Imagine the Presocratics are like kids who love to ask why everything happens, and they try to figure it out without using magic or fairies.
Long ago, before people had phones or even books, some smart thinkers in ancient Greece started asking big questions. They wondered: What makes the world go round? What is everything made of? These thinkers were called the Presocratics, and they're like the first scientists ever!
Like a Puzzle with Pieces
Think about building a puzzle, you start with one piece, then add more until you see the whole picture. The Presocratics did something similar. They looked at things in nature, like water or fire, and thought maybe everything came from those simple ideas.
For example, Thales said maybe everything started with water, just like how a fish lives in water, and we need water to grow plants and drink! He was trying to explain the world using something real, not magic or fairies, but things you can touch and feel every day.
Examples
- One person thought everything was made from fire, another said it was water.
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See also
- How Does Plato and Aristotle: Crash Course History of Science #3 Work?
- How Does Isaac Newton | Illustrating History Work?
- How Does Presocratics Part 1: Early Greek Philosophy Work?
- What is the Socrates? – 8-Bit Philosophy?
- What is Phaedo?