Abstract

In this article, we introduce a novel approach, ‘Being of a Thing’, owing to the penetrating work carved out by Heidegger and Wittgenstein in the first half of the 20th Century, to study classic philosophical inquiries and use it to resolve three ancient Greek paradoxes, i.e. Anaximander’s riddle of origin, Hiappasus’ incommensurability in reality and Parmenides’ impossible to think ‘What is Not’. In early times, the three paradoxes were treated as independent inquiries and were either resolved negatively, that is, given a No answer, or did not have consensus on the solution yet. In this article, we resolve all of them positively with the new approach and show that they all contribute coherently to the understanding of ‘Being of a Thing’.

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