DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198875314.013.0038 ISSN:

Heraclitus’s Theology

Richard Neels

Abstract

The early Greek philosophers pioneered important philosophical and theological concepts that are still with us today. The concept of omnipresence is a case in point. Thales is reported to have said that ‘all things are full of gods’. Anaximander states that a boundless substance ‘contains all things and steers all things’; Xenophanes that God is immobile but shakes all things with his mind; Anaxagoras that ‘everything is in everything’. With respect to specifically divine omnipresence, it isn’t until Heraclitus that we find a clear and robust commitment to an omnipresent God. What sets Heraclitus’s theology apart from his predecessors’ is that it is more developed and integrated into a holistic metaphysical worldview. Heraclitus also invented a philosophically rich metaphor for the mode of divine omnipresence in the world: oil-spice mixture. This chapter offers an examination of Heraclitus’s theology and explores its relation to the concept of divine omnipresence in philosophical theology.

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