Reality. Wynand De Beer
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Reality - Wynand De Beer страница 13

Название: Reality

Автор: Wynand De Beer

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Религия: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9781532686474

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ It thus appears that philosophical Idealism harbours a more valid explanation of reality than does materialism and its corollary, mechanism.

      Moreover, since Mind is the first cause of the cosmos arising from the relative non-being of formless matter, it implies that Mind provides the ultimate standard whereby things are measured and judged. Idealism is by its very nature opposed to the world-view of humanism, which holds mankind as such to be the final arbiter in all things—in other words, reality is viewed as man-centred instead of Mind-centred. In Western philosophy, the notion of humanism was first enunciated by Protagoras, an Athenian contemporary of Anaxagoras, who famously held that man (ho anthrōpos, which in Greek comprises male and female) is the measure (metron) of everything. As reported by Socrates, Protagoras said that “Man is the measure of all things: of the things which are, that they are, and of the things which are not, that they are not” (Theaet, 152a). This implies that truth is relative, and that different individuals will view it differently—the opposite of the stance taken in Idealism.

      According to Diogenes of Apollonia, a younger contemporary of Socrates, the entire world of physical phenomena arises from the intelligence (noēsis) underlying it. The term noēsis is cognate to nous, which (as we saw) is used by Anaxagoras for Mind. The following fragments from Diogenes’ writing are relevant here: “In my opinion, to sum it all up, all things that are, are differentiated from the same thing and are the same thing. But all these things (earth, water, air, fire, and all the rest of the things in the cosmos), being differentiated out of the same thing, come to be different things at different times and return into the same thing” (Fragment 2); “For without intelligence (noēsis) it [i.e., the same thing] could not be distributed in such a way as to have the measures of all things—winter and summer, night and day, rains and winds and good weather” (Fragment 3); “Humans and animals live by means of air through breathing. СКАЧАТЬ