- Ephesian School
Ephesian School sometimes refers to the philosophical thought of the ancient Greek philosopher
Heraclitus ofEphesus , who considered that thebeing of all theuniverse is fire. According to him, the being is material and one, but at the same time he acknowledges that the world witnesses constant change.Motion of the archelement (fire) is discordant and unharmonious, even thoughharmony is the final result of the process. This change, the transformation of material from one state into another, does not happen by accident, but rather "according to law", within certain limits and within certaintime . This law is named "logos" (λόγος) by Heraclitus. Therefore, the term "Ephesian School" could be applied to the Presocratic Greek thought which, looking upon the problem of One and Many (and their relationship), attempts at bringing the two "extremes" to peace:Parmenides ' assertion of One and negation of many and change, on the one part, and the Pythagorean assertion of Many (monad s) and motion and negation of One, on the other hand.Although there was never an official "Ephesian School,"
Diogenes Laërtius (ix. 6) mentions that his philosophy did have followers who called themselves "Heracliteans."Plato portraysCratylus in his dialogue of the same name as a disciple of Heraclitus.ee also
*
Pre-Socratic philosophy
*Milesian School
*Ionian School
*Pythagoreanism
*Eleatic School
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