Brilliant! This book was truly awe-inspiring. I learned everything I need to know about Heraclitus' Logos, the Logos-fire and it's Wise Design throughout the cosmos. Logos is about "One is Everything" and it means Word or the Word of God in a Christian context, but in more originally Greek context, Logos means collecting, counting, accounting, recounting, tale-telling, ratio, relation, reason, calculating, conversing, thinking etc. I now know where the "logy" suffix in our English language comes from, as in biology, "legein" is also related to the word "dialectic".
"Having all these aspects in mind, I think the Logos of Heraclitus needs no translation, but should simply enter that most hospitable linguistic venue, English. Our language is, after all, already loaded with somewhat mangled compounds of logia-endings, the -logy terms from archaeology to zoology, and also of legein derivatives, of which “dialectic” is the philosophically most potent. Transcription will allow logos to retain in English its whole burden of activities: collecting, counting, accounting, recounting, tale-telling; then ratio, relation, through to reason and all the derivative words for calculating, conversing, thinking—Language in all its internal origins and in its external manifestations, its utterance, that is, its “outering.”
Brann, Eva. The Logos of Heraclitus (pp. 124-125). Paul Dry Books. Kindle Edition.
I also know the difference between Heraclitus and Parmenides which is the difference between logologist and ontologist (being).
"Can anyone deny that these two are about the same search, the search pursued of old and now and ever, even though the one—to return them to their proper order—thinks as a logologist (so to speak), the other as an ontologist? And that they set out for the future, for us, the two perennial, yet ever-evolving, terms of that inquiry: Logos and Being and its one paramount and never-resolved perplexity: One and/or Many?"
Brann, Eva. The Logos of Heraclitus (p. 106). Paul Dry Books. Kindle Edition.
It is not known for sure which is the first Western philosopher, Heraclitus or Parmenides, however, I believe the former is first. An essential read. It is amazing to read and gain the knowledge of the first philosopher. I earnestly and highly recommend this essential little book!