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MAJOR ETHICAL PHILOSOPHERS

By erossss
  • 624 BCE

    Thales of Miletus (Materialist and Naturalism)

    Thales of Miletus (Materialist and Naturalism)
    He was the founder of the Milesian School of Natural Philosophy, and the teacher of Anaximander. He was perhaps the first subscriber to Materialist and Naturalism in trying to define the substance or substances of which all material objects were composed of water.
  • 610 BCE

    Anaximander

    Anaximander
    He was an early proponent of science, and is sometimes considered to be the first true scientist, and to have conducted the earliest recorded scientific experiment. He is often considered the founder of Astronomy, and he tried to observe and explain different aspects of the universe and its origins, and to describe the mechanics of celestial bodies in relation to the Earth.
  • 585 BCE

    Anaximenes

    Anaximenes
    In the physical sciences, Anaximenes was the first Greek to distinguish clearly between planets and stars, he used his principles to account for various natural phenomena, such as thunder and lightning, rainbows, earthquakes, etc.
  • 570 BCE

    PYTHAGORAS (Pythagorianism)

    PYTHAGORAS (Pythagorianism)
    He was the founder of the influential philosophical and religious movement or cult called Pythagorianism, and he was probably the first man to actually call himself a Pythagoras allegedly exercised an important influence on the work of Plato.
  • 428 BCE

    PLATO

    PLATO
    He was a hugely important Greek philosopher and Mathematician from the Socratic (or Classical) period. In many middle period dialogues, Republic and Phaedrus Plato advocates a belief in the immortality of the soul, and several dialogues end with long speeches imagining the afterlife. More than one dialogue contrasts knowledge and opinion, perception and reality, and nature and custom, and body and soul.
  • 384 BCE

    ARISTOTLE

    ARISTOTLE
    • He is a towering figure in ancient Greek philosophy, making contributions to logic, metaphysics, mathematics, physics, biology, botany, ethics, politics, agriculture, medicine, dance and theatre. He was a student of Plato who in turn studied under Socrates. Aristotle’s philosophy stresses biology, instead of mathematics like Plato. He also defined the supreme god as an activity of the rational soul in accordance to virtue.
  • 354 BCE

    AUGUSTINE (NEOPLATONISM)

    AUGUSTINE (NEOPLATONISM)
    He was an early North African Christian theologian and philosopher whose writings influenced the development of Western Christianity and Western Philosophy. St. Augustine is a fourth century philosopher whose groundbreaking philosophy infused Christian Doctrine with Neoplatonism. He is famous for being an inimitable Catholic theologian and for his agnostic contributions to Western.
  • 344 BCE

    ZENO DE CITIUM (HELLENISTIC PHILOSOPHY)

    ZENO DE CITIUM (HELLENISTIC PHILOSOPHY)
    He was born around 490 B.C in the Greek colony of Elea in southern Italy. The date is an estimate based on Plato’s report of a visit to Athens by Zeno and his teacher Parmenides when Socrates was a very young man and Zeno being about 25 years younger that Parmenides. Little is known for certain about Zeno’s life. He founded the Hellenistic philosophy in the early 3rd century B.C. in Athens with its school known as stoicism.
  • 341 BCE

    EPICURUS

    EPICURUS
    He was a Greek philosopher of the Hellenistic period. He was the founder of the ancient Greek philosophical school of Epicureanism, whose main goal was to attain a happy, tranquil life, characterized by the absence of pain and fear, through the cultivation of friendship, freedom and an analyzed life.
  • 1225

    THOMAS AQUINAS

    THOMAS AQUINAS
    He was an Italian philosopher and theologian of the Medieval period. He was the foremost classical proponent of natural theology at te peak of Scholasticism in Europe, and the founder of the Thomistic school of philosophy and theology. Combining the theological principles of faith with the philosophical principles of reason, he ranked among the most influential thinkers of Medieval Scholaticism.
  • IMMANNUEL KANT (KANTIAN ETHICS)

    IMMANNUEL KANT (KANTIAN ETHICS)
    He is one of the most influential philosophers in the history of Western philosophy. His contributions to metaphysics, epistemology, ethics and aesthetics have had profound impact on almost every philosophical movement that followed him. He made the Kantian Ethics which developed as a result of Enlightenment rationalism, is based on the view that the only intrinsically good thing is a goodwill; an action can only be good of its maximum.
  • JOHN RAWLS (THEORY OF JUSTICE

    JOHN RAWLS (THEORY OF JUSTICE
    • An American moral and political philosophy and ethics in the liberal tradition. A theory of Justice is a work of political philosophy and ethics by John Rawls, in which the author attempts to solve the problem of distributive justice by utilizing a variant of the familiar devise of the social contract.
  • JURGEN HEBERMAS (COMMUNICATIVE ACTION )

    JURGEN HEBERMAS (COMMUNICATIVE ACTION )
    A German sociologist and philosopher in tradition of critical theory and pragmatism. The Theory of Communicative is a two volume 1981 book wherin it continues his project of finding a way to ground the social sciences in theory of Language which had been set in On the Logic of the Social Science.