Entangled Reality
Athens is remembered for philosophy, democracy, and Socrates. But before a civilization can produce philosophers, it must first create enough stability, prosperity, and coherence for people to ask questions beyond immediate survival. In this first installment of the Hinge Points series, we explore the world that existed before Socrates—the stories, institutions, relationships, and forms of order that made reflection possible. Athens did not emerge from a vacuum. It inherited questions about authority, wisdom, justice, and human flourishing that had occupied civilizations across the Ancient Near East for centuries. Yet something distinctive happened in Athens: a civilization became sufficiently stable to begin examining the foundations of its own success. Along the way we encounter Hesiod, the Seven Sages, and the emergence of a new question—one that would eventually find its most famous expression in Socrates: How do we know that what we call wisdom is actually wisdom? Before Athens could condemn Socrates, it first had to become the kind of civilization capable of producing him. Explore the Atlas, Glossary, and companion essays: Entangled Realityhttps://entangledreality.org [https://entangledreality.org] Intellectual Contexthttps://entangledreality.org/intellectual-context/ [https://entangledreality.org/intellectual-context/] If these conversations are meaningful to you, please consider subscribing and sharing them with others. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit entangledreality.substack.com [https://entangledreality.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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