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THE ART AND THOUGHT
OF HERACLITUS

The art and thought
ofHeraclitus
An edition of the fragments with
translation and commentary
CHARLES H. KAHN
Professor of Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania

CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
CAMBRIDGE
LONDON NEW YORK NEW ROCHELLE
MELBOURNE SYDNEY

PUBLISHED BY THE PRESS SYNDICATE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE

The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK
40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211, USA
10 Stamford Road, Oakleigh, VIC 3166, Australia
Ruiz de Alarcon 13, 28014 Madrid, Spain
Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa
http://www.cambridge.org
© Cambridge University Press 1979
This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception
and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements,
no reproduction of any part may take place without
the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
First published 1979
First paperback edition 1981
Reprinted 1983, 1987, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1999, 2001
Library of Congress Catalogue card number: 77-82499
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
Heraclitus
The art and thought of Heraclitus.
1. Philosophy, Ancient
I. Title II. Kahn, Charles H.
182'.4 B220.E5
ISBN 0 521 28645 X paperback

Transferred to digital printing 2004

for Charalampos S. Floratos

a true friend and scholar, master of the
classical tradition and hierophant of
the beauty of Cephalonia

Contents

Preface
Bibliography and abbreviations
General introduction
1 The man, the time and the place
2 The book
3 The doctrine: Heraclitus and his predecessors

IX

xiii
1
1
3
9

Introductory note to text and translation

25

The fragments

27

On reading Heraclitus

87

Commentary on the fragments

96

Appendices
I Dubious quotations from Heraclitus
II Doxographic reports
III Heraclitus and the Orient, apropos of a recent book
by M.L. West

288
290
297

Notes

303

Concordances

341

Indexes
1 General index
2 Index of Passages discussed

349
353

Preface

Heraclitus was a great prose artist, one of the most powerful stylists
not only of Greek antiquity but of world literature. He was also a
major thinker, perhaps the only pre-Socratic philosopher whose
thought is of more than historical interest today. His reflections upon
the order of nature and man's place within it, upon the problems of
language, meaning and communication still seem profound; and
many of his insights will remain illuminating for the modern reader,
not merely for the specialist in ancient thought.
The aim of the present work is to demonstrate the truth of these
claims by making Heraclitus accessible to contemporary readers as a
philosopher of the first rank. With this in mind I have tried to rearrange the fragments in a meaningful order, to give a translation that
reflects as far as possible the linguistic richness of the original, and to
provide a commentary designed to make explicit the wealth of meaning that cannot be directly conveyed in a translation but is latent in
Heraclitus' own words, in his tantalizing and suggestive form of
enigmatic utterance.
The Greek text is given here together with the translation, since
any interpretation is obliged to make continual reference to the original wording. And I think it should be possible to read the fragments
in a meaningful order, even if one reads them in Greek. No attempt
has been made to produce a new critical edition, and I have generally
followed the text of Marcovich where he diverges from Diels. But in
some nine cases my text differs from both Diels and Marcovich in
such a way that the interpretation of the fragment is altered, sometimes radically (see p. 26). The notes to the translation are designed
to provide the minimum of information required to understand
Heraclitus' words without a knowledge of Greek. The commentary is
there for those readers who would go further. But in the commentary
too all Greek words have been given in transliteration, and the element
of scholarly controversy has been kept to a minimum (although I
have tried to acknowledge my debt to my predecessors, and to take






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