The only thing that is constant is change.

Same as to Change is the only thing that is constant, Change is the only permanent thing in this world, Change is the law of life, Change is the only evidence of life, and so on and so forth.

“Upon those who step into the same rivers flow other and yet other waters. All things are in flux like a river.” -Trans. John Mansley Robinson, An Introduction to Early Greek Philosophy

Response: The change that occurs in a river is vivid and unmistakable. By claiming that the change we see in a river is true of our world in general, it has the idea that some things simply stay the same: We may not see the change so clearly, but change is occurring nonetheless. This might be easiest to accept in the physical realm, where, for example, on the level of atoms, there is constant motion in all physical objects, no matter how solid and stationary they may seem. And certainly it is easy enough to see that the bodies of all living things are constantly changing, not only aging but also going through various biological processes and exchanges with the environment, such as breathing. But what about other realms? For Heraclitus, he might not have been thinking about things such as relationships and love, or a person’s identity, but his insistence on the fundamental fact of change encourages us to consider whether change is not inevitable in such aspects of life as well.

-The Daily Philosopher

Who is Heraclitus?

Find out here ——> http://home.wlu.edu/~mahonj/Ancient_Philosophers/Heraclitus.htm

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