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Understanding Anaxagoras: Misconceptions and Insights
Introduction to Anaxagoras
- Anaxagoras of Clazomenae is often regarded as the second pluralist after Empedocles, proposing multiple elements (arjés) to explain reality.
- Following Parmenides, who established a singular origin, Anaxagoras argues that multiplicity must arise from the multiple rather than the one.
Key Philosophical Principles
- He accepts Parmenides' view that what exists is uncreated, imperishable, and qualitatively immutable; thus, birth and death are illusions.
- The initial state described by Anaxagoras was a mixture where "all things were together," challenging traditional interpretations of his philosophy.
Homeomerías vs. Semillas
- A common misconception is that Anaxagoras referred to "homeomerías" (homogeneous parts), a term first used by Aristotle rather than found in Anaxagorean fragments.
- Aristotle's interpretation suggests that these homeomerías are composed of parts sharing the same name as the whole (e.g., hair made of hair).
Clarifying Terminology
- The term "espérmata" (seeds), which some attribute to Anaxagoras for describing particles, appears infrequently and does not align with its intended meaning in this context.
- Instead of focusing on specific particles or seeds, Anaxagoras emphasizes "créma" (things), indicating an ambiguity about elemental components.
Nature of Reality According to Anaxagoras
- His primary concern lies not in identifying ingredients but in explaining how diverse realities emerge from an original mixture.
- The second problem with classical interpretations involves misunderstanding his concept of ultimate particles; he believed division continues indefinitely without reaching a minimum unit.
Continuity and Interconnectedness
- Anaxagoras posits that things cannot exist separately; there’s both vertical continuity within divisions and horizontal continuity among all entities.
Anaxagoras and the Role of Noûs
The Concept of Noûs
- Anaxagoras introduces the concept of Noûs, which is described as the only thing that exists separately from everything else. It is essential for understanding the cosmos.
- Noûs is characterized as simple, eternal, pure, and autonomous. It initiates movement in all things but retains some corporeal characteristics.
- This cosmic intellect causes a shift in the original mixture, leading to a separation of elements while maintaining an underlying unity among them.
The Nature of Existence
- Everything contains a part of everything else; however, their proportions vary. For example, if something has more wood than gold, it will be perceived as wood.
- Visible things are merely reflections or combinations of unseen elements. The dominance of one element can mislead us into thinking it is separate from others.
Illusion of Individuality
- Anaxagoras argues that individuality is an illusion; true existence reflects an essential communion within the cosmos where nothing exists independently except for intellect.
Innovations in Cosmogony
- Anaxagoras uniquely assigns a significant role to intellect (Noûs), contrasting with earlier thinkers who attributed creation to necessity or mechanical processes.
- Unlike Empedocles' cyclical view of cosmogony, Anaxagoras posits that intellect organizes the cosmos once rather than through continuous cycles.
Critiques and Influence
- Both Plato and Aristotle critique Anaxagoras: Plato finds his intellect lacking presence while Aristotle sees it as a fallback explanation for unexplainable phenomena.
- Despite some inaccuracies (e.g., believing Earth was flat), Anaxagoras made significant contributions to cosmology by asserting that celestial bodies like the Moon reflect sunlight rather than emit their own light.