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Pythagoras and Early Philosophy

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The origin of western philosophy is often identified with the first natural philosophers of Ionia

and in particular Thales of Miletus. Thales visited Egypt, but it was probably the Babylonian

astronomical records that enabled him to predict an eclipse of the sun for the year 585 BC. As

the most powerful Greek city in Asia, he advised Miletus not to form an alliance with Croesus of

Lydia, though it was said that he enabled the Lydian army to cross the Halys River by diverting

part of it into another channel. According to Herodotus, after Croesus was defeated by the Medes

and before the Persian empire took over Greek Ionia, Thales suggested that the Ionians establish

a central seat of government in Teos which would still allow the other cities to enjoy their own

laws.

Aristotle reported that to prove he could make his knowledge practical Thales used his

astrological wisdom to predict an abundant olive crop and hired all the oil presses in Miletus and

Chios when they were cheap and then leased them later at a great profit, showing that

philosophers could become rich; but that is not what they pursue. He learned how to calculate the

height of something by measuring its shadow. Thales speculated that everything was like water,

GREEK CULTURE TO 500 BC

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though he maintained that all things are full of the gods or soul and spirits and that the

intelligence of the universe is divine. One account of how there came to be seven recognized

sages in Greece has it that some fishermen presented a tripod to Delphi, and the oracle told them

to give it to the wisest. So they gave it to Thales, who passed it on to another, who did the same

until it came to Solon, who declared that God is the wisest and sent it to Delphi.

Thales said that most ancient is God, being uncreated; most beautiful: the universe, being God's

craft; the greatest: space, which holds everything; the swiftest: the mind which speeds

everywhere; the strongest: necessity which masters all; and the wisest: time, which brings

everything to light. Probably believing in the immortality of the soul, Thales held that there is no

difference between life and death. When someone asked then why he did not die, he replied,

"Because there is no difference." When asked what is difficult, he replied, "To know yourself;"

what is easy: "To give advice to another;" what is most pleasant: "Success;" what is divine: "That

which has neither beginning nor end;" and what is the strangest thing he ever saw: "An aged

tyrant." 13 When asked how to lead the best and most just life, he said, "By refraining from

doing what we blame in others." When asked who is happy, he said, "The one with a healthy

body, a resourceful mind, and a docile nature."14 He advised people to remember their friends

present or absent, to shun ill-gotten gains, not to pride themselves on outward appearance, but to

study to be beautiful in character.

Thales was followed in Miletus by Anaximander, who instead of speculating there is a single

element held that everything is indefinite and infinite. He wrote a book on physics, which is the

Greek word for nature and astonished people by publishing a geographical map of the known

world. In speculating on the laws of the universe Anaximander touched on ethics when he

posited the cosmic principle that everyone pays a penalty of retribution to others for any injustice

according

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