:

Parmenides presented a view of truth, which is known as a correspondence theory of truth. In this view, truth is defined as the accordance of idea with reality. Since Parmenides conceived the eternal and unchanging being as the sole reality, true knowledge is a realization of this being and this knowledge is attainable not by senses but by reason alone.

For this (view) can never predominate, that That Which I Not exists. You must debar your thought from this way of search, nor let ordinary experience in its variety force you along this way, (namely, that of allowing) the eyes, sightless as it is, and the ear, full of sound, and the tongue, to rule; but (you must) judge by means of the Reason (Logos) the much-contested proof which is expounded by me.

In our everyday discourse, we distinguish beings according to their kind, mode, and sense of existence. Diversity of beings is established based upon differences in these existential characteristics. What is common to all beings is the fact of existence. Parmenides conceived the fact of existence as the common denominator to all beings and conceptualized it as the One. True knowledge is the realization of the fact of to-be as the first principle of being. Our perception of diversity among beings is, for Parmenides, merely a view of mortals in the World of Seeming.

Works

  • On Nature (written between 480 and 470 B.C.E.)

Preferred text (listed in reference):

  • Diels, H., and W. Kranz, eds. Die Fragmente der Vorsocratiker
  • Freeman, K., ed. Ancilla to the pre-Socratic philosophers

Online text:

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Text

  • Diels, H., and W. Kranz, eds. Die Fragmente der Vorsocratiker Berlin: Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1960.
  • Freeman, K., ed. Ancilla to the pre-Socratic philosophers. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1983.
  • Kirk, G.S., J.E. Raven, and M. Schofield. The Presocratic Philosophers, 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
  • Hicks, R.D., Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, 2 vols. Loeb Classical Library, 1925.

Secondary Sources

  • Barnes, Jonathan. The Presocratic Philosophers, vol. 1. London: Routledge, 1979.
  • Emlyn-Jones, C. The Ionians and Hellenism. London: Routledge, 1980.
  • Furley, David, and R.E. Allen, eds. Studies in Presocratic Philosophy, vol. 1. New York: Humanities Press, 1970.
  • Guthrie, W.K.C. A History of Greek Philosophy, 6 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986.
  • Taran, L. Parmenides. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965.
  • Taylor, A.E. Aristotle on his predecessors. La Salle: Open Court, 1977.

External Links

All links retrieved November 18, 2022.

General Philosophy Sources

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