英文摘要 |
In the present study, we attempt to deal with the question of ἓν πάντα εἶναι (all is one) as the structure of λόγος in Heraclitus’ thinking. To Heraclitus, the concept of everliving fire which creates the world as ἀρχή (principle) must not only be of material meaning, but also has to be the order or intelligibility of matter itself at the same time. The requirement of this dual meaning of ἀρχή is shown in the structure of λόγος, ἓν πάντα εἶναι. Thus, using the relation between κόσμος (world’s order) and πῦρ ἀείζωον (an everliving fire) in Fragment 30 as the study path, we attempt to verify how the implicated dual meaning of πῦρ ἀείζωον is clearly expressed in the concept of λόγος. Next, ἓν πάντα εἶναι, the structure of λόγος, will be further analyzed, and its concrete content will be discussed from two aspects: one is the meaning of “attunement in repeated turning back on itself” or “seeking for the unity in opposition” mentioned in Fragment 51, and the other is the question of one and all which was demonstrated under the relation between soul and river in Fragment 12. Finally, the question of λόγος and intelligibility will be dealt with by taking “σωφρονεῖν” (sound thinking) in Fragment 112 as the central concept. |