Parmenides (Text 58)

EPISODE · Oct 31, 2013 · 51 MIN

Parmenides (Text 58)

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Parmenides (Text 58)

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Philosophy Audiobooks Geoffrey Edwards Unabridged philosophy audiobooks including writing by Plato (Parmenides), Aristotle (Economics) and Cicero (On Moral Duties). Topics discussed include ethics, justice, law, logic, metaphysics, God, happiness, love and beauty. Each book has been streamlined by merging separate LibriVox recordings into a single seamless whole with no interruptions. Painting: La Perle et la vague by Paul-Jacques-Aimé Baudry. Parmenides by Plato (Πλάτων) (c. 428 BCE - c. 347 BCE) LibriVox Parmenides (Ancient Greek: ΠΑΡΜΕΝΙΔΗΣ) recounts a meeting between Socrates, Zeno and Parmenides. Topics discussed include universals, plurality and the One. - Summary by Geoffrey Edwards Early Greek Philosophy John Lord Man is the measure of all things, proclaimed Protagoras of Abdera, encapsulating the essence of early Greek philosophy. In the vibrant milieu of the sixth century B.C., Greek thinkers laid the groundwork for the western philosophical tradition with their bold inquiries into the nature of existence. From the pioneering ideas of Thales, Anaximander, and Anaximenes in the Greek colonies of western Asia Minor, who sought to explain the physical universe through natural laws, to Pythagoras in Croton, who illuminated the interconnectedness of geometry and music, these thinkers shaped profound insights into the fabric of reality. Alfred Benn, the esteemed Hellenic scholar, takes us through the captivating lives and teachings of Heraclitus, Parmenides, the Sophists, and ultimately, the poignant story of Socrates‚his trial and death‚offering a concise yet enlightening exploration of early Greek thought. (Summary by Pamela Nagami, M.D.) Homilies on Ephesians by St. John Chrysostom (c. 349 - c. 407) LibriVox From The Argument:“Ephesus is the metropolis of Asia. It was dedicated to Diana, whom especially they worshipped there as their great goddess. Indeed so great was the superstition of her worshippers, that when her temple was burnt, they would not so much as divulge the name of the man who burnt it. The blessed John the Evangelist spent the chief part of his time there: he was there when he was banished and there he died. It was there too that Paul left Timothy, as he says in writing to him, “As I exhorted thee to tarry at Ephesus.”“Most of the philosophers also, those more particularly who flourished in Asia, were there; and even Pythagoras himself is said to have come from thence; perhaps because Samos, whence he really came, is an island of Ionia. It was the resort also of the disciples of Parmenides, and Zeno, and Democritus, and you may see a number of philosophers there even to the present day.“These facts I mention, not merely as such, but with a vie
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