pre-Socratic
See also: Presocratic
English
Alternative forms
- præ-Socratic (archaic)
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: prē'sŏkrăʹtĭk, IPA(key): /ˌpɹiːsɒˈkɹætɪk/
Adjective
pre-Socratic (not comparable)
- (historical) Existing in Ancient Greece before the flourishing of the philosopher Socrates (circa 469–399 BCE).
Translations
Noun
pre-Socratic (plural pre-Socratics)
- (historical) Any of the pre-Socratic philosophers, viz. Thales (circa 624–546 BCE), Anaximander (circa 610–546 BCE), Anaximenes (circa 585–525 BCE), Pythagoras (circa 576–495 BCE), Xenophanes (circa 570–480 BCE), Heraclitus (circa 535–475 BCE), Parmenides (early-5th century BCE), Anaxagoras (circa 500–428 BCE), Empedocles (circa 490–430 BCE), and Democritus (circa 460–370 BCE).
Translations
any one of the pre-Socratic philosophers
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