Greek philosophy (2024)

In Western philosophy: Cosmology and the metaphysics of matter

Because the earliest Greek philosophers focused their attention upon the origin and nature of the physical world, they are often called cosmologists, or naturalists. Although monistic views (which trace the origin of the world to a single substance) prevailed at first, they were soon followed by several pluralistic…

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Aristotelianism

  • Greek philosophy (1)

    In Aristotle: The Academy

    …peninsula of Macedonia, in northern Greece. His father, Nicomachus, was the physician of Amyntas III (reigned c. 393–c. 370 bce), king of Macedonia and grandfather of Alexander the Great (reigned 336–323 bce). After his father’s death in 367, Aristotle migrated to Athens, where he joined the Academy of Plato (c.…

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asceticism

  • In asceticism: The origins of asceticism.

    Among the ancient Greeks, athletes preparing for physical contests (e.g., the Olympic Games) disciplined their bodies by abstaining from various normal pleasures and by enduring difficult physical tests. In order to achieve a high proficiency in the skills of warfare, warriors also adopted various ascetical practices. The ancient…

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Atomism

  • Greek philosophy (2)

    In atom: Development of atomic theory

    …until about 1900 originated with Greek philosophers in the 5th century bce. Their speculation about a hard, indivisible fundamental particle of nature was replaced slowly by a scientific theory supported by experiment and mathematical deduction. It was more than 2,000 years before modern physicists realized that the atom is indeed…

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  • Greek philosophy (3)

    In atomism: Ancient Greek atomism

    …characteristic of the importance of Greek philosophy that, already in the foregoing exposition of the different aspects of atomism, several Greek philosophers had to be introduced. Not only the general idea of atomism but also the whole spectrum of its different forms originated in ancient Greece. As early as the…

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  • Greek philosophy (4)

    In atomism: Ancient Greek atomism versus contemporary scientific atomism

    In comparing Greek atomism and modern atomic theories, it should be recalled that in Greek thought philosophy and science still formed a unity. Greek atomism was inspired as much by the desire to find a solution for the problems…

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catechetical school

  • In St. Clement of Alexandria: Early life and career

    …understanding of the role of Greek philosophy and the Mosaic tradition within the Christian faith. According to Clement, philosophy was to the Greeks as the Law of Moses was to the Jews, a preparatory discipline leading to the truth, which was personified in the Logos. His goal was to make…

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Christian doctrine

  • Greek philosophy (5)

    In Christianity: Restatement: respecting language and knowledge

    …the New Testament writings, and Greek became the language of the texts that constitute the permanent basis of Christian doctrine. That was the beginning of what the German theologian Adolf von Harnack called the “Hellenization of Christianity,” whose relation to “the historical Jesus”—the putative peasant from Nazareth—has been viewed as…

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Christian mysticism

  • Greek philosophy (6)

    In Christianity: Eastern Christianity

    …thought explicitly dependent on the Greek philosophical tradition of Plato and his followers. This intermingling of primitive Christian themes with Greek speculative thought has been variously judged by later Christians, but contemporaries had no difficulty in seeing it as proof of the new religion’s ability to adapt and transform all…

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Christian philosophy

  • Greek philosophy (7)

    In Christianity: Influence of Greek philosophy

    …intellectual milieu largely structured by Greek philosophical thought. By the 2nd century ce several competing streams of Greek and Roman philosophy—Middle Platonism, Neoplatonism, Epicureanism, Stoicism—had merged into a common worldview that was basically Neoplatonic, though enriched by the ethical outlook of the Stoics. This constituted the broad intellectual background for…

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Enlightenment thought

epistemology

  • Greek philosophy (9)

    In epistemology: The pre-Socratics

    The central focus of ancient Greek philosophy was the problem of motion. Many pre-Socratic philosophers thought that no logically coherent account of motion and change could be given. Although the problem was primarily a concern of metaphysics, not epistemology, it had the consequence that all major Greek philosophers held that…

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ethics

  • Greek philosophy (10)

    In ethics: Ancient Greece

    Ancient Greece was the birthplace of Western philosophical ethics. The ideas of Socrates (c. 470–399 bce), Plato, and Aristotle (384–322 bce) will be discussed in the next section. The sudden flowering of philosophy during that period was rooted in the ethical thought of…

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Hermetism

  • In Hermetic writings

    …revelation on occult, theological, and philosophical subjects ascribed to the Egyptian god Thoth (Greek Hermes Trismegistos [Hermes the Thrice-Greatest]), who was believed to be the inventor of writing and the patron of all the arts dependent on writing. The collection, written in Greek and Latin, probably dates from the middle…

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irrationalism

  • Greek philosophy (11)

    In irrationalism

    …dramatists, and even in such philosophers as Pythagoras and Empedocles and in Plato. In early modern philosophy—even during the ascendancy of Cartesian rationalism—Blaise Pascal turned from reason to an Augustinian faith, convinced that “the heart has its reasons” unknown to reason as such.

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Jewish doctrine

logic

  • Greek philosophy (13)

    In history of logic: Precursors of ancient logic

    …tradition according to which the Greek philosopher Parmenides (5th century bce) invented logic while living on a rock in Egypt. The story is pure legend, but it does reflect the fact that Parmenides was the first philosopher to use an extended argument for his views rather than merely proposing a…

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materialism

  • Greek philosophy (14)

    In materialism: Greek and Roman materialism

    Though Thales of Miletus (c. 580 bce) and some of the other pre-Socratic philosophers have some claims to being regarded as materialists, the materialist tradition in Western philosophy really begins with Leucippus and

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metaphysics

    pacifism

    • Greek philosophy (15)

      In pacifism: Early religious and philosophical movements

      The Greek conceptions of peace—including that of Stoicism—were centred on the peaceful conduct of the individual rather than on the conduct of whole peoples or kingdoms. In Rome the achievement of pax, or peace, was defined as a covenant between states or kingdoms that creates a…

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    Persian Wars

    Platonism

    • Greek philosophy (17)

      In Plato

      …Athens, Greece—died 348/347, Athens), ancient Greek philosopher, student of Socrates (c. 470–399 bce), teacher of Aristotle (384–322 bce), and founder of the Academy, best known as the author of philosophical works of unparalleled influence.

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    Pythagoreanism

    • Greek philosophy (18)

      In Pythagoreanism

      philosophical school and religious brotherhood, believed to have been founded by Pythagoras of Samos, who settled in Croton in southern Italy about 525 bce.

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    Roman antipathy

    • Greek philosophy (19)

      In ancient Rome: Culture and religion

      Later Romans remembered that a Greek doctor established a practice in Rome for the first time just before the Second Punic War, but his reputation did little to stimulate Roman interest in the subject. Like doctors, Greek philosophers of the 2nd century were regarded with interest and suspicion. In the…

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    skepticism

    • Greek philosophy (20)

      In skepticism

      The original Greek meaning of skeptikos was “an inquirer,” someone who was unsatisfied and still looking for truth.

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    Sophists

    • Greek philosophy (21)

      In Sophist

      Greek lecturers, writers, and teachers in the 5th and 4th centuries bce, most of whom traveled about the Greek-speaking world giving instruction in a wide range of subjects in return for fees.

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    Stoicism

    • Greek philosophy (22)

      In Stoicism: Early Greek Stoicism

      With the death of Aristotle (322 bce) and that of Alexander the Great (323 bce), the greatness of the life and thought of the Greek city-state (polis) ended. With Athens no longer the centre of worldly attraction, its claim to urbanity and cultural…

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    theology

    • Greek philosophy (23)

      In theology: Nature of theology

      The Greek philosopher Plato, with whom the concept emerges for the first time, associated with the term theology a polemical intention—as did his pupil Aristotle. For Plato, theology described the mythical, which he allowed may have a temporary pedagogical significance that is beneficial to the state…

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Although monistic views (which trace the origin of the world to a single substance) prevailed at first, they were soon followed by several pluralistic…","publisher":{"logo":{"url":"https://corporate.britannica.com/wp-content/themes/eb-corporate/_img/logo.png","@type":"ImageObject"},"name":"Encyclopedia Britannica","@type":"Organization"},"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"article"},"studentArticle":false,"initialLoad":true,"moneyRedirectedArticle":false}

    Learn about this topic in these articles:

    major reference

    • Greek philosophy (31)

      In Western philosophy: Cosmology and the metaphysics of matter

      Because the earliest Greek philosophers focused their attention upon the origin and nature of the physical world, they are often called cosmologists, or naturalists. Although monistic views (which trace the origin of the world to a single substance) prevailed at first, they were soon followed by several pluralistic…

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    Aristotelianism

    • Greek philosophy (32)

      In Aristotle: The Academy

      …peninsula of Macedonia, in northern Greece. His father, Nicomachus, was the physician of Amyntas III (reigned c. 393–c. 370 bce), king of Macedonia and grandfather of Alexander the Great (reigned 336–323 bce). After his father’s death in 367, Aristotle migrated to Athens, where he joined the Academy of Plato (c.…

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    asceticism

    • In asceticism: The origins of asceticism.

      Among the ancient Greeks, athletes preparing for physical contests (e.g., the Olympic Games) disciplined their bodies by abstaining from various normal pleasures and by enduring difficult physical tests. In order to achieve a high proficiency in the skills of warfare, warriors also adopted various ascetical practices. The ancient…

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    Atomism

    • Greek philosophy (33)

      In atom: Development of atomic theory

      …until about 1900 originated with Greek philosophers in the 5th century bce. Their speculation about a hard, indivisible fundamental particle of nature was replaced slowly by a scientific theory supported by experiment and mathematical deduction. It was more than 2,000 years before modern physicists realized that the atom is indeed…

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    • Greek philosophy (34)

      In atomism: Ancient Greek atomism

      …characteristic of the importance of Greek philosophy that, already in the foregoing exposition of the different aspects of atomism, several Greek philosophers had to be introduced. Not only the general idea of atomism but also the whole spectrum of its different forms originated in ancient Greece. As early as the…

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    • Greek philosophy (35)

      In atomism: Ancient Greek atomism versus contemporary scientific atomism

      In comparing Greek atomism and modern atomic theories, it should be recalled that in Greek thought philosophy and science still formed a unity. Greek atomism was inspired as much by the desire to find a solution for the problems…

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    catechetical school

    • In St. Clement of Alexandria: Early life and career

      …understanding of the role of Greek philosophy and the Mosaic tradition within the Christian faith. According to Clement, philosophy was to the Greeks as the Law of Moses was to the Jews, a preparatory discipline leading to the truth, which was personified in the Logos. His goal was to make…

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    Christian doctrine

    • Greek philosophy (36)

      In Christianity: Restatement: respecting language and knowledge

      …the New Testament writings, and Greek became the language of the texts that constitute the permanent basis of Christian doctrine. That was the beginning of what the German theologian Adolf von Harnack called the “Hellenization of Christianity,” whose relation to “the historical Jesus”—the putative peasant from Nazareth—has been viewed as…

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    Christian mysticism

    • Greek philosophy (37)

      In Christianity: Eastern Christianity

      …thought explicitly dependent on the Greek philosophical tradition of Plato and his followers. This intermingling of primitive Christian themes with Greek speculative thought has been variously judged by later Christians, but contemporaries had no difficulty in seeing it as proof of the new religion’s ability to adapt and transform all…

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    Christian philosophy

    • Greek philosophy (38)

      In Christianity: Influence of Greek philosophy

      …intellectual milieu largely structured by Greek philosophical thought. By the 2nd century ce several competing streams of Greek and Roman philosophy—Middle Platonism, Neoplatonism, Epicureanism, Stoicism—had merged into a common worldview that was basically Neoplatonic, though enriched by the ethical outlook of the Stoics. This constituted the broad intellectual background for…

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    Enlightenment thought

    epistemology

    • Greek philosophy (40)

      In epistemology: The pre-Socratics

      The central focus of ancient Greek philosophy was the problem of motion. Many pre-Socratic philosophers thought that no logically coherent account of motion and change could be given. Although the problem was primarily a concern of metaphysics, not epistemology, it had the consequence that all major Greek philosophers held that…

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    ethics

    • Greek philosophy (41)

      In ethics: Ancient Greece

      Ancient Greece was the birthplace of Western philosophical ethics. The ideas of Socrates (c. 470–399 bce), Plato, and Aristotle (384–322 bce) will be discussed in the next section. The sudden flowering of philosophy during that period was rooted in the ethical thought of…

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    Hermetism

    • In Hermetic writings

      …revelation on occult, theological, and philosophical subjects ascribed to the Egyptian god Thoth (Greek Hermes Trismegistos [Hermes the Thrice-Greatest]), who was believed to be the inventor of writing and the patron of all the arts dependent on writing. The collection, written in Greek and Latin, probably dates from the middle…

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    irrationalism

    • Greek philosophy (42)

      In irrationalism

      …dramatists, and even in such philosophers as Pythagoras and Empedocles and in Plato. In early modern philosophy—even during the ascendancy of Cartesian rationalism—Blaise Pascal turned from reason to an Augustinian faith, convinced that “the heart has its reasons” unknown to reason as such.

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    Jewish doctrine

    logic

    • Greek philosophy (44)

      In history of logic: Precursors of ancient logic

      …tradition according to which the Greek philosopher Parmenides (5th century bce) invented logic while living on a rock in Egypt. The story is pure legend, but it does reflect the fact that Parmenides was the first philosopher to use an extended argument for his views rather than merely proposing a…

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    materialism

    • Greek philosophy (45)

      In materialism: Greek and Roman materialism

      Though Thales of Miletus (c. 580 bce) and some of the other pre-Socratic philosophers have some claims to being regarded as materialists, the materialist tradition in Western philosophy really begins with Leucippus and

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    metaphysics

      pacifism

      • Greek philosophy (46)

        In pacifism: Early religious and philosophical movements

        The Greek conceptions of peace—including that of Stoicism—were centred on the peaceful conduct of the individual rather than on the conduct of whole peoples or kingdoms. In Rome the achievement of pax, or peace, was defined as a covenant between states or kingdoms that creates a…

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      Persian Wars

      Platonism

      • Greek philosophy (48)

        In Plato

        …Athens, Greece—died 348/347, Athens), ancient Greek philosopher, student of Socrates (c. 470–399 bce), teacher of Aristotle (384–322 bce), and founder of the Academy, best known as the author of philosophical works of unparalleled influence.

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      Pythagoreanism

      • Greek philosophy (49)

        In Pythagoreanism

        philosophical school and religious brotherhood, believed to have been founded by Pythagoras of Samos, who settled in Croton in southern Italy about 525 bce.

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      Roman antipathy

      • Greek philosophy (50)

        In ancient Rome: Culture and religion

        Later Romans remembered that a Greek doctor established a practice in Rome for the first time just before the Second Punic War, but his reputation did little to stimulate Roman interest in the subject. Like doctors, Greek philosophers of the 2nd century were regarded with interest and suspicion. In the…

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      skepticism

      • Greek philosophy (51)

        In skepticism

        The original Greek meaning of skeptikos was “an inquirer,” someone who was unsatisfied and still looking for truth.

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      Sophists

      • Greek philosophy (52)

        In Sophist

        Greek lecturers, writers, and teachers in the 5th and 4th centuries bce, most of whom traveled about the Greek-speaking world giving instruction in a wide range of subjects in return for fees.

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      Stoicism

      • Greek philosophy (53)

        In Stoicism: Early Greek Stoicism

        With the death of Aristotle (322 bce) and that of Alexander the Great (323 bce), the greatness of the life and thought of the Greek city-state (polis) ended. With Athens no longer the centre of worldly attraction, its claim to urbanity and cultural…

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      theology

      • Greek philosophy (54)

        In theology: Nature of theology

        The Greek philosopher Plato, with whom the concept emerges for the first time, associated with the term theology a polemical intention—as did his pupil Aristotle. For Plato, theology described the mythical, which he allowed may have a temporary pedagogical significance that is beneficial to the state…

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      Greek philosophy (2024)
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