Eleatic School
The Eleatic School was a pre-Socratic philosophical tradition founded by Parmenides of Elea in southern Italy, continuing through Zeno of Elea and Melissus of Samos. Its core doctrine — that reality is a single, unchanging, indivisible whole and that change and multiplicity are illusions — established the most powerful challenge to Heraclitean flux in ancient philosophy. The Eleatic position is not merely a historical rival; it is the permanent structural alternative to process ontology, the claim that stability is more fundamental than change. The school did not merely argue against becoming. It made becoming logically impossible, and in doing so forced two millennia of philosophy to account for how change could be real without being contradictory. The Eleatic challenge remains unanswered in any system that treats change as fundamental without specifying what persists through change.