Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle: The Thinkers Who Changed History
Fexingo History · Mediterranean
Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle: The Thinkers Who Changed History
In the sunlit agoras of Athens and the shaded groves of the Academy, three figures laid the foundations of Western thought. Socrates, the gadfly who questioned everything, left no writings—yet his method of relentless inquiry shaped philosophy forever. His student Plato, fleeing the trauma of Socrates’ execution, built a metaphysical system of Forms and penned the Republic, a utopian blueprint that still haunts political theory. And Aristotle, Plato’s most brilliant pupil, rejected the ethereal for the empirical, cataloguing ethics, biology, and logic with a systematic mind that would define science for two millennia. This show, hosted by Lucas and Luna, traces the thread from Socrates’ trial in 399 BCE, through Plato’s Academy and Aristotle’s Lyceum, to the enduring influence of their ideas on Christianity, the Enlightenment, and modern democracy. We’ll explore the Peloponnesian War’s chaos, Plato’s disastrous Sicilian ventures, Aristotle’s tutelage of Alexander the Great, and the Hellenistic world that scattered their texts across the Mediterranean. Why does a Socratic dialogue still provoke, and why do we still debate Plato’s ideal state? Join us as we argue with the dead.