Putting all of his faith in the power of abstract reason, Parmenides argues in his poem that genuine knowledge can only involve being, and that non-being is literally unspeakable and unthinkable. Using only the premise that "what is" is and what "is not" is not, he proceeds to deduce the nature of reality. The reality he arrives at bears no resemblance at all to the world we experience around us through our senses. When starting out on a rational inquiry, according to Parmenides, there are only two logically coherent possibilities: either you begin your inquiry with the premise that the subject of your inquiry exists or you begin with the premise that it does not exist
It is possible to understand Parmenides’ being as the ‘totality of what exists’. Parmenides’ insight...
In this article we defend an intermediate position between the traditional interpretations of the po...
I will seek to test the possibility that Parmenides was referring, in the Way of Being (the Aletheia...
Putting all of his faith in the power of abstract reason, Parmenides argues in his poem that genuine...
It is argued that the properties that Parmenides attributes to Being and Unbeing are best interprete...
As is clear from the multiple references to knowledge in the proemium of fragment B1, Parmenides pre...
Starting from the judgement of Parmenides that there is existence but non-existence is not, the auth...
It is possible to understand Parmenides' being as the 'totality of what exists'. Parmenides' insight...
Being exists in an absolute sense, and because it exists it cannot cease to be. In other words non-b...
The poem of the Presocratic philosopher Parmenides about “What Is” deeply influenced the course of W...
This thesis examines the fragments of Parmenides\u27 poem On Nature . I attempt to determine the re...
<p></p><p>Abstract: In fragment DK 28 B 2 of his poem, Parmenides presents his method for distinguis...
Parmenides has been widely regarded as someone whose main assertions are outrageously false, since h...
We propose the interpretation of Parmenides’ poem in which “indivisibility” of things is justified. ...
What could justify the Presocratic conviction that human beings can have knowledge? The answer that ...
It is possible to understand Parmenides’ being as the ‘totality of what exists’. Parmenides’ insight...
In this article we defend an intermediate position between the traditional interpretations of the po...
I will seek to test the possibility that Parmenides was referring, in the Way of Being (the Aletheia...
Putting all of his faith in the power of abstract reason, Parmenides argues in his poem that genuine...
It is argued that the properties that Parmenides attributes to Being and Unbeing are best interprete...
As is clear from the multiple references to knowledge in the proemium of fragment B1, Parmenides pre...
Starting from the judgement of Parmenides that there is existence but non-existence is not, the auth...
It is possible to understand Parmenides' being as the 'totality of what exists'. Parmenides' insight...
Being exists in an absolute sense, and because it exists it cannot cease to be. In other words non-b...
The poem of the Presocratic philosopher Parmenides about “What Is” deeply influenced the course of W...
This thesis examines the fragments of Parmenides\u27 poem On Nature . I attempt to determine the re...
<p></p><p>Abstract: In fragment DK 28 B 2 of his poem, Parmenides presents his method for distinguis...
Parmenides has been widely regarded as someone whose main assertions are outrageously false, since h...
We propose the interpretation of Parmenides’ poem in which “indivisibility” of things is justified. ...
What could justify the Presocratic conviction that human beings can have knowledge? The answer that ...
It is possible to understand Parmenides’ being as the ‘totality of what exists’. Parmenides’ insight...
In this article we defend an intermediate position between the traditional interpretations of the po...
I will seek to test the possibility that Parmenides was referring, in the Way of Being (the Aletheia...