Adam Glantz

17%
Flag icon
You might remember that for Parmenides and his followers motion and change were impossible, because for anything to come into being it would have to come from non-being, but there is no non-being. Aristotle suggests that Anaxagoras accepted part of this reasoning. He agreed that nothing could come from absolute non-being, and yet, like the atomists, he refused to accept that nothing ever really changes or moves.
Classical Philosophy (A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps #1)
Rate this book
Clear rating