Often called the first philosopher, Thales famously claimed that "all is water." While it sounds simple today, it was revolutionary because it suggested a single, material explanation for the world's complexity, rather than attributing everything to the whims of gods like Poseidon or Zeus.
A student of Thales, he argued that the source couldn't be a specific element like water, but must be the Apeiron —an "indefinite" or "boundless" substance that balances the opposites of the world (hot/cold, wet/dry).
Western philosophy didn’t start with a book or a decree, but with a shift in perspective. Around the 6th century BCE, in the Greek city-state of Miletus, a group of thinkers began to swap myth for logic. This transition—often called the move from —marks the official beginning of the Western intellectual tradition. 1. The Pre-Socratics: Searching for the Arche The beginning of western philosophy : interpret...
The idea that there is a single underlying order to the universe.
Unlike mythology, which was often dogmatic, philosophy encouraged students to argue with their teachers to find a closer version of the truth. 3. The Shift to the Human Condition Often called the first philosopher, Thales famously claimed
The beginning of Western philosophy is the story of humanity's "coming of age." It represents the moment we decided that the universe is a puzzle to be solved rather than a mystery to be feared.
Before Socrates focused on human ethics, the earliest philosophers (the Pre-Socratics) were obsessed with the natural world. They sought the —the fundamental "stuff" or first principle of the universe. Around the 6th century BCE, in the Greek
The Birth of Reason: Interpreting the Dawn of Western Philosophy