Laurie Lee
British writer (1914-1997)
Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher (c.570-c.478 BC)
Xenophanes of Colophon was a Greek philosopher, theologian, poet, and critic of Homer from Ionia who travelled throughout the Greek-speaking world in early Classical Antiquity.
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Xenophanes of Colophonwas a Greek philosopher, theologian, poet, and critic of Homer from Ionia who travelled throughout the Greek-speaking world in early Classical Antiquity.
As a poet, Xenophanes was known for his critical style, writing poems that are considered among the first satires. He composed elegiac couplets that criticised his society’s traditional values of wealth, excesses, and athletic victories. He criticised Homer and the other poets in his works for representing the gods as foolish or morally weak. His poems have not survived intact; only fragments of some of his work survive in quotations by later philosophers and literary critics.
Xenophanes is seen as one of the most important pre-Socratic philosophers. A highly original thinker, Xenophanes sought explanations for physical phenomena such as clouds or rainbows without references to divine or mythological explanations, but instead based on first principles. He distinguished between different forms of knowledge and belief, an early instance of epistemology. Later philosophers such as the Eleatics and the Pyrrhonists saw Xenophanes as the founder of their doctrines, and interpreted his work in terms of those doctrines, although modern scholarship disputes these claims.
But if cattle and horses or lions had hands, or were able to draw with their hands and do the work that men can do, horses would draw the forms of the gods like horses, and cattle like cattle, and they would make their bodies such as they each had themselves.
Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher (c.570-c.478 BC)
Men create the gods in their own image.
Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher (c.570-c.478 BC)
God is one, greatest of gods and men, not like mortals in body or thought.
Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher (c.570-c.478 BC)
It takes a wise man to recognize a wise man.
Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher (c.570-c.478 BC)
No human being will ever know the Truth, for even if they happen to say it by chance, they would not even known they had done so.
Greek Pre-Socratic philosopher (c.570-c.478 BC)