Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle: The Thinkers Who Changed History — Fexingo History

Aristotle's Biology: The Philosopher Who Classified Life

8 min · 1 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Aristotle's Biology: The Philosopher Who Classified Life

Descripción

We know Aristotle as the philosopher of logic, ethics, and politics. But he also spent years cataloging marine life off Lesbos, dissecting squid and sea urchins, and building a system to classify animals that would endure for nearly two millennia. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Aristotle's biological works — his observations of the octopus's reproductive arms, his dissection of the mammalian heart, his belief that all living things form a 'ladder of nature' (the scala naturae), and his theory of spontaneous generation. They discuss his collaboration with Theophrastus, his use of empirical dissection, and why his biology, unlike his physics, stands up remarkably well to modern scrutiny. They also touch on the limits of his method: his reliance on anecdote, his failure to grasp evolution, and his teleological view that every organism has a purpose. From the shores of Pyrrha to the pages of his History of Animals, this is Aristotle as a working naturalist — not just a thinker, but a scientist. #Aristotle #HistoryOfScience #AncientBiology #Lesbos #Theophrastus #ScalaNaturae #HistoryOfAnimals #GenerationOfAnimals #MarineBiology #AncientGreece #Peripatetics #Lyceum #Empiricism #Classification #Teleology #Dissection #SpontaneousGeneration #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle: The Thinkers Who Changed History — Fexingo History!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

138 episodios

episode Diogenes the Cynic: The Philosopher Who Shocked Athens artwork

Diogenes the Cynic: The Philosopher Who Shocked Athens

Diogenes of Sinope was the most provocative thinker of the ancient world—purposefully homeless, openly contemptuous of power, and armed with nothing but a cloak, a staff, and a biting wit. This episode tracks his life from exile in Sinope to his infamous encounters in Athens and Corinth: the takedown of Platonic abstractions (he demonstrated the absurdity of Plato's 'featherless biped' by plucking a chicken), his riposte to Alexander the Great ('stand out of my sun'), and his startling views on self-sufficiency, shame, and natural living. We explore how Diogenes's radical simplicity challenged the foundations of Greek society, whether his public acts (masturbation, begging, defecation) were genuine asceticism or performance art, and how his teachings fed into Stoicism. We also look at the ancient sources—chiefly Diogenes Laërtius—and grapple with the historical problem of Cynic writings: almost none survive. Why did Diogenes choose a life of voluntary poverty, and what did he hope to achieve by violating every social norm? #DiogenesOfSinope #Cynicism #AncientGreekPhilosophy #DiogenesLaërtius #AlexanderTheGreat #Plato #Socrates #Sinope #Athens #Corinth #Antisthenes #Stoicism #Asceticism #AncientGreece #Philosophy #History #FexingoHistory #Counterculture Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 de jul de 202610 min
episode Aristotle's Student in the Field: Theophrastus and the Birth of Botany artwork

Aristotle's Student in the Field: Theophrastus and the Birth of Botany

Long overshadowed by his mentor Aristotle, Theophrastus was the ancient world's first systematic botanist. After Aristotle fled Athens in 323 BC, Theophrastus took over the Lyceum and began classifying plants with a rigor that wouldn't be matched for nearly two thousand years. This episode follows Theophrastus from his origins on the island of Lesbos to his landmark work *Historia Plantarum*, where he identified plant parts, described germination, and even speculated on photosynthesis. We also explore his other contributions—from his treatise on weather signs (*De Signis Tempestatum*) to his ethical *Characters*, a gallery of Athenian personality types. Theophrastus's legacy survived through the Byzantine scholar Arethas of Caesarea and later inspired Renaissance botanists like Leonhart Fuchs. Lucas and Luna delve into how one man's tireless observation and classification created a science that still underpins biology today. #Theophrastus #Aristotle #Lyceum #HistoriaPlantarum #AncientBotany #Lesbos #DeSignisTempestatum #Characters #Peripatetic #ArethasOfCaesarea #LeonhartFuchs #RenaissanceBotany #AncientGreece #HistoryOfScience #PlantClassification #Botany #FexingoHistory #Mediterranean Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

6 de jul de 20267 min
episode Aristotle's Lyceum: The Peripatetic School That Shaped Science artwork

Aristotle's Lyceum: The Peripatetic School That Shaped Science

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Aristotle's Lyceum, the philosophical school he founded in Athens in 335 BCE. Unlike Plato's Academy, the Lyceum was a research institution where Aristotle and his students collected specimens, dissected animals, and catalogued knowledge. Lucas explains how the Lyceum's 'Peripatetic' name came from Aristotle's habit of teaching while walking, and how the school pioneered systematic biology, zoology, and political science. They touch on Aristotle's collaboration with Theophrastus, his successor, and the massive collection of constitutions that informed the 'Politics'. The episode also covers the Lyceum's decline after Aristotle's flight from Athens, its revival under Andronicus of Rhodes, and its eventual disappearance. A fresh angle from previous episodes, focusing on the Lyceum as a proto-research university and its lost works on the constitutions of 158 Greek city-states. #Aristotle #Lyceum #Peripatetic #Theophrastus #AncientGreece #Philosophy #Science #Biology #Zoology #Politics #ConstitutionOfAthens #Athens #335BCE #AndronicusOfRhodes #AlexanderTheGreat #Hellenistic #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Aristotle's Biology: How a Philosopher Revolutionised Natural Science artwork

Aristotle's Biology: How a Philosopher Revolutionised Natural Science

When we think of Aristotle, we usually imagine the philosopher who founded logic and ethics. But he also spent years dissecting sea creatures off the island of Lesbos, cataloguing hundreds of species, and developing a theory of life that would dominate science for nearly two thousand years. In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore Aristotle's biological works, including his observations of the cuttlefish, the chick embryo, and the strange reproductive habits of the eel. They discuss how Aristotle's concept of the soul as the 'form' of the body shaped his biology, and why his work on marine animals was so accurate that it was only surpassed in the 19th century. Along the way, they consider the legacy of his student Theophrastus, the role of dissection in ancient science, and the controversial theory of spontaneous generation. This is a side of Aristotle that rarely makes the textbooks, but it reveals a restless mind determined to understand every living thing. #Aristotle #Biology #HistoryOfScience #AncientGreece #Lesbos #Theophrastus #Cuttlefish #SpontaneousGeneration #Lyceum #PeripateticSchool #MarineBiology #Zoology #Embryology #NaturalHistory #Teleology #ScalaNaturae #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer10 min
episode The Death of Socrates: Hemlock, Politics, and Philosophy's First Martyr artwork

The Death of Socrates: Hemlock, Politics, and Philosophy's First Martyr

In 399 BCE, Athens condemned its most famous citizen to death. But what really happened in Socrates's final hours? This episode reconstructs the last day of Socrates's life using Plato's Phaedo, Xenophon's Apology, and legal records from the Athenian dikastēria. Lucas and Luna explore the political context behind the verdict—the lingering trauma of the Thirty Tyrants, the amnesty of 403 BCE, and the charges of impiety and corruption of youth. They examine the hemlock's effects on the human body, the ritual of the pharmakon, and the philosopher's calm refusal to escape despite Crito's bribe offer. They discuss the role of Xanthippe, the grief of his followers, and the final argument for the immortality of the soul. Sources include Plato's Phaedo and Crito, Xenophon's Memorabilia, Diogenes Laërtius, and modern toxicological studies. This is not just a story about one man's death—it's about how a civilization chooses to end a life when ideas feel threatening. And it raises a question that haunts liberal democracies still: how do you kill an idea by killing the person who holds it? #Socrates #Hemlock #Phaedo #Crito #Xanthippe #Athens #399BCE #Pharmakon #ImmortalityOfTheSoul #ThirtyTyrants #Amnesty #DiogenesLaërtius #Plato #Xenophon #Philosophy #Martyrs #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4 de jul de 202610 min