Western philosophy begins not with a system, but with a question. When Thales of Miletus asked what underlying principle governed the cosmos, he inaugurated something far greater than a theory about nature. He introduced the conviction that reality possesses an intelligible order accessible to human reason.
This shift may seem unremarkable to the modern mind, yet, in the ancient world, it represented a profound civilizational rupture. Before Thales, the structure of the cosmos was explained primarily through myth, divine genealogies, and sacred narratives. Nature reflected the will of gods, not principles discoverable through inquiry.
Thales altered the direction of Western thought by seeking a rational explanation for the world from within nature itself.
Living in Miletus during the late seventh and early sixth centuries BC, in a city shaped by commerce, navigation, and contact with Egypt and Babylon, Thales embodied both the practical and speculative spirit of the early Greek world. According to Aristotle, Herodotus, and Diogenes Laërtius, he was not merely a philosopher, but also an astronomer, engineer, geometer, and political thinker. He studied eclipses, measured pyramids, observed the stars, and searched for patterns beneath the visible order of things.
What distinguished him from earlier traditions was not technical knowledge alone, but the belief that the world contained an internal coherence that human reason could discover.
The Milesians called this originating principle the arché—a word meaning beginning, source, and governing principle simultaneously. It became the starting point of natural philosophy. The question that moved Thales was simple yet radical: What is the world ultimately made of? Is there a primordial principle from which all things emerge and to which all things return?
For Thales, that principle was water. To modern readers, this conclusion may appear primitive or naïve. Yet such a reaction misunderstands the significance of his insight. The importance of Thales lies not primarily in the substance he identified, but in the method he introduced. For the first time in Western thought, nature was approached as something governed by intelligible causes rather than divine genealogy alone.
Aristotle later explained the reasoning behind these first philosophers in Metaphysics (I, 3). They sought a permanent reality underlying change itself, something from which all things emerged and to which all things returned. Though forms changed, some enduring substrate remained.
Thales observed that life depended upon moisture. Seeds were moist, nourishment required moisture, and living beings could not survive without it. From these observations he concluded that water was the originating principle of nature.
This choice was not arbitrary. Across nearly all ancient civilizations, water symbolized life, fertility, destruction, continuity, and renewal. The Nile shaped Egypt. The Tigris and Euphrates sustained Mesopotamia. The Indus, Ganges, and Yellow River nourished entire civilizations in the East. Water stood at the boundary between chaos and order.
Thales transformed this ancient intuition into rational inquiry. In doing so, he initiated one of the most important transitions in human history: the movement from myth toward reason.
The symbolic force of water carried an even deeper philosophical significance. Water is always in motion, yet it preserves its identity. It is the same in rain, river, and sea. Within it coexist permanence and transformation, what Heraclitus would later recognize as becoming. Without fully realizing it, Thales anticipated one of the central tensions of Western philosophy: the relationship between being and change.
His gesture also marked the birth of physis, nature understood as an autonomous and intelligible reality. The world was no longer interpreted merely through sacred narrative or divine caprice, but through patterns, causes, and discoverable principles. When Thales measured the shadow of a pyramid or calculated an eclipse, he was doing more than mathematics. He was demonstrating that the order of the cosmos could be known.
This confidence in rational intelligibility was revolutionary. The cosmos ceased to be merely a prison of fate and became instead an architecture of reason. The world was intelligible not because man controlled it, but because he participated in it through thought itself.
The stories surrounding Thales are deeply symbolic. One tradition claims he fell into a well while observing the stars, a warning about philosophers who gaze toward heaven while neglecting the ground beneath them. Yet another story presents a very different image. Aristotle recounts that Thales predicted an abundant olive harvest and secured the local olive presses in advance, becoming wealthy when demand surged.
In that episode, knowledge becomes foresight, foresight becomes decision, and decision becomes exchange. Thought orders time, and in doing so, creates value. Without naming it, Thales anticipated something remarkably close to the economic principle of rational action under conditions of scarcity. For this reason, Thales still matters.
Thales matters not because modern science confirms his cosmology, but because he helped establish the intellectual habit upon which both science and philosophy depend: the belief that reality possesses an order discoverable through reason.
When Aristotle later called him the first philosopher, he was not merely offering retrospective praise. He recognized in Thales the archetype of the thinker, the man who—faced with the multiplicity of the world—sought the principle capable of unifying it. That principle was water, the first mirror in which Western civilization saw reflected the possibility of reason itself.