Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- NATURE AND THE GREEKS
- Dedication
- I The motives for returning to ancient thought
- II The competition, reason v. senses
- III The Pythagoreans
- IV The Ionian Enlightenment
- V The religion of Xenophanes. Heraclitus of Ephesus
- VI The Atomists
- VII What are the special features?
- Bibliography
- SCIENCE AND HUMANISM
I - The motives for returning to ancient thought
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- NATURE AND THE GREEKS
- Dedication
- I The motives for returning to ancient thought
- II The competition, reason v. senses
- III The Pythagoreans
- IV The Ionian Enlightenment
- V The religion of Xenophanes. Heraclitus of Ephesus
- VI The Atomists
- VII What are the special features?
- Bibliography
- SCIENCE AND HUMANISM
Summary
When, early in 1948, I set out to deliver a course of public lectures on the subject dealt with here, I still felt the urgent need of prefacing them with ample explanations and excuses. What I was expounding then and there (to wit, at University College, Dublin) has come to form a part of the little book before you. Some comment from the standpoint of modern science was added, and a brief exposition of what I deem to be the peculiar fundamental features of the present-day scientific world-picture. To prove that these features are historically produced (as against logically necessitated), by tracing them back to the earliest stage of Western philosophic thought, was my real objective in enlarging on the latter. Yet, as I said, I did feel a little uneasy, particularly since those lectures arose from my official duty as a professor of theoretical physics. There was need to explain (though I was myself not so thoroughly convinced of it) that in passing the time with narratives about ancient Greek thinkers and with comments on their views I was not just following a recently acquired hobby of mine; that it did not mean, from the professional point of view, a waste of time, which ought to be relegated to the hours of leisure; that it was justified by the hope of some gain in understanding modern science and thus inter alia also modern physics.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- 'Nature and the Greeks' and 'Science and Humanism' , pp. 3 - 21Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014