Online Encyclopedia

ELEATIC SCHOOL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 169 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELEATIC SCHOOL  , a

Greek school of philosophy which came into existence towards the end of the 6th century B.e., and ended with Melissus of
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Samos (fl. c . 450 B.C.) . It took its name from Elea, a Greek city of
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lower Italy, the home of its chief exponents, Parmenides and
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Zeno . Its foundation is often attributed to
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Xenophanes of
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Colophon, but, although there is much in his speculations which formed
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part of the later Eleatic
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doctrine, it is probably more correct to regard Parmenides as the founder of the school . At all events, it was Parmenides who gave it its fullest development . The main doctrines of the Eleatics were evolved in opposition, on the one hand, to the
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physical theories of the early physical philosophers who explained all existence in terms of
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primary
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matter (see IONIAN SCHOOL), and, on the other hand, to the theory of Heraclitus that all existence may be summed up as perpetual change . As against these theories the Eleatics maintained that the true explanation of things lies in the conception of a universal unity of being . The senses with their changing and inconsistent reports cannot cognize this unity; it is by thought alone that we can pass beyond the false appearances of sense and arrive at the knowledge of being, at the fundamental truth that " the All is One." There can be no creation, for being cannot come from not-being; a thing cannot arise from that which is different from it . The errors of
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common opinion arise to a
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great extent from the ambiguous use of the verb " to be," which may imply existence or be merely the copula which connects subject and predicate . In these main contentions the Eleatic school achieved a real advance, and paved the way to the
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modern conception of
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meta-physics . Xenophanes in the
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middle of the 6th century had made the first great attack on the crude
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mythology of early
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Greece, including in his onslaught the whole anthropomorphic
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system enshrined in the poems of Homer and
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Hesiod . In the hands of Parmenides this spirit of
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free thought
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developed on metaphysical lines .

Subsequently, whether from the fact that such bold speculations were

obnoxious to the general sense of propriety in Elea, or from the inferiority of its leaders, the school de-generated into verbal disputes as to the possibility of motion, and similar
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academic trifling . The best
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work of the school was absorbed in the Platonic metaphysic (see E . Caird,
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Evolution of
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Theology in the Greek Philosophers, 1904) . See further the articles on XENOPHANES; PARMENIDES; ZENO (of Elea) ; MELISSUS, with the
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works there quoted ; also the histories of philosophy by Zeller, Gomperz, Windelband, &c .

End of Article: ELEATIC SCHOOL
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