When the Ground Shifts. Xenophanes, Heraclitus, and Parmenides. (My History of Philosophy.
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The Living In Faith Everyday Podcast: L.I.F.E. Podcast:
This is my Bi-Monthly podcast that seeks to respond to and engage with the world of Philosophy and current trends in the Arts and Entertainment from a Christian Perspective.
Welcome to my next episode, taking you through the history of philosophy from my Christian perspective.
Today the philosophical landscape doesn’t just expand… it tilts, cracks, and rearranges itself entirely. Up to now, our journey through the Presocratics has been almost gentle. The Milesians and Pythagoras were asking big questions, yes, but they were still playing the same game. Today, the whole question changes, and today, the ground beneath our feet begins to move. Because, in this episode, we meet three thinkers who are no longer content to identify the universe’s ingredients. They want to know something far more unsettling:
What is real?
Is the world we see the world as it truly is?
And what, if anything, can we say about the divine?
And the thinkers who ask them—Xenophanes, Heraclitus, and Parmenides—will reshape the entire trajectory of Western thought.
Xenophanes: The Poet Who Challenged the Gods
He is the first Greek thinker to say, “God is not like us, and we should stop pretending He is.”
Heraclitus: The Philosopher of Fire and Flux
Heraclitus is the first to say that reality is not static; it is dynamic, restless, alive.
Parmenides: The Philosopher Who Froze the Universe
For Parmenides, change is impossible. Reality is one, eternal, unchanging, indivisible.
If Heraclitus gives us a river, Parmenides gives us a sort of philosophical block of marble.
Their clash will shape Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, the medieval theologians, and what later emerges as the entire Christian philosophical tradition.
This is the moment in the story where philosophy becomes self‑aware and where the questions deepen. Where the conversation becomes even more dramatic, and woven through these thinkers are themes that Christians will later recognise with startling clarity:
The criticism of idols.
The search for the One behind everything.
The desire for a truth that does not move
So welcome to today’s episode, where the river meets the rock, where the poet meets the prophet, and where the ancient world begins to wrestle with questions that still shape our faith, our philosophy, and our understanding of reality.
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