Ancient Greece · 384–322 BC
Aristotle
“How do we organize everything we know?”
Aristotle was Plato's best student — but he disagreed with his teacher. Plato thought real truth lived in perfect ideas; Aristotle said NO, truth starts with what we can see, touch, and observe in the real world. He studied everything — animals, stars, logic, politics — and built systems to organize it all.
“Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom.”
The big idea
Aristotle broke with Plato by insisting that knowledge starts with observing the real, physical world, not a hidden realm of Forms. He believed everything has a purpose, and that we understand things by carefully observing and classifying them. In ethics he taught the ‘golden mean’: virtue is the balanced middle between two extremes.
What they changed
He practically invented whole fields — logic, biology, physics, and political science — and his system of classification organized human knowledge for nearly 2,000 years. His logic was the standard taught in schools until the 1800s.
The controversy
Because his authority was so huge, some of his mistakes (like heavier objects falling faster) held science back for centuries until Galileo and Newton overturned them. His claims that some people are ‘natural slaves’ and that women are inferior are rightly condemned today.
In their words
- “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.” — Will Durant, summarizing Aristotle
- “Man is by nature a political animal.” — Aristotle
✦ A curious detail
Aristotle was the personal tutor of Alexander the Great, who went on to conquer much of the known world.
Read further
Portrait: Roman copy of a Greek bust of Aristotle. Public domain · via Wikimedia Commons.
Meet Aristotle on the voyage
A curated lecture, a short enquiry, and a wax-seal medallion to acquire — and the next thinker unlocks. No account, no password.
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