Heraclitus: Pre-Socratic Philosophy

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  • Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
  • Professor Angie Hobbs gives an introductory discussion of the obscure, ancient Greek Pre-Socratic thinker, Heraclitus. This is from the University of Sheffield.
    00:00 Introduction
    06:50 Relativism
    09:29 Flux
    14:50 Fire
    18:10 Language
    20:53 Paradoxes
    #Philosophy #Heraclitus

КОМЕНТАРІ • 143

  • @kavafikos
    @kavafikos Рік тому +53

    It amazes me when I come across people who can simplify and transfer deep thinking while retaining its meaning. IF I HAD A TEACHER LIKE DR HOBBS AT UNIVERSITY, I WOULD NEVER HAVE LEFT UNIVERSITY; When I listen to her it becomes obvious to me why learning is and should be a life-long exercise. Lucky the students who have such a teacher!

    • @enlightenedanalysis1071
      @enlightenedanalysis1071 Рік тому +2

      Excellent point. Agreed.

    • @GeorgeK520
      @GeorgeK520 10 місяців тому +2

      When skills converge (subject matter expertise and teaching in this case) reduces the amount of individuals excelling in them. I also find that selecting the right university is also important.

    • @belomolnar2128
      @belomolnar2128 5 місяців тому +2

      Me too. ❤. She is Great.

    • @Pontiki1977
      @Pontiki1977 2 місяці тому +1

      @@enlightenedanalysis1071 Ms Hobbs is a genius. She is smarter than most of us and she is also focused on a specific art. That is why is she is a professor. We are being taught whatever by civil servants in our schools. But only universities have real tutors.

    • @josephwinnard6666
      @josephwinnard6666 2 місяці тому +1

      Agreed 100%! You can hear the passion for the subject matter exuding. This is the secret sauce to a great teacher and she demonstrates it in spades. Bravo!!

  • @uniphcommunity.thewhitetower
    @uniphcommunity.thewhitetower 7 місяців тому +5

    THE SUN IS NEW EVERY DAY! How poetic! If it weren't for Heraclitus and the rest of the Presocratics, there would not be so much progress in philosophical thinking from then on! Thanks, Professor!

  • @FerozKhan-ss9nn
    @FerozKhan-ss9nn Рік тому +8

    This introduction of Heraclitus: this explanation of his thoughts is a great way of presenting the idea of the Ancient Greek philosopher so wonderfully. Dr. Hobbs has not only simplified the deep but obscure theory of Heraclitus in the most easy way possible but also has made it sure that it reaches the maximum readers who have some interest in the ancient philosophy of Heraclitus as a pre-Socratic philosopher. Overall treatment of Heraclitus in this manner has enlightened the watchers and acquainted them with the original Heraclitus and his teachings on the universe and its movement as was perceived in the remotest of times in history of mankind and their quest for knowledge.
    Pakistan

  • @kipwonder2233
    @kipwonder2233 Рік тому +3

    This woman is completely FABULOUS👏👏👏

  • @goodtothinkwith
    @goodtothinkwith 8 місяців тому +5

    What a wonderful mind! Beautiful exposition

  • @Laurencemardon
    @Laurencemardon Рік тому +7

    Heraclitus !!! My main man! What a treat: thank-you Philos Overdose ... cheers from Canada.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому

      If all changed randomly, you would be even more irrational than now. Youre trying to get high without having to pay. Wherever you go, there you are. Existence is identity.

  • @inthetearoom
    @inthetearoom Рік тому +7

    what an amazing lady...how she lights up
    she was meant for this
    very inspiring

  • @simossosias3727
    @simossosias3727 Рік тому +5

    Heraclitus is for western philosophy what Lao Tzu is for eastern philosophy. They echoed each other but they never met.

    • @sylvann7501
      @sylvann7501 Місяць тому +1

      The universal flow of the dao, yin and yang/dialectical unity of opposites.

    • @williamevansstevens
      @williamevansstevens Місяць тому +1

      Exactly!

  • @jameswelch7523
    @jameswelch7523 Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much for the upload- I've been searching for this! :)

  • @mccoytg1
    @mccoytg1 Рік тому +2

    As a student (old retired guy that just started learning about this stuff) it would be interesting to hear you place Heraclitus, Parmenides, and Plato on the timeline covering the transition from archaic period to the philosophical age. Explain the trajectory. And the change in how "Truth" was arrived at & communicated before and after. And look at both myth & language...in that context. Its interesting that traditional myth was discounted for logic & reason - expressed in language. But now with language (like myth) once again we question the medium's ability to communicate "Truth". Also "via negativa" (Apophatic) versus "paradox". Thanks for your lectures. Very informative.

  • @slicktrickyes
    @slicktrickyes Рік тому +8

    “If those who guide you say: Look, the Kingdom is in the sky! Then the birds are closer than you. If they say: Look, it is in the sea! Then the fish already know it. The Kingdom is inside you, and it is outside you. When you know yourself, then you will be known, and you will know that you are the child of the Living Father; but if you do not know yourself, you will live in vain and you will be vanity.” - Some Guy

  • @noshirm6285
    @noshirm6285 Рік тому +1

    Dr. Hobbs is erudite and marvelously articulate. I found this presentation easier to grasp in a first listening than I did the one on Parmenides. I’ve also listened to Gadamer’s lecture on Heraclitus. Many thanks for your subtitles on that video. 🤗

  • @gangeladavid1495
    @gangeladavid1495 Рік тому +2

    Brilliant presentation thank you for sharing as well as inspiring. I am studying philosophy and i found your talk interesting and very useful for my learning ❤

  • @genegoranov5865
    @genegoranov5865 2 місяці тому

    What a wonderful presentation !

  • @georgenajemy2165
    @georgenajemy2165 7 місяців тому

    I am not smart enough to understand or critique what Ms. Hobbs explains but I do have just enough intelligence to appreciate how articulate she is when explaining complex ideas. A pleasure to listen to her and “try” to learn.

  • @peterdixon9353
    @peterdixon9353 Рік тому +2

    Great stuff, any more of these?

  • @user-wi8vq3jo2z
    @user-wi8vq3jo2z 10 місяців тому

    Incredible work!

  • @norbertsarkozy
    @norbertsarkozy Рік тому +9

    I think that Hellenic philosophy was more deeply thought than we can imagine today. And I don't think so that they(Pre-Socratics)
    would solve ethical issues in any special way.They dealt with being, time, the individual and the being itself.Only Socrates and all the great ones after him and of course the Sophists began to moralize and "politicize".

    • @garymelnyk7910
      @garymelnyk7910 Рік тому

      If we could “understand” being and individuality then there would be no more need for moralising or politics. We would act according to the logos. With that forgotten all that’s left is talk of politics. Heraclitus was a true poet, and his exquisite words will echo in the caverns of the bosom as long as “heart and brain have faculty by nature to subsist”.

    • @norbertsarkozy
      @norbertsarkozy Рік тому

      @@garymelnyk7910Yes, you are right if you understand logos as meaning argument from reason like Aristotle. But Heraclitus understood the word Logos differently . The Stoics take from Heraclitus the concept of logos, to which they attribute the meaning of world law: Logos is the inevitable destiny of the world.So what is important is the meaning we give to the word LOGOS.🙂

    • @garymelnyk7910
      @garymelnyk7910 Рік тому

      @@norbertsarkozy I try not to give any meaning to the word. I sit patiently waiting for the word to give of it’s own meaning, believing (as I have seen written by others) that “the logos that can be named is not the eternal logos”. In this case it is greater to receive than to give.

    • @edwardd652
      @edwardd652 Рік тому

      One of the greatest disasters ever happened in human history, switching from Pre-socratics to Socrates. It changed the nature and understanding of Philosophy and opened the way to Christianity which enslaved REASON/LOGOS for hundreds of years and murdered Greek Ratioanilism.

  • @chadpenner5059
    @chadpenner5059 5 місяців тому +1

    Her hair is amazing love it❤

  • @Doctor.T.46
    @Doctor.T.46 Рік тому +6

    Thank you so much for this. I love Heraclitus.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому +2

      He's changed.

    • @reimannx33
      @reimannx33 Рік тому +3

      @@TeaParty1776 The more he changed, the more he stayed the same.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому

      @@reimannx33 change within a context. but H had no context, only changing chaos

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому

      @Tony We are amused. But did you know that he said you can and cannot step into the same river twice.

  • @saleban1
    @saleban1 Рік тому +1

    Love Angie Hope.

  • @EllaBugby
    @EllaBugby Рік тому +3

    A truly brilliant teacher, with such an eager spirit. Her depths of knowledge certainly rise to the surface in a fine way. As much as I respect Heraclitus' great mind, I do think that Parmenides alone hit the core of what we are: 'being'. Heraclitus, of course, had a firm conception of the importance of Logos, which is not completely dissimilar to ἐόν (being), as both terms point to the idea of all as one. Yet, Parmenides was clear when he distinguished the seeming (seeming being key here) world of change from unchanging Being, whereas Heraclitus was too caught up in hypothesising about change and motion - both of which do not really exist.

    • @gordonely6911
      @gordonely6911 8 місяців тому

      Truly most grateful am I for your pithy opinion on the merits of Parmenides’ and Heraclitus’ epistles 😳

  • @SreematiMukherjee
    @SreematiMukherjee Рік тому +12

    Excellent! Engaging and lucid. " Uncomprehending" is syntactically placed in an enigmatic manner, but I think it perhaps means that inscrutability underlies ultimate ( if at all possible ) meaning, or the Logos. "Logos" also means language and Heraclitus would then tie in with the poststructuralist position that language fails to yield a final meaning. Thus ambiguity, paradox, ellipses inhabit the core of the universe.

    • @divertissementmonas
      @divertissementmonas Рік тому

      The Yaminahau shamans use a metaphorical logic in the language they use to talk to the spirits. It's called 'tsai yoshtoyoshto' which means 'language -twisting-twisting'. A twisted-language that only they use. I suppose it could just be a conclusion of poststructral anthropologists though...

    • @SreematiMukherjee
      @SreematiMukherjee Рік тому

      @@divertissementmonas I see...interesting to know about the 'twisted' language of the shamans. The Yorubas in Africa have a trickster monkey in their symbology/ cosmology, whose language is 'double voiced'. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., uses the trope of the 'signifying monkey' to establish the double voicedness in the Black use of the English language.

    • @divertissementmonas
      @divertissementmonas Рік тому +1

      @@SreematiMukherjee That is a good example of acculturation.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому

      >poststructuralist position that language fails to yield a final meaning.
      “Like a spoiled, disillusioned child, who had expected predigested capsules of automatic knowledge, a logical positivist stamps his foot at reality and cries that context, integration, mental effort and first-hand inquiry are too much to
      expect of him, that he rejects so demanding a method of cognition, and that he will manufacture his own “constructs” from now on. (This amounts, in effect, to the declaration: “Since the intrinsic has failed us, “the subjective is our only alternative.”) The joke is on his listeners: it is this exponent of a primordial mystic’s craving for an effortless, rigid, automatic omniscience that modern men take for an advocate of a free-flowing, dynamic, progressive science.”
      Ayn Rand, "Intro. To Objectivist Epistemology.”

    • @kreek22
      @kreek22 Рік тому

      Metaphysics consists of a thousand different ways to empty the world of meaning. Far more difficult, perhaps impossible, is to add meaning to the world. Immutable structures, like math and logic, are discoverable, to be sure. But, they provide a map of true relations the teleology of which is inscrutable. Empirical science, being founded upon inductive reasoning, is not demonstrably immutable, howsoever useful for contingent human purposes. Metaphysics makes the grandest claims for itself, but offers only childish unveilings of the kenoma and the poetry of pure speculation.

  • @carbonc6065
    @carbonc6065 Рік тому +1

    Excellent.

  • @Pontiki1977
    @Pontiki1977 2 місяці тому

    All words from that quote @8:00 are still used, in their original or in other forms, in modern Greek. Ποταμος, Αυτος, Μπαινω, Ετερα, Και, Υδατα, Επιρροη.

  • @tvshow5108
    @tvshow5108 Рік тому

    Great narration. Great greak thinkers.

  • @belomolnar2128
    @belomolnar2128 4 місяці тому +1

    The Most Important Day in our human history was year 624 before our chronicle. The birth of THALES of Miletus it did start the Human ´s Philosophy. 🍀🍀🍀. We are having 2.600 years of the Humanity.

  • @SuperEbarnes
    @SuperEbarnes Рік тому

    Thank you Dr. Hobbes - most helpful! I may steal that splendid ending for my lecture on Heraclitus today.

  • @acaciopiedade
    @acaciopiedade 29 днів тому

    Thank you for this excellent exposition! I would ask a question: why the road is always the same whether you go up or down, but the river is never the same when you step it twice?

  • @edwardd652
    @edwardd652 Рік тому +1

    The purest formation of FIRE is SUN. The energy of everything

  • @PinoSantilli-hp5qq
    @PinoSantilli-hp5qq 8 місяців тому

    Much Truth in Heraclitus! Just take the time to ponder it and you will understand.

  • @louislorenzi-prince3842
    @louislorenzi-prince3842 Місяць тому

    He made more sense than Cybil did when she spoke at Delphi.

  • @thegroove2000
    @thegroove2000 Рік тому +1

    Highly knowledgable lady.

  • @mejoe444
    @mejoe444 3 місяці тому +2

    Hello from Ephesus.

  • @thegroove2000
    @thegroove2000 Рік тому

    Great thinkers indeed.

  • @brainlife
    @brainlife Рік тому

    Brilliant

  • @machintelligence
    @machintelligence Рік тому +1

    Nothing like a contradictory paradox to grab your attention and attract an audience.
    If you want to put a modern scientific spin on the idea that everything is fire; matter and energy are interchangeable. Therefore everything is energy (in one form or another.)

  • @sensennsen
    @sensennsen Рік тому

    Pure genius

  • @jdzentrist8711
    @jdzentrist8711 Рік тому

    So beautiful

  • @lliihhaann
    @lliihhaann Рік тому +1

    his ideas are reminiscent of The Four Noble Truths

  • @mills8102
    @mills8102 Рік тому +2

    The logos which can be named is not the eternal logos.

    • @garymelnyk7910
      @garymelnyk7910 Рік тому +2

      Exactly! David J Barrow (RIP) from Cambridge University made an incredible statement: “A universe simple enough to be understood could not have created a mind capable of understanding it.” Too many people think that they know! But as Emily Dickinson said: “But what of that?”

  • @painbow6528
    @painbow6528 Рік тому +6

    Her hair is the truest philosophy.

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ 10 місяців тому

    Watched all of it 28:33

  • @Villainilla
    @Villainilla Рік тому

    It makes sense now why Nietzsche really liked the pre-socratics, especially Heraclitus.

    • @sylvann7501
      @sylvann7501 Місяць тому

      Despite how he rejects the logos?

    • @sylvann7501
      @sylvann7501 Місяць тому

      He does have a sort of postmodernist approach of focusing on the unique identity of each thing rather than the unity of their components

  • @Anonymous_Prole
    @Anonymous_Prole Рік тому +2

    An attractive and erudite lady explaining one the West's foundational thinkers.

  • @blackfeatherstill348
    @blackfeatherstill348 Рік тому +2

    Similar in thought and time to Zhuangzi

  • @jurijsrjabokons7509
    @jurijsrjabokons7509 Рік тому +2

    Heraclitus said for the first: Everything is in a state of flux.

  • @bill5922
    @bill5922 Рік тому

    I am in the process of building a community with goal an environment where intelligent and ambitious people get value and help each other to reach their goals

    • @lsdc1
      @lsdc1 Рік тому

      A meaningful goal. Any pointers?

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Рік тому

      How can you help a dumb bunny moron who wont help himself? Value is not a mystical or social mystical revelation. It is action that furthers conditional life. And, for man, that requires a focused mind. Dumb bunnies have no mind, unfocused or not. Communism is a blood-drenched failure. You need to accept the risk of independent judgment and failure. And, then, as Frank Sinatra sings, "...when my chin is on the ground, I pick myself up, dust myself off, and start all over again." A society of dumb bunnies will become a bunny coat for fascists.

  • @sergiosatelite467
    @sergiosatelite467 Місяць тому

    That voice. That hair. That Heraclitus.

  • @MacAirgialla
    @MacAirgialla Рік тому

    Reads like St.Thomas Gospel. I think I have answer to the language/paradox issue. Or, rather I found the answer hiding in plain view..

  • @iallalli5223
    @iallalli5223 Рік тому

    HERACLITUS IS SAYING ABOUT YOU.
    HAVE NICE SUN LIGHT.

  • @user-by4tr1ee9i
    @user-by4tr1ee9i 6 місяців тому

    HERACLETUS WAS THINKER PHILOSOPHERS AND PERHAPS THE FIRST THEORETICAL PHISICIST

  • @zombieeyedcunt4653
    @zombieeyedcunt4653 Рік тому

    Why does heraclitus look like Heisenberg about to lecture Jesse in the intro???

  • @thegroove2000
    @thegroove2000 Рік тому +41

    I'm here for the abundance of hair because I don't have any.

  • @user-mj9iq5fy5r
    @user-mj9iq5fy5r 10 місяців тому

    Angie is adorable

  • @rahulthakar8006
    @rahulthakar8006 10 місяців тому

    I don't think he is talking about geography when he said ' road up and down are one and the same ' 😅

    • @user-gk5ze6lm1x
      @user-gk5ze6lm1x 2 місяці тому

      I think the point is, that experience is differentiated but similar

  • @scottwalker9766
    @scottwalker9766 2 місяці тому

    The logos. The living light.

    • @scottwalker9766
      @scottwalker9766 2 місяці тому

      It is a Christian thing and I really don't confine myself.

    • @scottwalker9766
      @scottwalker9766 2 місяці тому

      Uniqueness can only be defined by time a space.

    • @scottwalker9766
      @scottwalker9766 2 місяці тому

      And both are arbitrary.

  • @shortattentionspantheatre5075
    @shortattentionspantheatre5075 11 місяців тому

    Eironiea, in..deed...and in passivity

  • @waldwassermann
    @waldwassermann Рік тому +1

    All is Flux. The question is Why?

    • @davidthurman3963
      @davidthurman3963 Рік тому

      Is that an actual question or a symptom? No matter how you answer I will ask why? Will that be an actual question or just a symptom?

    • @waldwassermann
      @waldwassermann Рік тому +1

      @@davidthurman3963 The Solution asks all questions.

  • @user-by4tr1ee9i
    @user-by4tr1ee9i 6 місяців тому +1

    ONE COULD SAY HE WAS PROVEN RIGHT IN 1930'S WHEN THE ATOM WAS PHOTOGRAPHED...

  • @Wholly_Fool
    @Wholly_Fool 8 місяців тому

    Well it's clear where Nietzsche derived much of his whimsical nature from.

  • @evo1ov3
    @evo1ov3 7 місяців тому

    Yeah, once you understand the Greeks used their alphabet, as their numeral system. And get a grasp of real word objects of arithmetic as they relate to geometry.... Heraclitus makes total sense.

  • @MyRealName148
    @MyRealName148 Рік тому +1

    I knew her hairdresser. She said this women used a firecracker to comb her hair on a regular basis. But she is brilliant

  • @jamesmiller3548
    @jamesmiller3548 Рік тому

    She is a great teacher. My only problem is I cannot stop looking at her beautiful hair.

  • @stefos6431
    @stefos6431 Рік тому +2

    Professor Hobbs...you're #1 miss ;)

  • @akaalpaka3139
    @akaalpaka3139 4 місяці тому +2

    This video is sponsored by John Frieda

  • @susanshort9328
    @susanshort9328 Рік тому

    I wish she would tell us what Heraclitus actually said

  • @peteryyz43
    @peteryyz43 Рік тому +3

    Hair - aclitus.

  • @MindbodyMedic
    @MindbodyMedic Рік тому +1

    Clicked for the wonderful hair and was not disappointed.

  • @AsadAli-jc5tg
    @AsadAli-jc5tg Рік тому

    I think Parmenides was a better thinker then Heraclitus.

  • @alexanderkane3960
    @alexanderkane3960 8 місяців тому

    🤣🤣🤣

  • @Dazzletoad
    @Dazzletoad Рік тому

    With all that obscurity the title of this show should have been:
    *'Heraclitus: Pre-Socratic Jordan B. Peterson.'*

    • @feridunaksu9042
      @feridunaksu9042 Рік тому

      Well designed interpretation of paradoxes and ecplanations and descriptions

    • @dimitriosbetsis1509
      @dimitriosbetsis1509 Рік тому

      Jordan B. Peterson is a Scientist, in the extended sense used by Sociologists, whereas Heraclitus is more of an Epistemologist!

    • @Dazzletoad
      @Dazzletoad Рік тому +1

      @@dimitriosbetsis1509 My comment was sarcastic 🙄

  • @albertklassen6055
    @albertklassen6055 Рік тому

    I think the pearl necklace is the perfect piece. I find myself wondering if it’s real or fake. If it’s fake, can we really and truly believe anything she says. Furthermore is she a she or perhaps a he in disguise or a they. I’m confused. And is it unacceptable to even make these observations or ask these questions. Are they crass and do they elicit an offensive response. Are they unethical.

  • @jannieschluter9670
    @jannieschluter9670 Місяць тому

    I think he was more damaging than helpful to the world of philosophy...

  • @BobHooker
    @BobHooker Рік тому

    I think maybe she is beating the analogy a bit too much, why would be care if a damned river is the same river, I think the statement is about time.

    • @hermanhale9258
      @hermanhale9258 8 місяців тому

      She talks like she is telling a horror story. Dopey for dopey people. Dagobert D. Runes translates that quote as: "Who rises in the same stream will always struggle with fresh waters." And he says,"this observation makes too little precise sense for us to attach much importance to it." Runes is pretty hard on the old-timers. "Vague speculations, grounded in superstition...often destructive influence on the minds of future generations."

  • @casteretpollux
    @casteretpollux 8 місяців тому

    Why sit waving your hands at an empty chair? And breathy voice? I think Ill stick with reading the book.

  • @albertklassen6055
    @albertklassen6055 Рік тому

    I came for knowledge and stayed for the hair. I keep on getting distracted . The accent doesn’t help either.

  • @mateuszliese1059
    @mateuszliese1059 Рік тому +2

    All these pre-Socratics would have sent this postmodern feminist woman to what they felt was their domain, that being of course the kitchen and or fetching her husbands slippers. The irony of it all.

    • @kreek22
      @kreek22 Рік тому

      A philosophy professor is a slipper fetcher.

    • @mateuszliese1059
      @mateuszliese1059 Рік тому

      @@kreek22 And I ask: what do you have against slipper fetchers?

    • @kreek22
      @kreek22 Рік тому +3

      @@mateuszliese1059 How could I object to the natural order of things?

  • @grosbeak6130
    @grosbeak6130 Рік тому

    Why do you name your UA-cam channel with taking drugs?