This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
The ancient world was a crucible of thought, where philosophy was born not in the cloisters of universities but amid bustling ports, fertile plains, and vibrant city-states. Among the earliest and most influential centers of such inquiry was the city of Miletus, located on the western coast of Asia Minor in what is now modern-day Turkey. Flourishing in the 6th century BCE, Miletus gave rise to a remarkable intellectual movement that would come to be known as the Milesian School-a group of thinkers whose bold inquiries laid the foundation for Western philosophy and natural science.
This audiobook is a journey into the heart of that school, whose key figures-Thales, Anaximander, and Anaximenes-sought to explain the cosmos not through myth or divine caprice, but through reason, observation, and speculation about the underlying principles (archai) of nature. In doing so, they initiated a radical transformation in human thought: the shift from mythos to logos.
Though the writings of the Milesians survive only in fragments and second-hand reports, their legacy is immense. They were not mere speculators; they were pioneers of a new way of engaging with the world, one grounded in observation, rationality, and a belief in the intelligibility of nature. The questions they asked-What is the world made of? What is the nature of change? Can the universe be explained by natural causes?-remain central to philosophical and scientific inquiry today.
This audiobook aims to present the ideas of the Milesian School not only in their historical context but also as living philosophical positions that continue to inspire and provoke. In understanding them, we do not merely look back; we look inward, and perhaps even forward, along the trajectory of reason that they helped set in motion.
This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
The ancient world was a crucible of thought, where philosophy was born not in the cloisters of universities but amid bustling ports, fertile plains, and vibrant city-states. Among the earliest and most influential centers of such inquiry was the city of Miletus, located on the western coast of Asia Minor in what is now modern-day Turkey. Flourishing in the 6th century BCE, Miletus gave rise to a remarkable intellectual movement that would come to be known as the Milesian School-a group of thinkers whose bold inquiries laid the foundation for Western philosophy and natural science.
This audiobook is a journey into the heart of that school, whose key figures-Thales, Anaximander, and Anaximenes-sought to explain the cosmos not through myth or divine caprice, but through reason, observation, and speculation about the underlying principles (archai) of nature. In doing so, they initiated a radical transformation in human thought: the shift from mythos to logos.
Though the writings of the Milesians survive only in fragments and second-hand reports, their legacy is immense. They were not mere speculators; they were pioneers of a new way of engaging with the world, one grounded in observation, rationality, and a belief in the intelligibility of nature. The questions they asked-What is the world made of? What is the nature of change? Can the universe be explained by natural causes?-remain central to philosophical and scientific inquiry today.
This audiobook aims to present the ideas of the Milesian School not only in their historical context but also as living philosophical positions that continue to inspire and provoke. In understanding them, we do not merely look back; we look inward, and perhaps even forward, along the trajectory of reason that they helped set in motion.

Milesian School: A Note on the Philosophical Movement

Milesian School: A Note on the Philosophical Movement
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Product Details
BN ID: | 2940203634047 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Pons Malleus |
Publication date: | 09/06/2025 |
Series: | Western Philosophical Schools , #43 |
Edition description: | Unabridged |
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