pplpod
In this episode of pplpod, we explore Anaximander of Miletus, the ancient Greek thinker who made one of the boldest leaps in the history of human thought: the idea that Earth does not rest on anything at all. Born around 610 BC in the Ionian city of Miletus, Anaximander challenged a world still explained through myth, gods, and divine moods. Instead of seeing thunder as Zeus’s anger or the sea as Poseidon’s temper, he argued that nature worked through balance, geometry, and mechanical laws. The episode follows how he moved beyond his teacher Thales, who believed everything came from water, and proposed the apeiron, the boundless or indefinite source from which all opposing forces emerge and eventually return. The episode also breaks down Anaximander’s strange but revolutionary cosmology. He imagined Earth as a floating cylinder suspended at the center of infinite space, held in place not by pillars, turtles, or oceans, but by symmetry and equal forces acting from every direction. From there, the discussion moves into his mechanical model of the heavens, with fiery wheels, flute-like openings, and natural explanations for eclipses and moon phases. It also covers his early theory that life began in the sea, his idea that humans must have developed inside fish-like creatures because infants are too helpless to survive alone, and his practical achievements, including the first published map of the known world, the use of the gnomon to track solstices, and natural explanations for rain, thunder, and earthquakes. Key topics covered: • Anaximander of Miletus and the birth of natural philosophy • The apeiron, balance, isonomy, and the move away from myth • The unsupported Earth, infinite space, and cosmic symmetry • Fiery wheels, eclipses, moon phases, and mechanical cosmology • Early evolutionary thinking, world maps, sundials, weather, and earthquakes Source credit: Research for this episode included transcript materials and supporting philosophical and scientific history sources accessed 6/10/2026. Content is summarized and adapted for commentary and educational use.
300 episoder
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