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Zeno of Elea

Zeno of Elea (/ˈzn ...ˈɛliə/; Ancient Greek: Ζήνων ὁ Ἐλεᾱ́της; c. 490 – c. 430 BC) was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher. He was a student of Parmenides and one of the Eleatics. Born in Elea, Zeno defended his instructor's belief in monism, the idea that only one single entity exists that makes up all of reality. He rejected the existence of space, time, and motion. To disprove these concepts, he developed a series of paradoxes to demonstrate why these are impossible. Though his original writings are lost, subsequent descriptions by Plato, Aristotle, Diogenes Laertius, and Simplicius of Cilicia have allowed study of his ideas.

Zeno of Elea
Portrait of Zeno of Elea by Jan de Bisschop (1628–1671)
Bornc. 490 BC
Diedc. 430 BC (aged around 60)
Elea or Syracuse
EraPre-Socratic philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolEleatic
Main interests
Metaphysics, ontology
Notable ideas
Zeno's paradoxes

Zeno's arguments are divided into two different types: his arguments against plurality, or the existence of multiple objects, and his arguments against motion. Those against plurality suggest that for anything to exist, it must be divisible infinitely, meaning it would necessarily have both infinite mass and no mass simultaneously. Those against motion invoke the idea that distance must be divisible infinitely, meaning infinite steps would be required to cross any distance.

Zeno's philosophy is still debated in the present day, and no solution to his paradoxes has been agreed upon by philosophers. His paradoxes have influenced philosophy and mathematics, both in ancient and modern times. Many of his ideas have been challenged by modern developments in physics and mathematics, such as atomic theory, mathematical limits, and set theory.

Life edit

Zeno was born c. 490 BC.[1][2][3] Little about his life is known for certain, except that he was from Elea and that he was a student of Parmenides.[1] Zeno is portrayed in the dialogue Parmenides by Plato, which takes place when Zeno is about 40 years old.[4] In Parmenides, Zeno is described as having once been a zealous defender of his instructor Parmenides; this younger Zeno wished to prove that belief in the physical world as it appears is more absurd than belief in the Eleatic idea of a single entity of existence.[5] By the time that Parmenides takes place, Zeno is shown to have matured and to be more content to overlook challenges to his instructor's Eleatic philosophy.[6] Plato also has Socrates hint at a previous romantic or sexual relationship between Parmenides and Zeno.[6][7] It is unknown how accurate the depiction in Parmenides is to reality, but it is agreed that it bears at least some truth.[3][1]

Zeno died c. 430 BC.[8][2] According to Diogenes Laertius, Zeno was killed while he was engaged in a plot to overthrow the tyrant Nearchus. This account tells that he was captured, and that he was killed after he refused to give the names of his co-conspirators.[3][8] Before his death, Zeno is said to have asked to whisper the names into Nearchus's ear, only to bite the ear when Nearchus approached, holding on until he was killed.[3]

Writings edit

The writings of Zeno have been lost; no fragments of his original thoughts exist. Instead, modern understanding of Zeno's philosophy comes through recording by subsequent philosophers.[2][4] Zeno is only known to have written one book, most likely in the 460s BC.[1] This book is told of in Parmenides, when the character of Zeno describes it as something that he wrote in his youth.[5] According to Plato's account, the book was stolen and published without Zeno's permission.[3] Zeno's paradoxes were recorded by Aristotle in his book Physics.[9] Simplicius of Cilicia, who lived in the 6th century AD, is another one of the main sources of present day knowledge about Zeno.[2][3]

Philosophy edit

Zeno is one of three major philosophers in the Eleatic school, along with Parmenides and Melissus of Samos.[10] This school of philosophy was a form of monism, following Parmenides' belief that all of reality is one single indivisible object.[11][2] Both Zeno and Melissus engaged in philosophy to support the ideas of Parmenides. While Melissus sought to build on them, Zeno instead argued against opposing ideas.[12] Such arguments would have been constructed to challenge the ideas of pluralism, particularly those of the Pythagoreans.[2]

Zeno was the first philosopher to use argumentative rather than descriptive language in his philosophy. Previous philosophers had explained their worldview, but Zeno was the first one to create explicit arguments that were meant to be used for debate. Aristotle described Zeno as the "inventor of dialectic".[13] To disprove opposing views about reality, he wrote a series of paradoxes that used reductio ad absurdum arguments, or arguments that disprove an idea by showing how it leads to illogical conclusions.[12] Furthermore, Zeno's philosophy makes use of infinitesimals, or quantities that are infinitely small while still being greater than zero.[14]

Criticism of Zeno's ideas may accuse him with using rhetorical tricks and sophistry rather than cogent arguments.[5][15] Critics point to how Zeno describes the attributes of different ideas as absolutes when they may be contextual.[5] He may be accused of comparing similarities between concepts, such as attributes that physical space shared with physical objects, and then assuming that they be identical in other ways.[16]

Plurality and space edit

Zeno rejected the idea of plurality, or that more than one thing can exist.[8] According to Proclus, Zeno had forty arguments against plurality.[1]

In one argument, Zeno proposed that multiple objects cannot exist, because this would require everything to be finite and infinite simultaneously.[1][11] He used this logic to challenge the existence of indivisible atoms.[17] Though the first part of this argument is lost, its main idea is recorded by Simplicius. According to him, Zeno began the argument with the idea that nothing can have size because "each of the many is self-identical and one".[18] Zeno argued that if objects have mass, then they can be divided.[11] The divisions would in turn be divisible, and so on, meaning that no object could have a finite size, as there would always be a smaller part to take from it.[19] Zeno also argued from the other direction: if objects do not have mass, then they cannot be combined to create something larger.[11][19]

In another argument, Zeno proposed that multiple objects cannot exist, because it would require an infinite number of objects to have a finite number of objects; he held that in order for there to be a finite number of objects, there must be an infinite number of objects dividing them. For two objects to exist separately, according to Zeno, there must be a third thing dividing them, otherwise they would be parts of the same thing. This dividing thing would then itself need two dividing objects to separate it from the original objects. These new dividing objects would then need dividing objects, and so on.[20]

As with all other aspects of existence, Zeno argued that location and physical space are part of the single object that exists as reality.[11] Zeno believed that for all things that exist, they must exist in a certain point in physical space. For a point in space to exist, it must exist in another point in space.[21] This space must in turn exist in another point in space, and so on.[11] Zeno was likely the first philosopher to directly propose that being is incorporeal rather than taking up physical space.[22]

Motion and time edit

Zeno's arguments against motion contrast the actual phenomena of happenings and experience with the way that they are described and perceived.[23] The exact wording of these arguments has been lost, but descriptions of them survive through Aristotle in his Physics.[24] Aristotle identified four paradoxes of motion as the most important.[25] Each paradox has multiple names that it is known by.[26]

  • The dichotomy, the racetrack, or the stadium[9] argues that no distance can be traveled. To cross a certain distance, one must first cross half of that distance, and to cross that distance, one must first cross half of that distance, and so on. This appears to make crossing any distance impossible, as an infinite number of acts are required to do it.[25] The argument contends that any appearance of movement is simply an illusion.[27] It is unknown whether Zeno intended for it to be impossible to start or finish crossing a certain distance.[3]
  • Achilles and the tortoise, or simply Achilles,[9] argues that a swift runner such as Achilles can never catch up to a slow runner, such as a tortoise. Every time Achilles goes to where the tortoise was, the tortoise will have moved ahead, and when Achilles reaches that next point, then the tortoise will have moved ahead again, and so on. This makes it seem that Achilles can never reach the tortoise.[28] The dichotomy and Achilles are two variations of the same argument, and they effectively come to the same conclusions.[26]
  • The flying arrow, or simply the arrow,[9] argues that all objects must be motionless in space. If an arrow is in the air, it is stationary at any given instant by occupying a specific area in space.[28]
  • The moving rows, also sometimes called the stadium,[9] argues that periods of time can be both halved and doubled simultaneously. It describes a row of objects passing beside other rows of objects in a stadium. If one of the opposing rows is stationary and the other is moving, then it will take a different amount of time to pass them.[29]

Legacy edit

Antiquity edit

 
Zeno shows the Doors to Truth and Falsity (Veritas et Falsitas). Fresco in the Library of El Escorial, Madrid.

Zeno's greatest influence was within the thought of the Eleatic school, as his arguments built on the ideas of Parmenides,[22] though his paradoxes were also of interest to Ancient Greek mathematicians.[30] Zeno is regarded as the first philosopher who dealt with attestable accounts of mathematical infinity.[31] Zeno was succeeded by the Greek Atomists, who argued against the infinite division of objects by proposing an eventual stopping point: the atom. Though Epicurus does not name Zeno directly, he attempts to refute some of Zeno's arguments.[22]

Zeno appeared in Plato's dialogue Parmenides, and his paradoxes are mentioned in Phaedo.[8] Aristotle also wrote about Zeno's paradoxes.[25] Plato looked down on Zeno's approach of making arguments through contradictions.[7] He believed that even Zeno himself did not take the arguments seriously.[5] Aristotle disagreed, believing them to be worthy of consideration.[7] He challenged Zeno's dichotomy paradox through his conception of infinity, arguing that there are two infinities: an actual infinity that takes place at once and a potential infinity that is spread over time. He contended that Zeno attempted to prove actual infinities using potential infinities.[25][3] He also challenged Zeno's paradox of the stadium, observing that it is fallacious to assume a stationary object and an object in motion require the same amount of time to pass.[29] The paradox of Achilles and the tortoise may have influenced Aristotle's belief that actual infinity cannot exist, as this non-existence presents a solution to Zeno's arguments.[22]

Modern era edit

Zeno's paradoxes are still debated, and they remain one of the archetypal examples of arguments to challenge commonly held perceptions.[13][14] The paradoxes saw renewed attention in 19th century philosophy that has persisted to the present.[3] Zeno's philosophy shows a contrast between what one knows logically and what one observes with the senses with the goal of proving that the world is an illusion; this practice was later adopted by the modern philosophic schools of thought, empiricism and post-structuralism. Bertrand Russell praised Zeno's paradoxes, crediting them for allowing the work of mathematician Karl Weierstrass.[7]

Scientific phenomena have been named after Zeno. The hindrance of a quantum system by observing it is usually called the Quantum Zeno effect as it is strongly reminiscent of Zeno's arrow paradox.[32][33] In the field of verification and design of timed and hybrid systems, the system behavior is called Zeno if it includes an infinite number of discrete steps in a finite amount of time.[34]

Zeno's arguments against plurality have been challenged by modern atomic theory. Rather than plurality requiring both a finite and infinite amount of objects, atomic theory shows that objects are made from a specific number of atoms that form specific elements.[11] Likewise, Zeno's arguments against motion have been challenged by modern mathematics and physics.[28] Mathematicians and philosophers continued studying infinitesimals until they came to be better understood through calculus and limit theory. Ideas relating to Zeno's plurality arguments are similarly affected by set theory and transfinite numbers.[14] Modern physics has yet to determine whether space and time can be represented on a mathematical continuum or if it is made up of discrete units.[3]

Zeno's argument of Achilles and the tortoise can be addressed mathematically, as the distance is defined by a specific number. His argument of the flying arrow has been challenged by modern physics, which allows the smallest instants of time to still have a minuscule non-zero duration.[28] Other mathematical ideas, such as internal set theory and nonstandard analysis, may also resolve Zeno's paradoxes.[35] However, there is no definitive agreement on whether solutions to Zeno's arguments have been found.[14]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Vlastos 1995, p. 241.
  2. ^ a b c d e f McGreal 2000.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Palmer 2021.
  4. ^ a b Strobach 2013, p. 32.
  5. ^ a b c d e Sanday 2009, p. 209.
  6. ^ a b Sanday 2009, p. 210.
  7. ^ a b c d Sherwood 2000.
  8. ^ a b c d Vamvacas 2009, p. 151.
  9. ^ a b c d e Strobach 2013, p. 30.
  10. ^ Vamvacas 2009, p. 137.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Vamvacas 2009, p. 152.
  12. ^ a b Vamvacas 2009, p. 150.
  13. ^ a b Vlastos 1995, p. 260.
  14. ^ a b c d Vamvacas 2009, p. 156.
  15. ^ Rossetti 1988, pp. 146–147.
  16. ^ Rossetti 1988, p. 148.
  17. ^ Vamvacas 2009, pp. 151–152.
  18. ^ Vlastos 1995, pp. 241–242.
  19. ^ a b Vlastos 1995, p. 242.
  20. ^ Vlastos 1995, pp. 245–246.
  21. ^ Vlastos 1995, p. 255.
  22. ^ a b c d Vlastos 1995, p. 259.
  23. ^ Sanday 2009, p. 211.
  24. ^ Vlastos 1995, p. 248.
  25. ^ a b c d Vamvacas 2009, p. 153.
  26. ^ a b Strobach 2013, p. 31.
  27. ^ Strobach 2013, p. 34.
  28. ^ a b c d Vamvacas 2009, p. 154.
  29. ^ a b Vamvacas 2009, p. 155.
  30. ^ Vlastos 1995, p. 258.
  31. ^ Boyer, Carl B.; Merzbach, Uta C. (2011). A History of Mathematics (Third ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. p. 538. ISBN 978-0-470-52548-7. Ever since the days of Zeno, men had been talking about infinity,...
  32. ^ Anastopoulos, Charis (2023). Quantum Theory: A Foundational Approach (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-1-009-00840-2.
  33. ^ W.M.Itano; D.J. Heinsen; J.J. Bokkinger; D.J. Wineland (1990). (PDF). Physical Review A. 41 (5): 2295–2300. Bibcode:1990PhRvA..41.2295I. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.41.2295. PMID 9903355. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-07-20. Retrieved 2004-07-23.
  34. ^ Paul A. Fishwick, ed. (1 June 2007). "15.6 "Pathological Behavior Classes" in chapter 15 "Hybrid Dynamic Systems: Modeling and Execution" by Pieter J. Mosterman, The Mathworks, Inc.". Handbook of dynamic system modeling. Chapman & Hall/CRC Computer and Information Science (hardcover ed.). Boca Raton, Florida, USA: CRC Press. pp. 15–22 to 15–23. ISBN 978-1-58488-565-8. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  35. ^ Vamvacas 2009, p. 157.

References edit

  • McGreal, Ian P. (2000). "The Paradoxes of Zeno". In Roth, John K. (ed.). World Philosophers and Their Works. Salem Press. ISBN 978-0-89356-878-8.
  • Palmer, John (2021). "Zeno of Elea". The Philosophers' Magazine (92): 72–78. doi:10.5840/tpm20219216. ISSN 1354-814X.
  • Rossetti, Livio (1988). "The Rhetoric of Zeno's Paradoxes". Philosophy & Rhetoric. 21 (2): 145–152. ISSN 0031-8213. JSTOR 40237542.
  • Sanday, Eric C. (2009). "Eleatic Metaphysics in Plato's Parmenides: Zeno's Puzzle of Plurality". The Journal of Speculative Philosophy. 23 (3): 208–226. doi:10.2307/25670738. ISSN 0891-625X. JSTOR 25670738.
  • Sherwood, John C. (2000). "Zeno of Elea". In Roth, John K. (ed.). World Philosophers and Their Works. Salem Press. ISBN 978-0-89356-878-8.
  • Strobach, Niko (2013). "Zeno's Paradoxes". In Dyke, Heather; Bardon, Adrian (eds.). A Companion to the Philosophy of Time. Wiley. ISBN 978-1-118-52209-7.
  • Vamvacas, Constantine J. (2009). The Founders of Western Thought – The Presocratics: A diachronic parallelism between Presocratic Thought and Philosophy and the Natural Sciences. Springer Science & Business Media. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9791-1. ISBN 978-1-4020-9791-1.
  • Vlastos, Gregory (1995). Graham, Daniel W. (ed.). Studies in Greek Philosophy, Volume I: The Presocratics. Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9780691241883. ISBN 978-0-691-24188-3. S2CID 246537246.

Further reading edit

  • Barnes, Jonathan. 1982. The Presocratic Philosophers. 2d ed. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  • Hornschemeier, Paul (2007). The Three Paradoxes. Seattle, WA: Fantagraphics Books.
  • Lewis, Eric. 1999. "The Dogmas of Indivisibility: On the Origins of Ancient Atomism. In Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy. Vol. 14. Edited by John J. Cleary and Gary M. Gurtler, S. J., 1–21. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.
  • McKirahan, Richard. 2001. "Zeno’s Dichotomy in Aristotle." Philosophical Inquiry 23.1–2: 1–24.
  • Navia, Luis. E. 1993. The Presocratic Philosophers: An Annotated Bibliography. New York and London: Garland.
  • Owen, G. E. L. 1958. "Zeno and the Mathematicians." Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 58:199–222.
  • Papa-Grimaldi, Alba. 1996. "Why Mathematical Solutions of Zeno’s Paradoxes Miss the Point: Zeno’s One and many Relation and Parmenides’ Prohibition." Review of Metaphysics 50.2: 299–314.
  • Plato; Fowler, Harold North (1925) [1914]. Plato in twelve volumes. 8, The Statesman.(Philebus).(Ion). Loeb Classical Library. trans. W. R. M. Lamb. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard U.P. ISBN 978-0-434-99164-8. OCLC 222336129.
  • Proclus; Morrow, Glenn R.; Dillon, John M. (1992) [1987]. Proclus' Commentary on Plato's Parmenides. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-02089-1. OCLC 27251522.
  • Russell, Bertrand (1996) [1903]. The Principles of Mathematics. New York, NY: Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-31404-5. OCLC 247299160.
  • Sainsbury, Mark, 1988. Paradoxes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Salmon, Wesley C. ed. 1970. Zeno’s Paradoxes. Indianapolis, IN, and New York: Bobbs-Merrill.
  • Vlastos, Gregory. 1967. "Zeno of Elea." In The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Vol. 8. Edited by Paul Edwards, 369–379. New York and London: Macmillan.
  • White, Michael J. 1992. The Continuous and the Discrete: Ancient Physical Theories from a Contemporary Perspective. Oxford: Clarendon.

External links edit

zeno, elea, this, article, about, presocratic, philosopher, famed, paradoxes, founder, stoicism, zeno, citium, other, uses, zeno, ancient, greek, Ζήνων, Ἐλεᾱ, της, socratic, greek, philosopher, student, parmenides, eleatics, born, elea, zeno, defended, instruc. This article is about the presocratic philosopher famed for his paradoxes For founder of Stoicism see Zeno of Citium For other uses see Zeno Zeno of Elea ˈ z iː n oʊ ˈ ɛ l i e Ancient Greek Zhnwn ὁ Ἐleᾱ ths c 490 c 430 BC was a pre Socratic Greek philosopher He was a student of Parmenides and one of the Eleatics Born in Elea Zeno defended his instructor s belief in monism the idea that only one single entity exists that makes up all of reality He rejected the existence of space time and motion To disprove these concepts he developed a series of paradoxes to demonstrate why these are impossible Though his original writings are lost subsequent descriptions by Plato Aristotle Diogenes Laertius and Simplicius of Cilicia have allowed study of his ideas Zeno of EleaPortrait of Zeno of Elea by Jan de Bisschop 1628 1671 Bornc 490 BC EleaDiedc 430 BC aged around 60 Elea or SyracuseEraPre Socratic philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolEleaticMain interestsMetaphysics ontologyNotable ideasZeno s paradoxesZeno s arguments are divided into two different types his arguments against plurality or the existence of multiple objects and his arguments against motion Those against plurality suggest that for anything to exist it must be divisible infinitely meaning it would necessarily have both infinite mass and no mass simultaneously Those against motion invoke the idea that distance must be divisible infinitely meaning infinite steps would be required to cross any distance Zeno s philosophy is still debated in the present day and no solution to his paradoxes has been agreed upon by philosophers His paradoxes have influenced philosophy and mathematics both in ancient and modern times Many of his ideas have been challenged by modern developments in physics and mathematics such as atomic theory mathematical limits and set theory Contents 1 Life 1 1 Writings 2 Philosophy 2 1 Plurality and space 2 2 Motion and time 3 Legacy 3 1 Antiquity 3 2 Modern era 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editZeno was born c 490 BC 1 2 3 Little about his life is known for certain except that he was from Elea and that he was a student of Parmenides 1 Zeno is portrayed in the dialogue Parmenides by Plato which takes place when Zeno is about 40 years old 4 In Parmenides Zeno is described as having once been a zealous defender of his instructor Parmenides this younger Zeno wished to prove that belief in the physical world as it appears is more absurd than belief in the Eleatic idea of a single entity of existence 5 By the time that Parmenides takes place Zeno is shown to have matured and to be more content to overlook challenges to his instructor s Eleatic philosophy 6 Plato also has Socrates hint at a previous romantic or sexual relationship between Parmenides and Zeno 6 7 It is unknown how accurate the depiction in Parmenides is to reality but it is agreed that it bears at least some truth 3 1 Zeno died c 430 BC 8 2 According to Diogenes Laertius Zeno was killed while he was engaged in a plot to overthrow the tyrant Nearchus This account tells that he was captured and that he was killed after he refused to give the names of his co conspirators 3 8 Before his death Zeno is said to have asked to whisper the names into Nearchus s ear only to bite the ear when Nearchus approached holding on until he was killed 3 Writings edit The writings of Zeno have been lost no fragments of his original thoughts exist Instead modern understanding of Zeno s philosophy comes through recording by subsequent philosophers 2 4 Zeno is only known to have written one book most likely in the 460s BC 1 This book is told of in Parmenides when the character of Zeno describes it as something that he wrote in his youth 5 According to Plato s account the book was stolen and published without Zeno s permission 3 Zeno s paradoxes were recorded by Aristotle in his book Physics 9 Simplicius of Cilicia who lived in the 6th century AD is another one of the main sources of present day knowledge about Zeno 2 3 Philosophy editMain article Zeno s paradoxes Zeno is one of three major philosophers in the Eleatic school along with Parmenides and Melissus of Samos 10 This school of philosophy was a form of monism following Parmenides belief that all of reality is one single indivisible object 11 2 Both Zeno and Melissus engaged in philosophy to support the ideas of Parmenides While Melissus sought to build on them Zeno instead argued against opposing ideas 12 Such arguments would have been constructed to challenge the ideas of pluralism particularly those of the Pythagoreans 2 Zeno was the first philosopher to use argumentative rather than descriptive language in his philosophy Previous philosophers had explained their worldview but Zeno was the first one to create explicit arguments that were meant to be used for debate Aristotle described Zeno as the inventor of dialectic 13 To disprove opposing views about reality he wrote a series of paradoxes that used reductio ad absurdum arguments or arguments that disprove an idea by showing how it leads to illogical conclusions 12 Furthermore Zeno s philosophy makes use of infinitesimals or quantities that are infinitely small while still being greater than zero 14 Criticism of Zeno s ideas may accuse him with using rhetorical tricks and sophistry rather than cogent arguments 5 15 Critics point to how Zeno describes the attributes of different ideas as absolutes when they may be contextual 5 He may be accused of comparing similarities between concepts such as attributes that physical space shared with physical objects and then assuming that they be identical in other ways 16 Plurality and space edit Zeno rejected the idea of plurality or that more than one thing can exist 8 According to Proclus Zeno had forty arguments against plurality 1 In one argument Zeno proposed that multiple objects cannot exist because this would require everything to be finite and infinite simultaneously 1 11 He used this logic to challenge the existence of indivisible atoms 17 Though the first part of this argument is lost its main idea is recorded by Simplicius According to him Zeno began the argument with the idea that nothing can have size because each of the many is self identical and one 18 Zeno argued that if objects have mass then they can be divided 11 The divisions would in turn be divisible and so on meaning that no object could have a finite size as there would always be a smaller part to take from it 19 Zeno also argued from the other direction if objects do not have mass then they cannot be combined to create something larger 11 19 In another argument Zeno proposed that multiple objects cannot exist because it would require an infinite number of objects to have a finite number of objects he held that in order for there to be a finite number of objects there must be an infinite number of objects dividing them For two objects to exist separately according to Zeno there must be a third thing dividing them otherwise they would be parts of the same thing This dividing thing would then itself need two dividing objects to separate it from the original objects These new dividing objects would then need dividing objects and so on 20 As with all other aspects of existence Zeno argued that location and physical space are part of the single object that exists as reality 11 Zeno believed that for all things that exist they must exist in a certain point in physical space For a point in space to exist it must exist in another point in space 21 This space must in turn exist in another point in space and so on 11 Zeno was likely the first philosopher to directly propose that being is incorporeal rather than taking up physical space 22 Motion and time edit Zeno s arguments against motion contrast the actual phenomena of happenings and experience with the way that they are described and perceived 23 The exact wording of these arguments has been lost but descriptions of them survive through Aristotle in his Physics 24 Aristotle identified four paradoxes of motion as the most important 25 Each paradox has multiple names that it is known by 26 The dichotomy the racetrack or the stadium 9 argues that no distance can be traveled To cross a certain distance one must first cross half of that distance and to cross that distance one must first cross half of that distance and so on This appears to make crossing any distance impossible as an infinite number of acts are required to do it 25 The argument contends that any appearance of movement is simply an illusion 27 It is unknown whether Zeno intended for it to be impossible to start or finish crossing a certain distance 3 Achilles and the tortoise or simply Achilles 9 argues that a swift runner such as Achilles can never catch up to a slow runner such as a tortoise Every time Achilles goes to where the tortoise was the tortoise will have moved ahead and when Achilles reaches that next point then the tortoise will have moved ahead again and so on This makes it seem that Achilles can never reach the tortoise 28 The dichotomy and Achilles are two variations of the same argument and they effectively come to the same conclusions 26 The flying arrow or simply the arrow 9 argues that all objects must be motionless in space If an arrow is in the air it is stationary at any given instant by occupying a specific area in space 28 The moving rows also sometimes called the stadium 9 argues that periods of time can be both halved and doubled simultaneously It describes a row of objects passing beside other rows of objects in a stadium If one of the opposing rows is stationary and the other is moving then it will take a different amount of time to pass them 29 nbsp The dichotomy nbsp Achilles and the tortoise nbsp The flying arrow nbsp The moving rowsLegacy editAntiquity edit nbsp Zeno shows the Doors to Truth and Falsity Veritas et Falsitas Fresco in the Library of El Escorial Madrid Zeno s greatest influence was within the thought of the Eleatic school as his arguments built on the ideas of Parmenides 22 though his paradoxes were also of interest to Ancient Greek mathematicians 30 Zeno is regarded as the first philosopher who dealt with attestable accounts of mathematical infinity 31 Zeno was succeeded by the Greek Atomists who argued against the infinite division of objects by proposing an eventual stopping point the atom Though Epicurus does not name Zeno directly he attempts to refute some of Zeno s arguments 22 Zeno appeared in Plato s dialogue Parmenides and his paradoxes are mentioned in Phaedo 8 Aristotle also wrote about Zeno s paradoxes 25 Plato looked down on Zeno s approach of making arguments through contradictions 7 He believed that even Zeno himself did not take the arguments seriously 5 Aristotle disagreed believing them to be worthy of consideration 7 He challenged Zeno s dichotomy paradox through his conception of infinity arguing that there are two infinities an actual infinity that takes place at once and a potential infinity that is spread over time He contended that Zeno attempted to prove actual infinities using potential infinities 25 3 He also challenged Zeno s paradox of the stadium observing that it is fallacious to assume a stationary object and an object in motion require the same amount of time to pass 29 The paradox of Achilles and the tortoise may have influenced Aristotle s belief that actual infinity cannot exist as this non existence presents a solution to Zeno s arguments 22 Modern era edit Zeno s paradoxes are still debated and they remain one of the archetypal examples of arguments to challenge commonly held perceptions 13 14 The paradoxes saw renewed attention in 19th century philosophy that has persisted to the present 3 Zeno s philosophy shows a contrast between what one knows logically and what one observes with the senses with the goal of proving that the world is an illusion this practice was later adopted by the modern philosophic schools of thought empiricism and post structuralism Bertrand Russell praised Zeno s paradoxes crediting them for allowing the work of mathematician Karl Weierstrass 7 Scientific phenomena have been named after Zeno The hindrance of a quantum system by observing it is usually called the Quantum Zeno effect as it is strongly reminiscent of Zeno s arrow paradox 32 33 In the field of verification and design of timed and hybrid systems the system behavior is called Zeno if it includes an infinite number of discrete steps in a finite amount of time 34 Zeno s arguments against plurality have been challenged by modern atomic theory Rather than plurality requiring both a finite and infinite amount of objects atomic theory shows that objects are made from a specific number of atoms that form specific elements 11 Likewise Zeno s arguments against motion have been challenged by modern mathematics and physics 28 Mathematicians and philosophers continued studying infinitesimals until they came to be better understood through calculus and limit theory Ideas relating to Zeno s plurality arguments are similarly affected by set theory and transfinite numbers 14 Modern physics has yet to determine whether space and time can be represented on a mathematical continuum or if it is made up of discrete units 3 Zeno s argument of Achilles and the tortoise can be addressed mathematically as the distance is defined by a specific number His argument of the flying arrow has been challenged by modern physics which allows the smallest instants of time to still have a minuscule non zero duration 28 Other mathematical ideas such as internal set theory and nonstandard analysis may also resolve Zeno s paradoxes 35 However there is no definitive agreement on whether solutions to Zeno s arguments have been found 14 See also editIncommensurable magnitudes Number that is not a ratio of integersPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets List of speakers in Plato s dialoguesNotes edit a b c d e f Vlastos 1995 p 241 a b c d e f McGreal 2000 a b c d e f g h i j Palmer 2021 a b Strobach 2013 p 32 a b c d e Sanday 2009 p 209 a b Sanday 2009 p 210 a b c d Sherwood 2000 a b c d Vamvacas 2009 p 151 a b c d e Strobach 2013 p 30 Vamvacas 2009 p 137 a b c d e f g Vamvacas 2009 p 152 a b Vamvacas 2009 p 150 a b Vlastos 1995 p 260 a b c d Vamvacas 2009 p 156 Rossetti 1988 pp 146 147 Rossetti 1988 p 148 Vamvacas 2009 pp 151 152 Vlastos 1995 pp 241 242 a b Vlastos 1995 p 242 Vlastos 1995 pp 245 246 Vlastos 1995 p 255 a b c d Vlastos 1995 p 259 Sanday 2009 p 211 Vlastos 1995 p 248 a b c d Vamvacas 2009 p 153 a b Strobach 2013 p 31 Strobach 2013 p 34 a b c d Vamvacas 2009 p 154 a b Vamvacas 2009 p 155 Vlastos 1995 p 258 Boyer Carl B Merzbach Uta C 2011 A History of Mathematics Third ed Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons p 538 ISBN 978 0 470 52548 7 Ever since the days of Zeno men had been talking about infinity Anastopoulos Charis 2023 Quantum Theory A Foundational Approach 1st ed Cambridge University Press p 213 ISBN 978 1 009 00840 2 W M Itano D J Heinsen J J Bokkinger D J Wineland 1990 Quantum Zeno effect PDF Physical Review A 41 5 2295 2300 Bibcode 1990PhRvA 41 2295I doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 41 2295 PMID 9903355 Archived from the original PDF on 2004 07 20 Retrieved 2004 07 23 Paul A Fishwick ed 1 June 2007 15 6 Pathological Behavior Classes in chapter 15 Hybrid Dynamic Systems Modeling and Execution by Pieter J Mosterman The Mathworks Inc Handbook of dynamic system modeling Chapman amp Hall CRC Computer and Information Science hardcover ed Boca Raton Florida USA CRC Press pp 15 22 to 15 23 ISBN 978 1 58488 565 8 Retrieved 2010 03 05 Vamvacas 2009 p 157 References editMcGreal Ian P 2000 The Paradoxes of Zeno In Roth John K ed World Philosophers and Their Works Salem Press ISBN 978 0 89356 878 8 Palmer John 2021 Zeno of Elea The Philosophers Magazine 92 72 78 doi 10 5840 tpm20219216 ISSN 1354 814X Rossetti Livio 1988 The Rhetoric of Zeno s Paradoxes Philosophy amp Rhetoric 21 2 145 152 ISSN 0031 8213 JSTOR 40237542 Sanday Eric C 2009 Eleatic Metaphysics in Plato s Parmenides Zeno s Puzzle of Plurality The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 23 3 208 226 doi 10 2307 25670738 ISSN 0891 625X JSTOR 25670738 Sherwood John C 2000 Zeno of Elea In Roth John K ed World Philosophers and Their Works Salem Press ISBN 978 0 89356 878 8 Strobach Niko 2013 Zeno s Paradoxes In Dyke Heather Bardon Adrian eds A Companion to the Philosophy of Time Wiley ISBN 978 1 118 52209 7 Vamvacas Constantine J 2009 The Founders of Western Thought The Presocratics A diachronic parallelism between Presocratic Thought and Philosophy and the Natural Sciences Springer Science amp Business Media doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 9791 1 ISBN 978 1 4020 9791 1 Vlastos Gregory 1995 Graham Daniel W ed Studies in Greek Philosophy Volume I The Presocratics Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9780691241883 ISBN 978 0 691 24188 3 S2CID 246537246 Further reading editBarnes Jonathan 1982 The Presocratic Philosophers 2d ed London Routledge amp Kegan Paul Hornschemeier Paul 2007 The Three Paradoxes Seattle WA Fantagraphics Books Lewis Eric 1999 The Dogmas of Indivisibility On the Origins of Ancient Atomism In Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy Vol 14 Edited by John J Cleary and Gary M Gurtler S J 1 21 Leiden The Netherlands Brill McKirahan Richard 2001 Zeno s Dichotomy in Aristotle Philosophical Inquiry 23 1 2 1 24 Navia Luis E 1993 The Presocratic Philosophers An Annotated Bibliography New York and London Garland Owen G E L 1958 Zeno and the Mathematicians Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 58 199 222 Papa Grimaldi Alba 1996 Why Mathematical Solutions of Zeno s Paradoxes Miss the Point Zeno s One and many Relation and Parmenides Prohibition Review of Metaphysics 50 2 299 314 Plato Fowler Harold North 1925 1914 Plato in twelve volumes 8 The Statesman Philebus Ion Loeb Classical Library trans W R M Lamb Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard U P ISBN 978 0 434 99164 8 OCLC 222336129 Proclus Morrow Glenn R Dillon John M 1992 1987 Proclus Commentary on Plato s Parmenides Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02089 1 OCLC 27251522 Russell Bertrand 1996 1903 The Principles of Mathematics New York NY Norton ISBN 978 0 393 31404 5 OCLC 247299160 Sainsbury Mark 1988 Paradoxes Cambridge Cambridge University Press Salmon Wesley C ed 1970 Zeno s Paradoxes Indianapolis IN and New York Bobbs Merrill Vlastos Gregory 1967 Zeno of Elea In The Encyclopedia of Philosophy Vol 8 Edited by Paul Edwards 369 379 New York and London Macmillan White Michael J 1992 The Continuous and the Discrete Ancient Physical Theories from a Contemporary Perspective Oxford Clarendon External links edit nbsp Media related to Zeno of Elea at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Works related to Zeno at Wikisource nbsp Quotations related to Zeno of Elea at Wikiquote Palmer John Zeno of Elea In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Zeno of Elea MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews nbsp Laertius Diogenes 1925 Others Zeno of Elea Lives of the Eminent Philosophers Vol 2 9 Translated by Hicks Robert Drew Two volume ed Loeb Classical Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zeno of Elea amp oldid 1191939319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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