

Materialism
14 snips Apr 24, 2008
In this engaging discussion, Anthony O’Hear, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Buckingham, Anthony Grayling from Birkbeck College, and Caroline Warman, Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford, explore the evolution of materialism from ancient Greece to modern science. They tackle its impact on religion and free will, delve into atomism through Epicurus and Lucretius, and dissect the philosophical tensions with Christianity. The conversation highlights materialism's influence on contemporary thought and its relationship with atheism, consciousness, and the foundations of modern science.
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Materialism Defined
- Materialism asserts that only matter, forces and processes exist and nothing immaterial does.
- Anthony Grayling says minds and gods are not independent entities but arise from material operations.
Greek Roots Of Materialism
- Early Greek philosophers proposed single material substances like water or air as the basis of everything.
- Anthony Grayling notes this pre-Socratic materialism treated humans as part of the same natural substance.
Epicurus’ Clinamen And Inclination
- Epicurus refined atomism with ideas like downward motion and the clinamen (swerve).
- Caroline Warman explains clinamen introduces indeterminacy allowing room for inclination and pleasure within material interactions.