What is another word for Anaximander?

Pronunciation: [ˈanɐksˌɪmandə] (IPA)

Anaximander, the Greek philosopher, was a prominent thinker of the 6th century BC. The name "Anaximander" can be used interchangeably with other terms, such as "pre-Socratic philosopher," "Miletian philosopher," or even simply "philosopher." Other synonyms for Anaximander include "naturalist," "astronomer," and "cosmologist," as his theories focused on the natural world and the origin of the universe. Anaximander's ideas and concepts were highly regarded during his time and greatly influenced later philosophers such as Aristotle. The name Anaximander will forever be associated with his legacy as a pioneering philosopher of the ancient world.

What are the hypernyms for Anaximander?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Anaximander

He had far more in common with the Orphici, with Abaris and Epimenides, than with Thales or Anaximander.
"Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius"
Samuel Dill
And in so far the philosophy of Anaximander is materialistic.
"The Approach to Philosophy"
Ralph Barton Perry
Thales, Anaximander and Anaximenes of Miletus, Bias of Priene, Solon of Athens, Pittakus of Lesbos, the most celebrated Hellenic philosophers, had in former and happier days been guests at the court of Croesus in Sardis.
"The Complete Historical Romances of Georg Ebers"
Georg Ebers

Famous quotes with Anaximander

  • Anaximander relies on the accuracy of geometry in matters beyond the range of any kind of verification—in its application to cosmic proportions—and also in contradiction to appearance, which suggests that the sun is about as large in diameter as the width of a human foot. The concept of geometrical similarity is also the precondition for Anaximander's attempt to construct a map of the world.
    Anaximander
  • The big bang and the steady state debate in some ways echoed that between the ideas of Anaximander and Anaxagoras from two and a half millennia earlier. Anaxagoras had envisaged that at one time "all things were together" and that the motive force for the universe originated at a single point... Anaximander on the other hand wanted a universe determined by "the infinite" and needed an "eternal motion" to explain the balancing process of things coming into being and passing away in an eternal universe... ancient philosophy was debating the alternatives of a creation event starting the universe from a single point versus a continuous creation in an eternal universe.
    Anaximander
  • Anaximander displays all the symptoms of the intellectual fever spreading through Greece. His universe is no longer a closed box, but infinite in extension and duration. The raw material is none of the familiar forms of matter but a substance without definite properties except for being indestructible and everlasting. Out of this stuff all things are developed, and into it they return... infinite multitudes of other universes have already existed, and been dissolved again into the amorphous mass. The earth is a cylindrical column, surrounded by air; it floats upright... without support or anything to stand on, yet it does not fall because, being in the centre, it has no preferred direction... if it did, this would disturb the symmetry and balance of the whole. The spherical heavens enclose the atmosphere "like the bark of a tree", and there are several layers... to accommodate the various stellar objects. ...The sun is merely a hole... the moon... it phases... due to recurrent partial stoppages of the puncture, and so are the eclipses. The stars are pin-holes in a dark fabric through which we glimpse the cosmic fire filling the space between two layers of "bark". ...it is the first approach to a mechanical model of the universe. ...yet the machinery looks like it had been dreamed up by a surrealist painter... closer to Picasso than to Newton.
    Anaximander
  • Anaximander the Milesian, affirmed the infinite to be the first principle, and that all things are generated out of it, and corrupted again into it. His infinite is nothing else but matter.
    Anaximander
  • All those... who discourse concerning nature, always subject a certain other nature of... elements, to the infinite... But no one of those who make the elements to be finite introduces infinity. Such, however, as make infinite elements, as Anaxagoras and Democritus, say that the infinite is continuous by contact. ...Rationally, too, do all philosophers consider the infinite as a principle; for it cannot be in vain, nor can any other power be present with it than that of a principle: for all things are either the principle, or from the principle; but of the infinite there is no principle, since otherwise it would have an end. ...it is also unbegotten and uncorruptible, as being a certain principle: for... end is the corruption of everything. ...It likewise appears to comprehend and govern all things, as those assert who do not introduce other causes beside the infinite... It would seem also that this is divine: for it is immortal and indestructible, as Anaximander says, and most of the physiologists.
    Aristotle

Related words: Anaximander's work, Anaximander's contributions, Anaximander's theories

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