HERACLITUS
(Ἡράκλειτος; c. 540-475 B.C.), Greek philosopher, was born at Ephesus
of distinguished parentage. Of his early life and education we know
nothing; from the contempt with which he spoke of all his
fellow-philosophers and of his fellow-citizens as a whole we may gather
that he regarded himself as self-taught and a pioneer of wisdom.
So
intensely aristocratic (hence his nickname ὀχλολοίδορος, "he who rails
at the people") was his temperament that he declined to exercise the
regal-hieratic office of βασιλεύς which was hereditary in his family,
and presented it to his brother. It is probable, however, that he did
occasionally intervene in the affairs of the city at the period when the
rule of Persia had given place to autonomy; it is said that he
compelled the usurper Melancomas to abdicate. From the lonely life he
led, and still more from the extreme profundity of his philosophy and
his contempt for mankind in general, he was called the "Dark
Philosopher" (ὁ σκοτεινός), or the "Weeping Philosopher," in contrast to
Democritus, the "Laughing Philosopher." κακοὶ μάρτυρες
Heraclitus is in a real sense the founder of metaphysics.
Starting from
the physical standpoint of the Ionian physicists, he accepted their
general idea of the unity of nature, but entirely denied their theory of
being. The fundamental uniform fact in nature is constant change (πάντα
χωρεῖ καὶ οὐδὲν μένει); everything both is and is not at the same time.
He thus arrives at the principle of Relativity; harmony and unity
consist in diversity and multiplicity. The senses are "bad witnesses"
(κακοὶ μάρτυρες); only the wise man can obtain knowledge.
To appreciate the significance of the doctrines of Heraclitus, it must
be borne in mind that to Greek philosophy the sharp distinction between
subject and object which pervades modern thought was foreign, a
consideration which suggests the conclusion that, while it is a great
mistake to reckon Heraclitus with the materialistic cosmologists of the
Ionic schools, it is, on the other hand, going too far to treat his
theory, with Hegel and Lassalle, as one of pure Panlogism. Accordingly,
when he denies the reality of Being, and declares Becoming, or eternal
flux and change, to be the sole actuality, Heraclitus must be understood
to enunciate not only the unreality of the abstract notion of being,
except as the correlative of that of not-being, but also the physical
doctrine that all phenomena are in a state of continuous transition from
non-existence to existence, and vice versa, without either
distinguishing these propositions or qualifying them by any reference to
the relation of thought to experience. " Every thing is and is not'";
all things are, and nothing remains. So far he is in general agreement
with Anaximander (q.v.), but he differs from him in the solution of the
problem, disliking, as a poet and a mystic, the primary matter which
satisfied the patient researcher, and demanding a more vivid and
picturesque element. Naturally he selects fire, according to him the
most complete embodiment of the process of Becoming, as the principle of
empirical existence, out of which all things, including even the soul,
grow by way of a quasi condensation, and into which all things must in
course of time be again resolved. But this primordial fire is in itself
that divine rational process, the harmony of which constitutes the law
of the universe (see LOGOS).
Real knowledge consists in comprehending
this all-pervading harmony as embodied in the manifold of perception,
and the senses are "bad-witnesses," because they apprehend phenomena,
not as its manifestation, but as "stiff and dead." In like manner real
virtue consists in the subordination of the individual to the laws of
this harmony as the universal reason wherein alone true freedom is to be
found." The law of things is a law of Reason Universal (λόγος), but
most men live as though they had a wisdom of their own."
Ethics here
stands to sociology in a close relation, similar, in many respects, to
that which we find in Hegel and in Comte. For Heraclitus the soul
approaches most nearly to perfection when it is most akin to the fiery
vapour out of which it was originally created, and as this is most so in
death, " while we live our souls are dead in us, but when we die our
souls are restored to life." The doctrine of immortality comes
prominently forward in his ethics, but whether this must not be reckoned
with the figurative accommodation to the popular theology of Greece
which pervades his ethical teaching, is very doubtful.
The school of disciples founded by Heraclitus flourished for long after
his death, the chief exponent of his teaching being Cratylus.
A good
deal of the information in regard to his doctrines has been gathered
from the later Greek philosophy, which was deeply influenced by it.
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