AbstractThis paper reconstructs the systematic and escalating logical crisis engineered by a distinctmethodological lineage within pre‐Platonic thought: the Logicians. Comprising Xenophanesof Colophon, Parmenides of Elea, Zeno of Elea, and Gorgias of Leontini, these thinkers wereunited not by a shared metaphysics but by a shared commitment to using pure logic as a destruc-tive tool—testing and ultimately dismantling the foundations of coherent discourse. We tracethe crisis from its origin in Xenophanes’ epistemic humility, through Parmenides’ legislative banon the indeterminate ground, Zeno’s dialectical enforcement of that ban, to Gorgias’s terminalreductio that left philosophy without an object, a method, or a medium. The paper then maps theresulting radiation of post‐crisis philosophical strategies—sophistry, atomism, cynicism, skepti-cism, and Plato’s reconstructive attempt—arguing that Socrates of Athens alone provided an exitthat preserved philosophy as a truth‐directed enterprise by transforming the crisis into a nav-igational way of life. Finally, we show how the Neo‐Pre‐Platonic Naturalist (NPN) frameworkcompletes this Socratic project, formalizing “long seeking” into a recursive, corrective protocolfor navigating a reality whose ultimate ground remains, as the Logicians correctly saw, unspeak-able. Keywords: Logicians, Xenophanes, Parmenides, Zeno, Gorgias, Eleatic crisis, indeterminateground, Apeiron, reductio ad absurdum, dialectic, n
Eli Adam Deutscher (Thu,) studied this question.
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