Image for What is What-is?

What is What-is? : A Study of Parmenides' Poem

See all formats and editions

This book interprets the poem by the pre-Socratic philosopher, Parmenides, in a way that differs fundamentally from traditional interpretations.

While some recent studies show that the poem uses the word "is" as a copula rather than a substantive, a close analysis of the Greek text shows that Parmenides did not deny the reality of a plurality of sense perceivable objects, but argued that each is an individual homogeneous unity that emerged from a mixture of opposite elements.

This means that much of the poem that has been taken to describe a position that Parmenides rejects is, in fact, what he accepts.

The book concludes, therefore, that Parmenides was not the radical and revolutionary thinker to the degree he is commonly portrayed to be: he stands within the intellectual transition occurring in the Greek world, moving from the past Homeric mythos into the emerging scientific view of the world.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£48.40 Save 20.00%
RRP £60.50
Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
0820474983 / 9780820474984
Hardback
182
06/04/2005
United States
155 pages, 1 table
370 grams