“Aurea mediocritas” The concepts of measure, measurement and moderation in Presocratic philosophy

Authors

Keywords:

Presocratics, measure, measurement, moderation, calculation, virtue, prudence, restraint, pleasure, delight, welfare, nature, knowledge of nature

Abstract

An important moral tradition was formed in ancient Greece, starting from the early 6th century BC and extending approximately to the first half of the 5th century BC. This social morality which values virtue above pleasure (?????) and ordains the observance of measure (??????), namely the morality of prudence (?????????), was shaped thanks to the orders of the Oracle of Delphi and the Seven Sages for self-restraint and avoidance of excess, but also thanks to the moral teaching of Presocratic philosophers and the legislation of wise and enlightened legislators, as it seems that the requirement for measure ensures the existence of polis (city) and makes it operating orderly and in a harmonic manner.

The purpose of this article is to show how the requirement for the measure was reflected in the theoretical thinking of Presocratic philosophers. The paper deals with the period, when the concepts of measure, measurement and moderation penetrated into the fields of ethics and political philosophy, fields that still have not acquired a more systematic form as it happens in the era of Plato, Aristotle and their descendants.

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“Aurea mediocritas” The concepts of measure, measurement and moderation in Presocratic philosophy

Published

23-03-2017

How to Cite

George, P. (2017). “Aurea mediocritas” The concepts of measure, measurement and moderation in Presocratic philosophy. SOCRATES, 4(4), 33–41. Retrieved from https://www.socratesjournal.com/index.php/SOCRATES/article/view/248