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         Heraclitus:     more books (100)
  1. Mythographi Graeci, Volume 3, part 1 by Apollodorus, Heraclitus, et all 2010-04-02
  2. Herakleitos Von Ephesos: Fragments (German Edition) by Hermann Diels, Heraclitus, 2010-02-10
  3. Heraclite: Traduction integrale des fragments, precedee d'une introduction (La Philosophie en poche) (French Edition) by Heraclitus, 1977
  4. Playing Trades (1870) by Heraclitus Grey, 2010-09-10
  5. Die Heraklitischen Briefe (German Edition) by Jacob Bernays, Jacob Heraclitus, 2010-01-09
  6. Heracliti Allegoriae Homericae by Heraclitus, 2010-02-23
  7. Heracliti Ephesii Reliquiae. Appendicis loco additae sunt Diogenis Laertii vita Heracliti particulae Hippocratei de Diaeta libri primi epistolae Heracliteae. Cum indice duplici scriptorum et verborum. by Heraclitus, 1877
  8. Armstrong Magney. by Heraclitus Grey, 2010-05-03
  9. Heraclitus by Philip Wheelwright, 1971-01-01
  10. The Way of Oblivion: Heraclitus and Kafka. [Subtitle]: (Harvard Studies in Comparative Literature, 44) by David. Schur, 1998-01-01
  11. Heraclitus by Henry W., Jr. Johnstone, 1989-12
  12. The Hidden Harmony: Discources on the fragments of Heraclitus
  13. 530s Bc Births: 530 Bc Births, 534 Bc Births, 535 Bc Births, Heraclitus, Rahula, Aristides, Onomacritus
  14. Philosophic Fire: Unifying the Fragments of Heraclitus by Robert Jones, 2001-11

61. Heraclitus Of Ephesus
© 1998 Bernard SUZANNE, Last updated December 5, 1998. Plato and hisdialogues Home Biography - Works - History of interpretation
http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/char/heraclit.htm
Bernard SUZANNE Last updated December 5, 1998 Plato and his dialogues : Home Biography Works History of interpretation ... New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version . Tools : Index of persons and locations Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World . Site information : About the author This page is part of the "tools" section of a site, Plato and his dialogues , dedicated to developing a new interpretation of Plato's dialogues. The "tools" section provides historical and geographical context (chronology, maps, entries on characters and locations) for Socrates, Plato and their time. For more information on the structure of entries and links available from them, read the notice at the beginning of the index of persons and locations . . . . WORK IN PROGRESS - PLEASE BE PATIENT . . . To Perseus general lookup encyclopedia mentions in ancient authors Plato and his dialogues : Home Biography Works History of interpretation ... New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version . Tools : Index of persons and locations Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World . Site information : About the author First published January 4, 1998 - Last updated December 5, 1998

62. "Heraclitus' Theory Of The Psyche" By Christopher D. Green
heraclitus' Theory of the Psyche. christo@yorku.ca. heraclitus was themost important philosopher between Pythagoras and Parmenides.
http://www.yorku.ca/christo/papers/heraclit.htm
Heraclitus' Theory of the Psyche
Christopher D. Green
Department of Psychology
York University
christo@yorku.ca Heraclitus was the most important philosopher between Pythagoras and Parmenides. He lived in the city of Ephesus, of which substantial ruins remain still on the western coast of present-day Turkey. The region was then called Ionia. His exact dates are not known. McKirahan (1994) reports them as being 540-480 BC. Unlike Xenophanes and Pythagoras, he did not flee the Persian invasion of Ionia (546 BC) for Italy; he survived it, and even flourished under it. As with all other early pre-Socratics, none of Heraclitus' original writings remain, although he was said to have written, as was traditional for philosophers of his time, a treatise generally on nature ( physis ). What is known of Heraclitus' philosophy is contained in more than 100 fragmentary mentionings of him by his successors. Many of these fragments are obscure, enigmatic, and even bizarre. Diogenes Laertius, a biographer who lived about 300 AD, recounted a story (repeated by Barnes, 1987, pp. 57-58) that Socrates, upon reading a copy of Heraclitus' work (allegedly given to him by the great tragic playwright, Euripides), said "What I understood was good.... But it would take a Delian diver to get to the bottom of it." Heraclitus frequently asserted the unity of opposites: "the road up and down is one and the same road" (DK22 B60); "while changing, it rests" (DK22 B84a); "in the case of a circle, beginning and end are the same" (DK22 B103); "cold things become warm, a warm thing becomes cold..." (DK22B 126); and perhaps strangest of all, "immortals are mortals, mortals immortals: living their death, dying their life" (DK22 B62).

63. Heraclitus - Quotes And Quotations
Author heraclitus, 544 BC 483 BC, - Big results require big - Character isdestiny. - Couples are wholes and not - Good character is not formed
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/h/a128154.html
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64. Heraclitus Links
heraclitus, Image Source http//www.forthnet.gr/presocratics/heracln.htm.Some heraclitus Links. You html. Search the Web for heraclitus.
http://elvers.stjoe.udayton.edu/history/people/Heraclitus.html

65. Ancient Whacks Of Heraclitus
Looking for creative inspiration? Try consulting the world's first creativity teacherheraclitusthe most provocative of the ancient Greek Philosophers.
http://www.blackdogaccessories.com/card_games_main25.htm
Family and Children Games Looking for creative inspiration? Try consulting the world's first creativity teacher: Heraclitusthe most provocative of the ancient Greek Philosophers. Card deck contains 30 ancient whacks designed as individual creativity exercises to be solved. Listing of Instructional Card Games Ulysses S. Grant: Strategies for Leadership Deck Rain Forest Card Game Family and Children

66. Filosofie
heraclitus van Efese (ca. 540 480 v. Chr.) De leer van heraclitus is door eenschrijver na hem samengevat in de woorden `alles stroomt' (`panta rhei').
http://home.planet.nl/~mutsa024/Efese.htm
Heraclitus van Efese (ca. 540 - 480 v. Chr.) Deze filosoof (wordt gerekend tot de jongere natuurfilosofen) neemt als oorzaak van de wereld weer een enkele stof, het vuur. Voor hem is al het andere een gedaanteverwisseling van het vuur. `Onze wereld hier werd noch door een van de Goden noch door een van de mensen geschapen. Zij was veeleer altijd al en is eeuwig levend vuur'. Uit dit oervuur, dat zelf zuivere rede (`logos') is, komt door tweespalt en strijd als drijvend element die veelheid van de dingen voort die zich weer verenigt tot harmonie. Dit door strijd ontstane evenwicht is een eeuwig stromen. De leer van Heraclitus is door een schrijver na hem samengevat in de woorden `alles stroomt' (`panta rhei'). Zijn eigen woorden luiden: `In dezelfde stroom dalen we af en dalen we niet af'. De gangbare verklaring hiervan is dat, wanneer men voor de tweede maal in dezelfde rivier denkt af te dalen, de rivier toch niet meer dezelfde is, Intussen stroomt immers weer ander water door de bedding. Met het benadrukken van de veranderlijkheid van alles onderscheidde Heraclitus zich enerzijds van de eleaten, die in een Een tweede grondbeginsel van Heraclitus is `de eenheid der stellingen'. Hiermee wordt bedoeld dat ieder ding en ieder verschijnsel zijn waarde ontleend aan het bestaan van een tegengestelde en dit tegengestelde in zekere zin oproept. Deze tegenstellingen vullen elkaar niet alleen aan, maar vloeien ook in elkaar over. Zo vloeit jong naar oud en de dag naar de nacht.

67. Heraclitus: Elevating Deltas To Be First Class Citizens In A Database Programmin
heraclitus heraclitus Elevating deltas to be a firstclass citizens in a databaseprogramming language. Technical Report USCCS94581, revised 1995.
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/ghandeharizadeh95heraclitus.html
Heraclitus: Elevating Deltas to be First Class Citizens in a Database Programming Language (1995) (Make Corrections) (18 citations)
Shahram Ghandeharizadeh, Richard Hull, Dean Jacobs ACM Transactions on Database Systems
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Abstract: n and J. Kiernan. A declarative approach to active databases: The A-RDL language and system. In J. Widom and S. Ceri, editors, Active Database Systems: Triggers and Rules for' Advanced Database Processing. Morgan-Kaufmann, Inc., San Francisco, California, 1995. to appear. D.G. Severance and G.M. Lohman. Differential files: Their application to the maintenance of large databases. ACM Trans. on Database Systems, 1(3), September 1976. J. E. Stoy. Denotational Semantics: The Scott-Strachey... (Update) Context of citations to this paper: More ...and thus describe (hypothetical) transitions to other database states. This form of deferred updates was already used in Heraclitus , U Datalog [MBM97] and the update calculus of Chen [Che95] As two or more update request sets can be better combined than two or more languages for semistructured data [1, 4, 10, 8, 19] We also see increased interest in change management in relational and object data

68. Benchmarking The Heraclitus[Alg,C] Prototype (ResearchIndex)
The heraclitus Alg, C prototype described in GHJ GHJ implements a database programminglanguage that supports the relational database model, the relational
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/zhou94benchmarking.html
Benchmarking the Heraclitus[Alg,C] Prototype (1994) (Make Corrections)
Gang Zhou, Shahram Ghandeharizadeh, Richard Hull
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Abstract: The Heraclitus[Alg,C] prototype described in [GHJ93, GHJ94] implements a database programming language that supports the relational database model, the relational algebra, and deltas as first-class citizens. This technical report describes benchmarking experiments that were performed using Heraclitus[Alg,C]. Speaking in broad terms, the benchmarking shows that the cost of accessing a delta, either explicitly or hypothetically using the when operator is proportional to the size of that delta. 1 ... (Update) Similar documents (at the sentence level): On Implementing a Language for Specifying Active.. - Ghandeharizadeh.. (1993) (Correct) Active bibliography (related documents): More All The Heraclitus DBPL With Application To Active.. - Zhou, Hull..

69. Heraclitus? Or Xenophanes?
heraclitus? or Xenophanes?, 1993, heraclitus of Ephesus is often touted as thefirst general semanticist. January 4, 1993. heraclitus? or Xenophanes?
http://www.xenodochy.org/gs/heraxeno.html
Heraclitus? or Xenophanes?
JAN 04, 1993 I have often heard Heraclitus of Ephesus touted as the first general semanticist. As reason the touters cite his theory of flux or "constant change" as expressed by fragment 21: "You cannot step twice into the same river, for other waters are continually flowing on." Heraclitus lived from about 525 bc until after 475 bc. But an earlier philosopher had views even more in accord with modern general semantics. Xenophanes of Colophon, reportedly born before 590 bc, and who lived past 92 (until after 498 bc), in fragment 34 "states that men can have no certain knowledge, only opinion. . . . Xenophanes did believe (fragment 18) that, by searching, men can improve their understanding, but he implies that this will always fall short of knowledge." One translation of fragment 34 goes: "Even if a man should chance to say the complete truth, he cannot know that it is the truth." [The Greeks] were also quite conscious of the need for verification. This they expressed by saying that every hypothesis must 'save the appearances' (. . .); in other words, that it must do justice to all the observed facts. That is the method of science, as we understand it still.

70. Heraclitus ... Karl Jones Web
heraclitus See also Philosophy Hellas - And Fire and Revolution a shorthistory of pyrotechnics and social dissent Updated June 30, 2000 - 820 AM.
http://www.karljones.com/history/hellas/heraclitus.asp
"A Theme, Some Narrative, and a Bounty of Links"
Home Page
- Phone: karl@karljones.com Karl Jones
Web HERACLITUS
See also: Philosophy Hellas
And: Fire and Revolution: a short history of pyrotechnics and social dissent
Updated June 30, 2000 - 8:20 AM You could not find out the boundaries of soul,
even by traveling along every path:
so deep a measure does it have. - Heraclitus: Fragment 45, Diogenes Laertius ix, 7 Heraclitus
c.535 - c.475, Greek philosopher HERACLITUS
by Karl Gregory Jones
Home Page
Mission Statement Email: karl@karljones.com "... A theme, some narrative, and a bounty of links."

71. Citation
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS) archive Volume 21 , Issue 3 (September1996) toc heraclitus elevating deltas to be firstclass citizens in a
http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=232801&dl=ACM&coll=portal&CFID=11111111&CF

72. Heraclitus At Peithô's Web
? heraclitus, featuring the GTW Patrick English translation and Unicode Greektext. heraclitus OF EPHESUS. The Fragments.
http://classicpersuasion.org/pw/heraclitus/
Jump to fragment: Heraclitus, tr. Patrick Heraclitus, tr. Patrick (uni) Burnet (at EPD)
HERACLITUS OF EPHESUS
The Fragments
The English translation by G.T.W. Patrick.
Patrick's 1888 translation of the fragments of Heraclitus, based on the Greek text of Bywater. Includes ancient sources and contexts for each fragment. Patrick translation with Unicode Greek text.
You'll need a Unicode Greek font such as the free Athena Unicode to see the Greek text as it appeared in Patrick's edition.
Life of Heraclitus
The Life of Heraclitus by Diogenes Laertius.
Heraclitus Links
Heraclitus, by William Harris
William Harris, Professor Emeritus at Middlebury College provides several Internet classical treasures. Harris' translation of Heraclitus includes commentary and a fresh perspective. Arthur Fairbanks translation of Heraclitus
At Hanover College. John Burnet's translation of Heraclitus.
At Exploring Plato's Dialogues, from Burnet's Early Greek Philosophy (3rd edition). Be sure to see Burnet's introduction to and discussion of Heraclitus

73. Heraclitus Lecture
heraclitus. Introduction Fl. 500 BC Cratylus 402A). Plutarch, no doubtfollowing Plato, also ascribes this idea to heraclitus (62=B91).
http://www.dsfss.uniud.it/~andrea/corso2000-01/S. Marc Cohen/heracli.htm
Heraclitus
Introduction
  • Fl. 500 B.C. in Ephesus, north of Miletus in Asia Minor. He was known in antiquity as "the obscure." And even today, it is very difficult to be certain what Heraclitus was talking about. As Barnes says ( Presocratics , p. 57):
    "Heraclitus attracts exegetes as an empty jampot wasps; and each new wasp discerns traces of his own favourite flavour."
    The reason for this: his dark and aphoristic style. He loved to appear to contradict himself. Even some of his doctrines sound incoherent and self-contradictory.
  • One thing seems certain: Heraclitus had an extremely negative reaction to Milesian thought. For the Milesians, what is real is fixed and permanent; change somehow had to be explained away. They understood changes as alterations of some basic, underlying, material stuff which is, in its own nature, unchanging. Heraclitus reversed this: change is what is real. Permanence is only apparent.
  • Heraclitus had a very strong influence on Plato. Plato interpreted Heraclitus to have believed that the material world undergoes constant change. He also thought Heraclitus was approximately correct in so describing the material world. Plato believed that such a world would be unknowable, and was thus driven to the conclusion that the material world was, in some sense, unreal, and that the real, knowable, world was immaterial. The unity of opposites
  • A number of fragments suggest that Heraclitus thought that opposites are really
  • 74. Heraclitus (c. 540- C. 470 BCE)
    heraclitus Quotes. (If you have a good quote you would like me to post, sendit to me and I'll post it as soon as I get a chance.). heraclitus.
    http://www.cp-tel.net/miller/BilLee/quotes/Heraclitus.html
    Heraclitus Quotes
    (If you have a good quote you would like me to post, send it to me and I'll post it as soon as I get a chance.)
    There is nothing permanent except change.
    Heraclitus "Polemos pater panton." -Heraclitus War is the father and king of all:
    some he has made gods, and some men;
    some slaves and some free.
    Heraclitus (c. 540- c. 470 BCE)
    Greek philosopher Nothing endures but change. No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man. Back To My Main Quotes Page

    75. Heraclitus: A New Translation Of The Fragments
    University of Paisley 1996. The verses of heraclitus of Ephesus. MalcolmCrowe. Feedback welcomed. All authentic quotations from heraclitus (fl.
    http://cis.paisley.ac.uk/crow-ci0/Articles/heraclitus.html
    Best viewed with Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.0. This article appeared in Systemist (1996) p. 161-176 and Computing and Information Systems University of Paisley The verses of Heraclitus of Ephesus Malcolm Crowe Feedback welcomed Kahn suggests that the surviving fragments may well represent most of the original. This observation has inspired the tentative reconstruction offered here. All authentic quotations from Heraclitus (fl. 500 BC) are included in the following text; material shown in square brackets on the English side has been added by the editor; and some small fragments and guesses in Marcovich's edition have been added in brackets to the Greek. Marcovich has pointed out by implication that Heraclitus wrote in free verse rather than straight prose. Heraclitus' words are of legendary opacity, and all of the fragments can be translated in many ways: the translation given here is partly new. The numbers are references to the fragments in Kahn's translation. The ordering of the fragments, apart from the opening paragraph, is of course conjectural: the relationship of the ordering given here with other translations is shown in the appendix. tou de logou tou d eontoV ginomenwn gar pantwn kata ton logon tonde okoiwn egw dihgeumai touV de allouV anqrwpouV Although this account holds forever men fail to comprehend it, both before they hear it and when they first hear. Even though all happenings are in accordance with this account, people behave like the unlearned when they experience works and words; whereas I set them forth, distinguishing everything according to its nature and telling how it is. But then most people are as unconscious of what they do awake as they are forgetful of what they do asleep:

    76. PHIL 2510: Heraclitus & Parmenides
    heraclitus Parmenides the search for the common; balance, harmony, ratios. heraclitusof Ephesus fragments with commentary online; his reputation the riddler;
    http://www.webster.edu/~evansja/guides/HeraclParm.html
  • Taking stockbackground assumptions:
    • the threat of CHAOS
    • oppositions: paired opposites
    • natural cycles
    • whatever is eternal is divinehence timeless?
    • the search for the common
    • balance, harmony, ratios
  • Heraclitus of Ephesus
    • fragments with commentary on-line
    • his reputation: the riddler
    • his style
      • "the way up & the way down are one and the same"
      • "you cannot step twice into the same river"
      • fire: it lives by consuming
    • strife
    • PANTA RHEI
    • the LOGOS is common to all
    • cosmology
    • radical Heracliteanism
      • Cratylus
      • a Platonic question: does radical Heracliteanism make language impossible?
    • Parmenides of Elea
      • his poem ( selections
      • the prolog
      • the two ways
        • the way of truth
          • [what] is, is, and cannot not be
          • indivisible and continuous
          • motionless
        • the way of mortal opinions
          • names
          • mere opinions
          • for an on-line outline of his central argument, click here
        • The post-Parmenidean problem: "Save the Appearances!" SOZEIN TA PHAINOMENA
          revised September 21, 1996
          Index to Study Guides
          Return to main menu
  • 77. Quotations - Heraclitus
    Quotations heraclitus. Topics -Character- -Choice- -Thoughts- heraclituswas a Greek philosopher who lived approximately 500 years BCE.
    http://www.motiration.com/quotations.phtml?LastName=Heraclitus&FirstName=

    78. Heraclitus
    heraclitus. Back to Last Page Glossary Index Related Terms. • paradox.Name heraclitus. Dates Born c. 540 BCE Died c. 475 BCE.
    http://atheism.about.com/library/glossary/general/bldef_heraclitus.htm
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    Heraclitus Back to Last Page Glossary Index Related Terms paradox
    Name
    Heraclitus Dates
    Born: c. 540 BCE Died: c. 475 BCE Biography:
    Heraclitus was pre-Socratic Greek philosopher of whom we only have second-hand information. According to the reports of others, he argued that fire was the primal substance from which the universe and all matter is formed - but there does not remain any fundamental "stuff" from which everything in the universe is made. Other preserved reports indicate that he used paradoxes to demonstrate that the world is in a constant state of flux - he even argued that the apparently unchanging hills were changing, just too slowly for people to readily notice. The most famous of these was his metaphor of the river. Acording to Heraclitus, because a river is always flowing and always in flux, it is impossible to ever step into the same river twice. It may look to us like the same river, but obviously the water has changed entirely and continually does so from second to second. The only thing which does remain the same is the cosmic balance of everything in motion.

    79. Heraclitus Forum Frigate
    heraclitus Forum Frigate Post MessageThe Jolly RogerOne Page Version.WRITERSWORD Welcome to the heraclitus Forum Frigate. Post
    http://jollyroger.com/zz/yphilo1d/Heraclitushall/shakespeare1.html
    Heraclitus Forum Frigate
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    Welcome to the Heraclitus Forum Frigate. Post yer opinion, a link to some of yer work, or yer thoughts regarding the best books and criticisms concerning Heraclitus . We'd also like to invite ye to sail on by the Heraclitus Live Chat , and feel free to use the message board below to schedule a chat session. And the brave of heart shall certainly wish to sign their souls aboard The Jolly Roger Oak planks of reason, riveted with rhyme,
    designed to voyage across all of time.
    Philosophy Philosopher Aristotle

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    80. Heraclitus: Heraclitus (c544-483BC)
    heraclitus heraclitus (c544483BC) Discussion Deck If ye would like to moderatethe heraclitus (c544-483BC) Discussion Deck, please drop becket@jollyroger.com
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    Heraclitus:
    Heraclitus (c544-483BC) Discussion Deck

    If ye would like to moderate the Heraclitus (c544-483BC) Discussion Deck, please drop becket@jollyroger.com a line.
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    Posted by Stephen Clancy on April 15, 19102 at 11:26:09: I require a book on how Heraclitus of Ephesus explained the fact that everything in the world is constantly changing and the solutions he offered, as well as the counter views and ideas held by other philosophers on the matter.
    Residing in a remote area of the West of Ireland I have poor access to good book stores. Therefore, I will be grateful to you if you would reccomend a book for me to cover this topic I am presently dealing with.
    Stephen
    Follow Ups:
    Post a Followup Name:
    E-Mail: Subject: Comments:
    : I require a book on how Heraclitus of Ephesus explained the fact that everything in the world is constantly changing and the solutions he offered, as well as the counter views and ideas held by other philosophers on the matter. : Residing in a remote area of the West of Ireland I have poor access to good book stores. Therefore, I will be grateful to you if you would reccomend a book for me to cover this topic I am presently dealing with. : Stephen Optional Link URL: Link Title: Optional Image URL: Follow Ups Post Followup Heraclitus (c544-483BC) Forum Frigate The Jolly Roger ... The World's Largest Literary Cafe : Carolinanavy.com ]

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