Ancient Greece · before 600 BC
The Myths
“Why does the world work the way it does?”
Long before anyone called themselves a philosopher, people explained the world with stories. Why does it thunder? The god Thor is swinging his hammer. Why do crops grow? Because we pleased the gods. These myths made a scary, mysterious world feel less random — but they couldn't be questioned or tested.
“Myths are public dreams; dreams are private myths.”
The big idea
Myths are stories that explain nature through the actions of gods and heroes — thunder, seasons, harvests, love, and war. They gave people a sense of order and meaning in a world they could not yet explain.
What they changed
Myths were humanity's first attempt to answer the big ‘why’ questions, and they shaped art, religion, and language for thousands of years. Philosophy and science were born the moment people started asking for natural explanations instead of supernatural ones.
The controversy
The trouble with a myth is that you can't test it or argue with it — you either believe the story or you don't. Around 600 BC the first Greek philosophers made a daring break: they asked ‘what natural cause did this?’ instead of ‘which god did this?’
In their words
- “Myth is much more important and true than history.” — Joseph Campbell
✦ A curious detail
The word ‘cereal’ comes from Ceres, the Roman goddess of the harvest!
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