Zeno of Elea (495?-435? B.C.) |
INDEX |
Zeno was born in the Greek colony of Elea in southern Italy around 495 B.C. Very little is known about him. He was a student of the philosopher Parmenides and accompanied his teacher on a trip to Athens in 449 B.C. There he met a young Socrates and made enough of an impression to be included as a character in one of Plato's books Parmenides. On his return to Elea he became active in politics and eventually was arrested for taking part in a plot against the city's tyrant Nearchus. For his role in the conspiracy, he was tortured to death. Many stories have arisen about his interrogation. One anecdote claims that when his captors tried to force him to reveal the other conspirators, he named the tyrant's friends. Other stories state that he bit off his tongue and spit it at the tyrant or that he bit off the Nearchus' ear or nose.
Zeno was a philosopher and logician, not a mathematician. He is credited by Aristotle with the invention of the dialectic, a form of debate in which one arguer supports a premise while another one attempts to reduce the idea to nonsense. This style relied heavily on the process of reductio ad absurdum, which is the reduction of an idea to absurdity by finding an inherent contradiction. Zeno wrote only one known work, Epicheiremata , in which he attacks the opponents of his teacher Parmenides.
Zeno's greatest fame is from his paradoxes. With only 200 words surviving from his only book, the only records we have of his brainchilds are from secondary sources, mainly Aristotle. Originally, there were about forty but only eight have survived. The purpose of the arguments was a defense of his teacher's ideas. Parmenides believed that reality was one, immutable and unchanging. Motion, change, time and plurality were all mere illusions. This, of course, attracted many critics. Zeno's paradoxes attempted to show that holding the opposite position, that reality was many, was contradictory and absurd. Therefore, "the one" must be the correct philosophy. Curiously, using Zeno's methods, his own position can also be shown to be contradictory as well.
The four most famous paradoxes are the Dichotomy, the Achilles , the Arrow, and the Stadium.
They start at the first position. Row A stays stationary while rows B
& C move at equal speeds in opposite directions. When they have reached
the second position, each B has passed twice as many C's as A's. Thus it
takes row B twice as long to pass row A as it does to pass row C. However,
the time for rows B & C to reach the position of row A is the same.
So half the time is equal to twice the time.
mathematical explanation
philosophical explanation