- Unit-point atomism
According to some twentieth-century philosophers, [
Paul Tannery (1887), "Pour l'histoire de la science Hellène" (Paris), and J. E. Raven (1948), "Pythagoreans and Eleatics" (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), are the major purveyors of this view. unit-point atomism was the philosophy of thePythagoreans , a conscious repudiation ofParmenides and theEleatics . It stated that atoms were infinitesimally small ("point") yet possessed corporeality. It was a predecessor of Democriteanatomism . Most recent students ofpresocratic philosophy , such as Kurt von Fritz,Walter Burkert ,Gregory Vlastos ,Jonathan Barnes , and Daniel W. Graham have rejected that any form of atomism can be applied to the early Pythagoreans (beforeEcphantus of Syracuse ). [Gregory Vlastos and Daniel W. Graham (1996), "Studies in Greek Philosophy: The Presocratics" (Princeton: Princeton University Press), 257.]Unit-point atomism was invoked in order to make sense of a statement ascribed to
Zeno of Elea in Plato's "Parmenides": "these writings of mine were meant to protect the arguments of Parmenides against those who make fun of him. . . My answer is addressed to the partisans of the many. . ." [Jonathan Barnes (1982), "The Presocratic Philosophers" (London: Routledge), 232–33.] The anti-Parmenidean pluralists were supposedly unit-point atomists whose philosophy was essentially a reaction against the Eleatics. This hypothesis, however, to explainZeno's paradoxes , has been thoroughly discredited.Notes
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