Parmenides' Grand Deduction: A Logical Reconstruction of the Way of Truth by Michael V. Wedin [Book Review]

Journal of the History of Philosophy 53 (4):775-776 (2015)
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Abstract

Over the past few decades there has been a rebellion brewing in the world of Parmenides scholarship. Most of the things you probably think you know about the man have come under serious and sustained attack. No longer is it safe to accept on trust the view—which G. E. L. Owen so forcefully defended in his 1960 paper “Eleatic Questions”—that according to Parmenides there exists only one thing, ungenerated, indestructible, unchanging, indivisible, and spherical. Nor is it safe to assume that he had no real commitment to empirical theorizing, and sought only to demolish the cosmological tradition that was initiated and developed by his Ionian predecessors Thales, Anaximander, and Anaximenes. All of..

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Sosseh Assaturian
University of Washington
Matt Evans
University of Texas at Austin

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