Empedocles: Difference between revisions
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{{Other uses}} | {{Other uses}} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}} | ||
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{{Infobox philosopher | {{Infobox philosopher | ||
|region = [[Western philosophy]] | |region = [[Western philosophy]] | ||
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|birth_place = [[Akragas]], [[Sicily]] | |birth_place = [[Akragas]], [[Sicily]] | ||
|death_date = {{circa|434 BC|lk=no}} | |death_date = {{circa|434 BC|lk=no}} | ||
|main_interests = [[Cosmogony]], [[ | |main_interests = [[Cosmogony]], [[biology]] | ||
|notable_ideas = [[Classical element|Classical four elements]]: [[fire (classical element)|fire]], [[air (classical element)|air]], [[earth (classical element)|earth]] and [[water (classical element)|water]] <br>''[[Philotes (mythology)|Love]]'' and ''[[Neikea|Strife]]'' as opposing physical forces | |notable_ideas = [[Classical element|Classical four elements]]: [[fire (classical element)|fire]], [[air (classical element)|air]], [[earth (classical element)|earth]] and [[water (classical element)|water]] <br>''[[Philotes (mythology)|Love]]'' and ''[[Neikea|Strife]]'' as opposing physical forces | ||
}} | }} | ||
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==Philosophy== | ==Philosophy== | ||
{{See also|Classical element#Hellenistic philosophy}} | {{See also|Classical element#Hellenistic philosophy}} | ||
Based on the surviving fragments of his work, modern scholars generally believe that Empedocles was directly responding to [[Parmenides]]' doctrine of [[monism]] and was likely acquainted with the work of [[Anaxagoras]], although it is unlikely he was aware of either the later [[Eleatics]] or the doctrines of the [[Atomists]].{{sfn|Inwood|2001|p=6-8}} Many later accounts of his life claim that Empedocles studied with the [[Pythagoreans]] on the basis of his doctrine of reincarnation, although he may have instead learned this from a local tradition rather than directly from the [[Pythagoreans]].{{sfn|Inwood|2001|p=6-8}} | Based on the surviving fragments of his work, modern scholars generally believe that Empedocles was directly responding to [[Parmenides]]' doctrine of [[monism]] and was likely acquainted with the work of [[Anaxagoras]], although it is unlikely he was aware of either the later [[Eleatics]] or the doctrines of the [[Atomists]].{{sfn|Inwood|2001|p=6-8}} Many later accounts of his life claim that Empedocles studied with the [[Pythagoreans]] on the basis of his doctrine of reincarnation, although he may have instead learned this from a local tradition rather than directly from the [[Pythagoreans]].{{sfn|Inwood|2001|p=6-8}} | ||
However, as the Modern Greek philosopher [[Elli Lambridi|Helle Lambridis]] has argued, while Empedocles seems to have borrowed from the Eleatic tradition (with Parmenides at its centre) as well as from the Heraclitean and Pythagorean schools of thought, his own philosophy is very different from all these three influences. The work of Empedocles, Lambridis suggests, must be seen in relation to the work of the Greeks as a whole that borrowed elements from Egypt, Babylon and other Eastern cultures to produce a totally different philosophy.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lambridis |first=Helle |title=Empedocles: A Philosophical Investigation |publisher=University of Alabama Press |year=1976 |location=Tuscaloosa |pages=38–39}}</ref> | |||
===Cosmogony=== | ===Cosmogony=== | ||
[[File:Empedocles_four_elements.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Empedocles' theory four elements (fire, air, water and earth), woodcut from a 1472 edition of Lucretius' [[De rerum natura | [[File:Empedocles_four_elements.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Empedocles' theory four elements (fire, air, water and earth), woodcut from a 1472 edition of Lucretius' ''[[De rerum natura]]'']] | ||
Empedocles established four ultimate [[classical element|elements]] which make all the structures in the world—[[Fire (classical element)|fire]], [[Air (classical element)|air]], [[Water (classical element)|water]], [[Earth (classical element)|earth]].{{sfn|Wallace|1911}}{{efn|Frag. B17 ([[Simplicius of Cilicia|Simplicius]], ''Physics'', 157–159)}} Empedocles called these four elements "roots",<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ströker |first=E. |date=September 1968 |title=Element and Compound. On the Scientific History of Two Fundamental Chemical Concepts |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.196807181 |journal=Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English |language=en |volume=7 |issue=9 |pages=718–724 |doi=10.1002/anie.196807181 |issn=0570-0833|url-access=subscription }}</ref> which he also identified with the mythical names of [[Zeus]], [[Hera]], [[Persephone|Nestis]], and [[Aidoneus]]{{efn|Frag. B6 (Sextus Empiricus, ''Against the Mathematicians'', x, 315)}} (e.g., "Now hear the fourfold roots of everything: enlivening Hera, Hades, shining Zeus. And Nestis, moistening mortal springs with tears").{{sfn|Kingsley|1995}} Empedocles never used the term "element" ({{lang|grc|στοιχεῖον}}, ''stoicheion''), which seems to have been first used by [[Plato]].{{efn|Plato, ''Timaeus'', 48b–c}}{{better source needed|date=September 2022}} According to the different proportions in which these four indestructible and unchangeable elements are combined with each other the difference of the structure is produced.{{sfn|Wallace|1911}} It is in the aggregation and segregation of elements thus arising, that Empedocles, like the atomists, found the real process which corresponds to what is popularly termed growth, increase or decrease. One interpreter describes his philosophy as asserting that "Nothing new comes or can come into being; the only change that can occur is a change in the juxtaposition of element with element."{{sfn|Wallace|1911}} This theory of the four elements became the standard [[dogma]] for the next two thousand years. | Empedocles established four ultimate [[classical element|elements]] which make all the structures in the world—[[Fire (classical element)|fire]], [[Air (classical element)|air]], [[Water (classical element)|water]], [[Earth (classical element)|earth]].{{sfn|Wallace|1911}}{{efn|Frag. B17 ([[Simplicius of Cilicia|Simplicius]], ''Physics'', 157–159)}} Empedocles called these four elements "roots",<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ströker |first=E. |date=September 1968 |title=Element and Compound. On the Scientific History of Two Fundamental Chemical Concepts |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.196807181 |journal=Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English |language=en |volume=7 |issue=9 |pages=718–724 |doi=10.1002/anie.196807181 |issn=0570-0833|url-access=subscription }}</ref> which he also identified with the mythical names of [[Zeus]], [[Hera]], [[Persephone|Nestis]], and [[Aidoneus]]{{efn|Frag. B6 (Sextus Empiricus, ''Against the Mathematicians'', x, 315)}} (e.g., "Now hear the fourfold roots of everything: enlivening Hera, Hades, shining Zeus. And Nestis, moistening mortal springs with tears").{{sfn|Kingsley|1995}} Empedocles never used the term "element" ({{lang|grc|στοιχεῖον}}, ''stoicheion''), which seems to have been first used by [[Plato]].{{efn|Plato, ''Timaeus'', 48b–c}}{{better source needed|date=September 2022}} According to the different proportions in which these four indestructible and unchangeable elements are combined with each other the difference of the structure is produced.{{sfn|Wallace|1911}} It is in the aggregation and segregation of elements thus arising, that Empedocles, like the atomists, found the real process which corresponds to what is popularly termed growth, increase or decrease. One interpreter describes his philosophy as asserting that "Nothing new comes or can come into being; the only change that can occur is a change in the juxtaposition of element with element."{{sfn|Wallace|1911}} This theory of the four elements became the standard [[dogma]] for the next two thousand years. | ||
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[[File:AGMA Clepsydre.jpg|thumb|right|A display of two 5th century BCE clepsydras, or "water clocks" from the Ancient Agora Museum in Athens]] | [[File:AGMA Clepsydre.jpg|thumb|right|A display of two 5th century BCE clepsydras, or "water clocks" from the Ancient Agora Museum in Athens]] | ||
Empedocles was a [[vegetarianism|vegetarian]]{{efn|Plato, Meno}} | Empedocles was a [[vegetarianism|vegetarian]]{{efn|Plato, Meno}}<ref>[[s:|Fragments of Empedocles]] 136 - 139</ref> and advocated vegetarianism, since the bodies of animals are also dwelling places of punished souls.{{efn|Sextus Empiricus, ''Against the Mathematicians'', ix. 127; Hippolytus, vii. 21}} For Empedocles, all living things were on the same spiritual plane; plants and animals are links in a chain where humans are a link too.{{sfn|Wallace|1911}} | ||
Empedocles is credited with the first comprehensive theory of light and vision. Historian [[Will Durant]] noted that "Empedocles suggested that light takes time to pass from one point to another."<ref>Durant, Will. ''[[The Story of Civilization]]'', Volume 2: ''The Life of Greece'' (New York; Simon & Schuster) 1939, p. 339.</ref> | Empedocles is credited with the first comprehensive theory of light and vision. Historian [[Will Durant]] noted that "Empedocles suggested that light takes time to pass from one point to another."<ref>Durant, Will. ''[[The Story of Civilization]]'', Volume 2: ''The Life of Greece'' (New York; Simon & Schuster) 1939, p. 339.</ref><ref>''Empedocles (and with him all others who used the same forms of expression) was wrong in speaking of light as 'travelling' or being at a given moment between the earth and its envelope, its movement being unobservable by us; that view is contrary both to the clear evidence of argument and to the observed facts; if the distance traversed were short, the movement might have been unobservable, but where the distance is from extreme East to extreme West, the draught upon our powers of belief is too great.'' Aristotle, ''On the soul'' 418b</ref> He put forward the idea that we see objects because light streams out of our eyes and touches them. While flawed, this became the fundamental basis on which later Greek philosophers and mathematicians like [[Euclid]] would construct some of the most important theories of light, vision, and optics.<ref name = Ep1>''[[Light Fantastic (TV series)|Let There be Light]]'' 7 August 2006 01:50 BBC Four</ref>{{better source needed|date=September 2022}} | ||
Knowledge is explained by the principle that elements in the things outside us are perceived by the corresponding elements in ourselves.{{efn|Frag. B109 (Aristotle, ''On the Soul'', 404b11–15)}} Like is known by like. The whole body is full of [[Sweat gland|pores]] and hence [[Cellular respiration|respiration]] takes place over the whole frame. In the organs of sense these pores are specially adapted to receive the effluences which are continually rising from bodies around us; thus [[perception]] occurs.{{efn|Frag. B100 (Aristotle, ''On Respiration'', 473b1–474a6)}} In vision, certain particles go forth from the eye to meet similar particles given forth from the object, and the resultant contact constitutes vision.{{efn|Frag. B84 (Aristotle, ''On the Senses and their Objects'', 437b23–438a5)}} Perception is not merely a passive reflection of external objects.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://theodora.com/encyclopedia/e/empedocles.html|title=Empedocles – Encyclopedia}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=September 2022}} | Knowledge is explained by the principle that elements in the things outside us are perceived by the corresponding elements in ourselves.{{efn|Frag. B109 (Aristotle, ''On the Soul'', 404b11–15)}} Like is known by like. The whole body is full of [[Sweat gland|pores]] and hence [[Cellular respiration|respiration]] takes place over the whole frame. In the organs of sense these pores are specially adapted to receive the effluences which are continually rising from bodies around us; thus [[perception]] occurs.{{efn|Frag. B100 (Aristotle, ''On Respiration'', 473b1–474a6)}} In vision, certain particles go forth from the eye to meet similar particles given forth from the object, and the resultant contact constitutes vision.{{efn|Frag. B84 (Aristotle, ''On the Senses and their Objects'', 437b23–438a5)}} Perception is not merely a passive reflection of external objects.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://theodora.com/encyclopedia/e/empedocles.html|title=Empedocles – Encyclopedia}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=September 2022}} | ||
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In old editions of Empedocles, about 450 lines were ascribed to "On Nature" which outlined his philosophical system, and explains not only the nature and history of the universe, including his theory of the four [[classical element]]s, but also theories on causation, perception, and thought, as well as explanations of terrestrial phenomena and biological processes. The other 100 lines were typically ascribed to his "Purifications", which was taken to be a poem about ritual purification, or the poem that contained all his religious and ethical thought, which early editors supposed that it was a poem that offered a mythical account of the world which may, nevertheless, have been part of Empedocles' philosophical system. | In old editions of Empedocles, about 450 lines were ascribed to "On Nature" which outlined his philosophical system, and explains not only the nature and history of the universe, including his theory of the four [[classical element]]s, but also theories on causation, perception, and thought, as well as explanations of terrestrial phenomena and biological processes. The other 100 lines were typically ascribed to his "Purifications", which was taken to be a poem about ritual purification, or the poem that contained all his religious and ethical thought, which early editors supposed that it was a poem that offered a mythical account of the world which may, nevertheless, have been part of Empedocles' philosophical system. | ||
A late 20th century discovery has changed this situation. The Strasbourg papyrus{{sfn|Martin|Primavesi|1999}}{{efn|Not to be confused with | A late 20th century discovery has changed this situation. The Strasbourg papyrus{{sfn|Martin|Primavesi|1999}}{{efn|Not to be confused with the [[Strasbourg papyrus]] containing Christian prayers}} contains a large section of "On Nature", including many lines formerly attributed to "On Purifications".{{sfn|Kingsley|Parry|2020}} This has raised considerable debate{{sfn|Inwood|2001|pp=8–21}}{{sfn|Trépanier|2004}} about whether the surviving fragments of his teaching should be attributed to two separate poems, with different subject matter; whether they may all derive from one poem with two titles;{{sfn|Osborne|1987|pages=24–31, 108}} or whether one title refers to part of the whole poem. | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
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{{Commons category}} | {{Commons category}} | ||
{{Wikiquote}} | {{Wikiquote}} | ||
{{Library resources box |by=yes |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Empedocles | {{Library resources box |by=yes |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Empedocles | ||
|viaf= |lcheading= |wikititle= }} | |viaf= |lcheading= |wikititle= }} | ||
*[ | * {{wikisource author-inline|Empedocles}} | ||
*[https://sites.google.com/site/empedoclesacragas/Home Empedocles] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200909215802/https://sites.google.com/site/empedoclesacragas/Home |date=9 September 2020 }} by Jean-Claude Picot with an extended and updated bibliography | * [https://history.hanover.edu/texts/presoc/emp.html#book1 Empedokles: Fragments], translated by Arthur Fairbanks, 1898. | ||
*[http://demonax.info/doku.php?id=text:empedocles_fragments Empedocles: Fragments] at [http://demonax.info/ demonax.info] | * [https://sites.google.com/site/empedoclesacragas/Home Empedocles] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200909215802/https://sites.google.com/site/empedoclesacragas/Home |date=9 September 2020 }} by Jean-Claude Picot with an extended and updated bibliography | ||
*{{MacTutor Biography|id=Empedocles}} | * [http://demonax.info/doku.php?id=text:empedocles_fragments Empedocles: Fragments] at [http://demonax.info/ demonax.info] | ||
*{{Internet Archive author |sname=Empedocles}} | * {{MacTutor Biography|id=Empedocles}} | ||
*{{Librivox author |id=8591}} | * {{Internet Archive author |sname=Empedocles}} | ||
* {{Librivox author |id=8591}} | |||
{{Greek schools of philosophy}} | {{Greek schools of philosophy}} | ||
Latest revision as of 10:57, 20 October 2025
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Expand Hungarian Template:Expand German Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".
Empedocles (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Langx; Template:Circa, Template:Fl. 444–443 BC) was a Greek pre-Socratic philosopher and a native citizen of Akragas, a Greek city in Sicily. Empedocles' philosophy is known best for originating the cosmogonic theory of the four classical elements. He also proposed forces he called Love and Strife which would mix and separate the elements, respectively.
Empedocles challenged the practice of animal sacrifice and killing animals for food. He developed a distinctive doctrine of reincarnation. He is generally considered the last Greek philosopher to have recorded his ideas in verse. Some of his work survives, more than is the case for any other pre-Socratic philosopher. Empedocles' death was mythologized by ancient writers, and has been the subject of a number of literary treatments.
Life
The exact dates of Empedocles' birth and death are unknown, and ancient accounts of his life conflict on the exact details. However, they agree that he was born in the early 5th century BC in the Greek city of Akragas in Magna Graecia, present-day Sicily.Template:Sfn Modern scholars believe the accuracy of the accounts that he came from a rich and noble family and that his grandfather, also named Empedocles, had won a victory in the horse race at Olympia in the 71st Olympiad (496–495 BC).Template:Efn Little else can be determined with accuracy.Template:Sfn
Primary sources of information on the life of Empedocles come from the Hellenistic period, several centuries after his own death and long after any reliable evidence about his life would have perished.Template:Sfn Modern scholarship generally believes that these biographical details, including Aristotle's assertion that he was the "father of rhetoric",Template:Efn his chronologically impossible tutelage under Pythagoras, and his employment as a doctor and miracle worker, were fabricated from interpretations of Empedocles' poetry, as was common practice for the biographies written during this time.Template:Sfn
Death and legacy
According to Aristotle, Empedocles died at the age of 60 (Template:Circa), but other writers have him living as long as 109 years.Template:Efn Likewise, myths survive about his death: a tradition traced to Heraclides Ponticus posits that some force removed him from Earth somehow, while another tradition had him die in the flames of Sicily’s Mount Etna.Template:Efn Diogenes Laërtius records the legend that Empedocles threw himself into Mount Etna so people would believe his body had vanished and he had turned into an immortal god;Template:Efn the volcano, however, threw back one of his bronze sandals, revealing the deceit. Another legend maintains that he jumped into the volcano to prove to his disciples that he was immortal: he believed he would come back as a god after being consumed by the fire. In Template:Interlanguage link, a comedic dialogue written by the second-century satirist Lucian of Samosata, Empedocles's final fate is re-imagined. Rather than being incinerated in Mount Etna, one of its eruptions carries him up into the heavens. Although singed by the ordeal, Empedocles survives and continues his life on the Moon, surviving on dew.
Burnet states that, although Empedocles likely did not die in Sicily, both general versions of the story (one in which he kills himself, the other in which he discovers he’s the first man to survive leaving Earth) could be easily accepted by ancient writers, as there was no local tradition to contradict them.Template:Sfn
Empedocles's death is the subject of Friedrich Hölderlin's play Tod des Empedokles (The Death of Empedocles) as well as Matthew Arnold's poem Empedocles on Etna.
Lucretius speaks of him enthusiastically, evidently viewing him as his model.Template:Efn Horace also refers to the death of Empedocles in his work Ars Poetica and admits poets have the right to destroy themselves.Template:Efn
Philosophy
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Based on the surviving fragments of his work, modern scholars generally believe that Empedocles was directly responding to Parmenides' doctrine of monism and was likely acquainted with the work of Anaxagoras, although it is unlikely he was aware of either the later Eleatics or the doctrines of the Atomists.Template:Sfn Many later accounts of his life claim that Empedocles studied with the Pythagoreans on the basis of his doctrine of reincarnation, although he may have instead learned this from a local tradition rather than directly from the Pythagoreans.Template:Sfn
However, as the Modern Greek philosopher Helle Lambridis has argued, while Empedocles seems to have borrowed from the Eleatic tradition (with Parmenides at its centre) as well as from the Heraclitean and Pythagorean schools of thought, his own philosophy is very different from all these three influences. The work of Empedocles, Lambridis suggests, must be seen in relation to the work of the Greeks as a whole that borrowed elements from Egypt, Babylon and other Eastern cultures to produce a totally different philosophy.[1]
Cosmogony
Empedocles established four ultimate elements which make all the structures in the world—fire, air, water, earth.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Empedocles called these four elements "roots",[2] which he also identified with the mythical names of Zeus, Hera, Nestis, and AidoneusTemplate:Efn (e.g., "Now hear the fourfold roots of everything: enlivening Hera, Hades, shining Zeus. And Nestis, moistening mortal springs with tears").Template:Sfn Empedocles never used the term "element" (Script error: No such module "Lang"., stoicheion), which seems to have been first used by Plato.Template:EfnTemplate:Better source needed According to the different proportions in which these four indestructible and unchangeable elements are combined with each other the difference of the structure is produced.Template:Sfn It is in the aggregation and segregation of elements thus arising, that Empedocles, like the atomists, found the real process which corresponds to what is popularly termed growth, increase or decrease. One interpreter describes his philosophy as asserting that "Nothing new comes or can come into being; the only change that can occur is a change in the juxtaposition of element with element."Template:Sfn This theory of the four elements became the standard dogma for the next two thousand years.
The four elements, however, are simple, eternal, and unalterable, and as change is the consequence of their mixture and separation, it was also necessary to suppose the existence of moving powers that bring about mixture and separation. The four elements are both eternally brought into union and parted from one another by two divine powers, Love and Strife (Philotes and Neikos).Template:Sfn Love (Script error: No such module "Lang".) is responsible for the attraction of different forms of what we now call matter, and Strife (Script error: No such module "Lang".) is the cause of their separation.Template:Efn If the four elements make up the universe, then Love and Strife explain their variation and harmony. Love and Strife are attractive and repulsive forces, respectively, which are plainly observable in human behavior, but also pervade the universe. The two forces wax and wane in their dominance, but neither force ever wholly escapes the imposition of the other.
As the best and original state, there was a time when the pure elements and the two powers co-existed in a condition of rest and inertness in the form of a sphere.Template:Sfn The elements existed together in their purity, without mixture and separation, and the uniting power of Love predominated in the sphere: the separating power of Strife guarded the extreme edges of the sphere.Template:Efn Since that time, strife gained more swayTemplate:Sfn and the bond which kept the pure elementary substances together in the sphere was dissolved. The elements became the world of phenomena we see today, full of contrasts and oppositions, operated on by both Love and Strife.Template:Sfn Empedocles assumed a cyclical universe whereby the elements return and prepare the formation of the sphere for the next period of the universe.
Empedocles attempted to explain the separation of elements, the formation of earth and sea, of Sun and Moon, of atmosphere.Template:Sfn He also dealt with the first origin of plants and animals, and with the physiology of humans.Template:Sfn As the elements entered into combinations, there appeared strange results—heads without necks, arms without shoulders.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Then as these fragmentary structures met, there were seen horned heads on human bodies, bodies of oxen with human heads, and figures of double sex.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn But most of these products of natural forces disappeared as suddenly as they arose; only in those rare cases where the parts were found to be adapted to each other did the complex structures last.Template:Sfn Thus the organic universe sprang from spontaneous aggregations that suited each other as if this had been intended.Template:Sfn Soon various influences reduced creatures of double sex to a male and a female, and the world was replenished with organic life.Template:Sfn
Psychology
Like Pythagoras, Empedocles believed in the transmigration of the soul or metempsychosis, that souls can be reincarnated between humans, animals and even plants.Template:Efn According to him, all humans, or maybe only a selected few among them,Template:Sfn were originally long-lived daimons who dwelt in a state of bliss until committing an unspecified crime, possibly bloodshed or perjury.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As a consequence, they fell to Earth, where they would be forced to spend 30,000 cycles of metempsychosis through different bodies before being able to return to the sphere of divinity.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn One's behavior during his lifetime would also determine his next incarnation.Template:Sfn Wise people, who have learned the secret of life, are closer to the divine,Template:SfnTemplate:Efn while their souls similarly are closer to the freedom from the cycle of reincarnations, after which they are able to rest in happiness for eternity.Template:Efn This cycle of mortal incarnation seems to have been inspired by the god Apollo's punishment as a servant to Admetus.Template:Sfn
Empedocles was a vegetarianTemplate:Efn[3] and advocated vegetarianism, since the bodies of animals are also dwelling places of punished souls.Template:Efn For Empedocles, all living things were on the same spiritual plane; plants and animals are links in a chain where humans are a link too.Template:Sfn
Empedocles is credited with the first comprehensive theory of light and vision. Historian Will Durant noted that "Empedocles suggested that light takes time to pass from one point to another."[4][5] He put forward the idea that we see objects because light streams out of our eyes and touches them. While flawed, this became the fundamental basis on which later Greek philosophers and mathematicians like Euclid would construct some of the most important theories of light, vision, and optics.[6]Template:Better source needed
Knowledge is explained by the principle that elements in the things outside us are perceived by the corresponding elements in ourselves.Template:Efn Like is known by like. The whole body is full of pores and hence respiration takes place over the whole frame. In the organs of sense these pores are specially adapted to receive the effluences which are continually rising from bodies around us; thus perception occurs.Template:Efn In vision, certain particles go forth from the eye to meet similar particles given forth from the object, and the resultant contact constitutes vision.Template:Efn Perception is not merely a passive reflection of external objects.[7]Template:Better source needed
Empedocles also attempted to explain the phenomenon of respiration by means of an elaborate analogy with the clepsydra, an ancient device for conveying liquids from one vessel to another.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn This fragment has sometimes been connected to a passageTemplate:Efn in Aristotle's Physics where Aristotle refers to people who twisted wineskins and captured air in clepsydras to demonstrate that void does not exist. The fragment certainly implies that Empedocles knew about the corporeality of air, but he says nothing whatever about the void, and there is no evidence that Empedocles performed any experiment with clepsydras.Template:Sfn
Writings
According to Diogenes Laertius,Template:Efn Empedocles wrote two poems, "On Nature" and "On Purifications", which together comprised 5000 lines. However, only some 550 lines of his poetry survive, quoted in fragments by later ancient sources.
In old editions of Empedocles, about 450 lines were ascribed to "On Nature" which outlined his philosophical system, and explains not only the nature and history of the universe, including his theory of the four classical elements, but also theories on causation, perception, and thought, as well as explanations of terrestrial phenomena and biological processes. The other 100 lines were typically ascribed to his "Purifications", which was taken to be a poem about ritual purification, or the poem that contained all his religious and ethical thought, which early editors supposed that it was a poem that offered a mythical account of the world which may, nevertheless, have been part of Empedocles' philosophical system.
A late 20th century discovery has changed this situation. The Strasbourg papyrusTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn contains a large section of "On Nature", including many lines formerly attributed to "On Purifications".Template:Sfn This has raised considerable debateTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn about whether the surviving fragments of his teaching should be attributed to two separate poems, with different subject matter; whether they may all derive from one poem with two titles;Template:Sfn or whether one title refers to part of the whole poem.
Notes
References
Bibliography
Ancient Testimony
References
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Further reading
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External links
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- Empedokles: Fragments, translated by Arthur Fairbanks, 1898.
- Empedocles Template:Webarchive by Jean-Claude Picot with an extended and updated bibliography
- Empedocles: Fragments at demonax.info
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Template:Greek schools of philosophy Template:Vegetarianism Template:Authority control
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ Fragments of Empedocles 136 - 139
- ↑ Durant, Will. The Story of Civilization, Volume 2: The Life of Greece (New York; Simon & Schuster) 1939, p. 339.
- ↑ Empedocles (and with him all others who used the same forms of expression) was wrong in speaking of light as 'travelling' or being at a given moment between the earth and its envelope, its movement being unobservable by us; that view is contrary both to the clear evidence of argument and to the observed facts; if the distance traversed were short, the movement might have been unobservable, but where the distance is from extreme East to extreme West, the draught upon our powers of belief is too great. Aristotle, On the soul 418b
- ↑ Let There be Light 7 August 2006 01:50 BBC Four
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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