“ Nothing in the visible world is exempt from change and decay ”
Bertrand Russell, A History of Western Philosophy (1945). copy citation
Author | Bertrand Russell |
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Source | A History of Western Philosophy |
Topic | change decay |
Date | 1945 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | |
Weblink | http://www.ntslibrary.com/PDF%20Books/History%20of%20Western%20Philosoph... |
Context
“The view that the heavenly bodies are eternal and incorruptible has had to be abandoned. The sun and stars have long lives, but do not live for ever. They are born from a nebula, and in the end they either explode or die of cold. Nothing in the visible world is exempt from change and decay; the Aristotelian belief to the contrary, though accepted by medieval Christians, is a product of the pagan worship of sun and moon and planets.
CHAPTER XXIV Early Greek Mathematics and Astronomy I AM concerned in this chapter with mathematics, not on its own account, but as it was related to Greek philosophy—a relation which, especially in Plato, was very close.”
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