preSocratics
The pre-Socratics is a collective label for Greek philosophers who studied and wrote before Socrates, roughly from the 6th century BCE to the early 5th century BCE. They sought natural explanations for the world and its processes, challenging mythological accounts. Central to their inquiry were questions about the nature of reality, change, and knowledge. They introduced rational inquiry as a method, often focusing on a single underlying principle or on the arrangement of many substances. Because most of their writings survive only in fragments quoted by later authors, our understanding of their views is indirect and subject to interpretation.
Key figures and ideas vary across the tradition. The Milesians—Thales of Miletus, Anaximander, and Anaximenes—posed natural
Their legacy lies in shifting inquiry from myth to rational explanation, laying groundwork for later metaphysics,