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Single Idea 447
[filed under theme 7. Existence / A. Nature of Existence / 3. Being / a. Nature of Being
]
Full Idea
Being has no coming-to-be and no destruction, for it is whole of limb, without motion, and without end. And it never was, nor will be, because it is now, a whole all together, one, continuous; for what creation of it will you look for?
Gist of Idea
Being must be eternal and uncreated, and hence it is timeless
Source
Parmenides (fragments/reports [c.474 BCE], B08 ll.?), quoted by Simplicius - On Aristotle's 'Physics' 9.145.1-
Book Ref
'Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers', ed/tr. Freeman,Kathleen [Harvard 1957], p.43
The
28 ideas
with the same theme
[the nature of pure being]:
448
|
No necessity could produce Being either later or earlier, so it must exist absolutely or not at all
[Parmenides]
|
447
|
Being must be eternal and uncreated, and hence it is timeless
[Parmenides]
|
449
|
Being is not divisible, since it is all alike
[Parmenides]
|
12270
|
Being is one
[Melissus, by Aristotle]
|
20901
|
True Being only occurs when it is completely full, with atoms and no void
[Democritus, by Aristotle]
|
12348
|
There are four kinds of being: incidental, per se, potential and actual, and being as truth
[Aristotle, by Wedin]
|
11194
|
Being is either what falls in the categories, or what makes propositions true
[Aristotle, by Aquinas]
|
11288
|
Things are predicated of the basic thing, which isn't predicated of anything else
[Aristotle]
|
15776
|
There is only being in a certain way, and without that way there is no being
[Aristotle]
|
611
|
Being, taken simply as being, is the domain of philosophy
[Aristotle]
|
22121
|
The concept of being has only one meaning, whether talking of universals or of God
[Duns Scotus, by Dumont]
|
22122
|
Being (not sensation or God) is the primary object of the intellect
[Duns Scotus, by Dumont]
|
16789
|
Only supernatural means could annihilate anything once it had being
[Hobbes]
|
6919
|
Absolute thought remains in another world from being
[Feuerbach]
|
19457
|
Being is what is undetermined, and hence indistinguishable
[Feuerbach]
|
22209
|
Our goal is to reveal a new hidden region of Being
[Husserl]
|
11010
|
Being is what belongs to every possible object of thought
[Russell]
|
21897
|
Reducing being to the study of beings too readily accepts the modern scientific view
[Heidegger, by May]
|
15573
|
For us, Being is constituted by awareness of other sorts of Being
[Heidegger]
|
22333
|
Only language is understandable Being
[Gadamer]
|
21908
|
Ontology can be continual creation, not to know being, but to probe the unknowable
[Deleuze]
|
21902
|
'Being' is univocal, but its subject matter is actually 'difference'
[Deleuze]
|
14664
|
Necessary beings (numbers, properties, sets, propositions, states of affairs, God) exist in all possible worlds
[Plantinga]
|
12340
|
There is no Being as a whole, because there is no set of all sets
[Badiou]
|
9809
|
Mathematics inscribes being as such
[Badiou]
|
14401
|
Every proposition is entirely about being
[Lewis]
|
7707
|
To grasp being, we must say why something exists, and why there is one world
[Jacquette]
|
12254
|
Being is substantial/accidental, complete/incomplete, necessary/contingent, possible, relative, intrinsic..
[Oderberg]
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