Difference between revisions of "Cause of the universe"

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(the ultimate cause was considered to be water by Thales, fire by Heraclitus, etc.)
 
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In [[Ancient Greece]], "the ultimate cause was considered to be water by [[Thales]], fire by [[Heraclitus]], ''einai'' by [[Parmenides]], number by [[Pythagoras]], atom by [[Democritus]], idea by [[Plato]] and [[eidos]] and ''hyle'' by [[Aristotle]]." [http://www.unification.org/ucbooks/UT/UT-1-1.htm]
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In [[Ancient Greece]], "the ultimate cause was considered to be water by [[Thales]], fire by [[Heraclitus]], ''einai'' by [[Parmenides]], number by [[Pythagoras]], atom by [[Democritus]], idea by [[Plato]] and ''eidos'' and ''hyle'' by [[Aristotle]]."<ref>http://www.unification.org/ucbooks/UT/UT-1-1.htm</ref>
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==References==
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{{reflist}}
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[[Category:Philosophy]]

Latest revision as of 16:54, March 16, 2017

In Ancient Greece, "the ultimate cause was considered to be water by Thales, fire by Heraclitus, einai by Parmenides, number by Pythagoras, atom by Democritus, idea by Plato and eidos and hyle by Aristotle."[1]

References