Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (fifth century BCE) is best known for his stance that there is a share of everything in everything. He puts forward this theory of extreme mixture as a solution to the problem of change that he and his contemporaries inherited from Parmenides: that what is cannot come from what is not (and vice versa). For Anaxagoras the fundamental elements of reality are the opposites (hot, cold, wet, dry, etc.), which are instances of physical causal powers. Everything there is in the universe (except nous) derives from the composition of the opposites into (phenomenologically emergent) wholes. Every type of whole contains in different proportions every type of opposite. The opposites’ extreme mixture is made possible by their omnipresence and hence compresence in the universe. This in turn is facilitated by the fact that the opposites exist as unlimitedly divided; each of their instances approaches zero extension. Thus, they can be scattered everywhere and be in everything. By positing that the ultimate constituents of the universe exist as unlimitedly divided, Anaxagoras is the first gunk-lover in the history of metaphysics. |