Xenophanes of Colophon (Greek Ξενοφάνης , 570–480 BC) was a Greekphilosopher, poet, and social and religious critic. Our knowledge of his views comes from his surviving poetry, all of which are fragments passed down as quotations by later Greek writers. His poetry criticized and satirized a wide range of ideas, including the belief in the pantheon of anthropomorphicgods and the Greeks' veneration of athleticism. He is the earliest Greek poet who claims explicitly to be writing for future generations, creating fame that will reach all of Greece, and never die while the Greek kind of songs survives.See p. 123.
Xenophanes rejected the idea that the gods resembled humans in form. One famous passage ridiculed the idea by claiming that, if oxen were able to imagine gods, then those gods would be in the image of oxen. Because of his development of the concept of a "one god greatest among gods and men" that is abstract, universal, unchanging, immobile and always present, Xenophanes is often seen as one of the first monotheists, in the Western philosophy of religion. This vision is not undisputed; while it seems clear that Xenophanes differed markedly from the commonly held cosmology of his contemporaries, it is less clear that his ideas were congruent with monotheism per se. Final resolution of this question is unlikely barring new texts coming to light.
He also wrote that poets should only tell stories about the gods which were socially uplifting, one of many views which foreshadowed the work of Plato. Xenophanes also concluded from his examination of fossils that water once must have covered all of the Earth's surface. His epistemology, which is still influential today, held that there actually exists a truth of reality, but that humans as mortals are unable to know it. Therefore, it is possible to act only on the basis of working hypotheses - we may act as if we knew the truth, as long as we know that this is extremely unlikely. This aspect of Xenophanes was brought out again by the late Sir Karl Popper and is a basis of Critical rationalism.
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The Homeric Gods and Xenophanes' Opposing Theory of the Divine - A brief paper from 2000 by Ursula DeYoung, summarizing this thinker's relation to the Homeric view of divinity.
Meta Description: [ Ursula DeYoung describes the theological skepticism of the ancient Greek poet Xenophanes who argued that Homer was mistaken in his promotion of a divine pantheon of anthropomorphic gods. Xenophanes rejected polytheism and wrote that there was only one omnipotent god. ]
Xenophanes of Colophon - From the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, by James Lesher. Article on Xenophanes of Colophon, the founder of Eleatic philosophy.