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Because humanity thinks itself important.

We are not the measure of anything, except we make ourselves so.....

Life existed before us, the Earth existed long before we came along, and life and the Earth and the rest of the universe will still be here long after humanity's days have ended.

Also, one could say we are 'trapped' inside our own range of human perception. We can't overcome our own boundaries in interpreting the world. Combine this with the belief that there is no greater conscience than ourselves. Then for at least humanity itself, it has the be the measure of all things.

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Q: Why is man the measure of all things?
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Related questions

What does man is the measure of all things mean to the Greeks?

what does man is the measure of all things mean to the Greeks?


Who said man was the measure of all things?

Protagoras


Who is Man is the measure of all things?

The Greek philosopher Protagoras.


What can be attributed to protagoras an greek humanist?

"man is the measure of all things


Who said man is the measure of all things?

The Greek philosopher Protagoras.


What does protagora mean when he sya mena is the measure of all things?

That man is more important that all other things.


Who is responsible for one of the most famous of all greek dictums man is the measure of all things?

Protagoras


Who is responsible for one of the most famous of all Greek dictum's Man is the measure of all things?

Protagoras


Why man is a measurable things?

Perhaps you refer to the famous statement of Protagoras (c.485-c.410 B.C.): Man is the measure of all things. This means, on the one hand, that all qualities must be understood in human terms, and on the other, that only humans can measure things.


Man is the major of all things?

The expression is Man ( meaning human beings) is the measure of all things. This saying, from a fragment of Protagora, has been variously interpreted. Perhaps it means that we can only understand things in human terms.


What sayings are attributed to Protagoras an early Greek humanist?

Protagoras apparently wrote :(on knowledge) "The only real ill-doing is the deprivation of knowledge."(on reality) "Man is the measure of all things: of things which are, that they are, and of things which are not, that they are not."(on the divine) "Concerning the gods, I have no means of knowing whether they exist or not or of what sort they may be, because of the obscurity of the subject, and the brevity of human life."


What philosopher said man is the measure of all things?

protagoras dogmatic, rhetorical, and relative, he was the opposite of everything Plato believed in