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Logic IV. 46
you that each of them has to steadiness of reality? This is settled by looking at practical questions. And the conclusion holds good of processes as of things. For are not actions also a 'one species of beings?' [foreign text]. If so surely names ought to be appropriate. The matter is of no consequence but the form should be that which is naturally fit for the purpose. He thinks the first men in Greece had for gods only the sun, moon, earth, stars, and heaven. Of the gods we know nothing [foreign text]. the doubtful way in which he speaks of the most famous utterance of Heraclitus is remarkable [foreign text].
Nevertheless the indications are that a great part of all the stuff in the Ceratylus came from a Heraclitan source and was intended to support the philosophy of Heraclitus. he thinks the sound of R expresses motion' I penetration, the [sibilants?] shaking and wind, dentals, binding and rest in a place; L smoth

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