The Intersection of Philosophy and Mythology in the Greco-Roman Thought

| Titolo | The Intersection of Philosophy and Mythology in the Greco-Roman Thought | Autore | Robert Scott | Prezzo | € 2,99 | Editore | Historia Magna | Lingua | Testo in Inglese | Formato | DRMFREE | |
 |
Descrizione |
The relationship between philosophy and mythology in the Greco-Roman world is one of profound complexity, entangled in the very roots of Western intellectual tradition. Mythology, as the oldest form of storytelling and meaning-making, predates philosophy but provides the foundation upon which philosophical thought was first constructed. It is in myth that ancient cultures embedded their understanding of the cosmos, human nature, and the divine, weaving narratives that sought to explain both the physical world and the moral order governing human life. Philosophy, emerging in the sixth century BCE with the Pre-Socratic thinkers, did not outright reject mythology but instead engaged with it, seeking either to reinterpret its claims through reason or to provide alternative explanations rooted in logical inquiry.
|