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Parent topics
- Pre-Socratic philosophy [r]: Early Greek philosophers who researched and theorised about natural philosophy and cosmology. [e]
Subtopics
- Materialism [r]: A world view that attributes to matter the status of the underlying constituent of nature, and excludes any explanations of reality that could not be reduced to physics. [e]
- Monism [r]: Add brief definition or description
Other ancient Greek philosophers
- Anaximander [r]: (fl. early 6th c. BC) A Greek philosopher who held that the primary principal of the world consisted of a boundless, non-material entity which underlay the world and its various changes. [e]
- Anaximenes [r]: (6th c. BC) Greek philosopher who sought to explain the phenomena of the universe in terms of the various manifestations of a single element and thus became the first to attempt to explain qualitative differences in terms of quantitative ones. [e]
- Pythagoras [r]: Greek mathematician and thinker of the 6th century BCE. [e]
- Heraclitus [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Parmenides [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Zeno of Elea [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Empedocles [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Anaxagoras [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Ancient Atomists [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Leucippus [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Democritus [r]: (c. 494 - c. 404 BC) Greek natural philosopher who promulgated the atomic theory, which asserted that the universe is composed of two elements: the atoms and the void in which they exist and move. [e]
- History of political thought [r]: The development of political ideas over time since the discovery of politics in Plato, Confucius and Mencius. [e]
- Pantheism [r]: A religious and philosophical doctrine that everything is of an all-encompassing immanent abstract God; or that the universe, or nature, and God are equivalent. [e]
- Pythagoras [r]: Greek mathematician and thinker of the 6th century BCE. [e]
- Anaximander [r]: (fl. early 6th c. BC) A Greek philosopher who held that the primary principal of the world consisted of a boundless, non-material entity which underlay the world and its various changes. [e]
- Ancient philosophy [r]: The study of philosophy in civilizations such as ancient Greece and Rome. [e]
- Citizen [r]: A legally recognized member of a political or civil community. [e]