Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Stoics and Socrates :: essays research papers
 The Stoics and Socrates      The question of the reality of the soul and its distinction from the body is  among the most important problems of philosophy, for with it is bound up the  doctrine of a future life. The soul may be defined as the ultimate internal  principle by which we think, feel, and will, and by which our bodies are  animated. The term "mind" usually denotes this principle as the subject of our  conscious states, while "soul" denotes the source of our vegetative activities  as well. If there is life after death, the agent of our vital activities must  be capable of an existence separate from the body. The belief in an active  principle in some sense distinct from the body is inference from the observed  facts of life. The lowest savages arrive at the concept of the soul almost  without reflection, certainly without any severe mental effort. The mysteries  of birth and death, the lapse of conscious life during sleep, even the most  common operations of imagination and memory, which abstract a man from his  bodily presence even while awake; all such facts suggest the existence of  something besides the visible organism. An existence not entirely defined by the  material and to a large extent independent of it, leading a life of its own. In  the psychology of the savage, the soul is often represented as actually  migrating to and fro during dreams and trances, and after death haunting the  neighborhood of its body. Nearly always it is figured as something extremely  volatile, a perfume or a breath.    In Greece, the heartland of our ancient philosophers, the first essays of  philosophy took a positive and somewhat materialistic direction, inherited from  the pre-philosophic age, from Homer and the early Greek religion. In Homer,  while the distinction of soul and body is recognized, the soul is hardly  conceived as possessing a substantial existence of its own. Severed from the  body, it is a mere shadow, incapable of energetic life. Other philosophers  described the soul's nature in terms of substance. Anaximander gives it an  aeriform constitution, Heraclitus describes it as a fire. The fundamental  thought is the same. The soul is the nourishing agent which imparts heat, life,  sense, and intelligence to all things in their several degrees and kinds. The  Pythagoreans taught that the soul is a harmony, its essence consisting in those  perfect mathematical ratios which are the law of the universe and the music of  the heavenly spheres. All these early theories were cosmological rather than  psychological in character. Theology, physics, and mental science were not as  yet distinguished.    In the "Timaeus" (p.  					    
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