Page:Early Greek philosophy by John Burnet, 3rd edition, 1920.djvu/143

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SCIENCE AND RELIGION
129

hard.[1] Least of all can we admit that Xenophanes allowed the existence of subordinate or departmental gods; for it was just the existence of such that he was chiefly concerned to deny. At the same time, I cannot help thinking that Freudenthal was more nearly right than Wilamowitz, who says that Xenophanes "upheld the only real monotheism that has ever existed upon earth."[2] Diels, I fancy, comes nearer the mark when he calls it a "somewhat narrow pantheism."[3] But all these views would have surprised Xenophanes himself about equally. He was really Goethe's Weltkind, with prophets to right and left of him, and he would have smiled if he had known that one day he was to be regarded as a theologian.

  1. Xenophanes calls his god "greatest among gods and men," but this is simply a case of "polar expression," to which parallels will be found in Wilamowitz's note to Euripides' Herakles, v. 1106 Cf. especially the statement of Herakleitos (fr. 20) that "no one of gods or men" made the world.
  2. Griechische Literatur, p. 38.
  3. Parmenides Lehrgedicht, p. 9.

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