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Journal of nephrology · Nov 2009
Biography Historical ArticleThe nature of water: Greek thought from Homer to Acusilaos.
- Rosa Maria De Santo, Carmela Bisaccia, Massimo Cirillo, Rosa Maria Pollastro, Ilaria Raiola, and Luca Salvatore De Santo.
- Istituto Italiano per gli Studi Filosofici, Naples, Italy. bluetoblue@libero.it
- J. Nephrol. 2009 Nov 1;22 Suppl 14:92-7.
AbstractGreek philosophy finds its roots in the myth of Homer's and Hesiod's poems and especially in Orphism which introduced the concept of a soul separated from the body with an independent principle, psiche (soul), to be rewarded or punished after death. Orphism was an important step in Greek culture. It introduced the divine into man, the soul which does not die with the body and reincarnates. From Orphism started the need of rituals capable of separating the spirit from the body. From Homer to Acusilaos, water was a very important element which connected humans and gods, long before Thales of Miletus defined it the arche.
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