Proclus and the Axiomatic Conception of Knowledge
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TODAY IN PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY: Proclus and the Axiomatic Conception of Knowledge
Sunday 08 February 2026 is the 1,614th anniversary of the birth of Proclus Lycius (08 February 412 – 17 April 485), who was born in Constantinople, then the capital of the eastern Roman Empire, now Istanbul and the largest city in Turkey, on this date in AD 412. Proclus was among the last of the philosophers who made up the Golden Chain of the succession of scholarchs of the Platonic Academy in Athens.
In writing A Commentary on the First Book of Euclid’s Elements Proclus brought together axiomatics and Greek philosophy, making himself the first philosopher of mathematics. I argue that this was a crucial and formative moment in the history of Western civilization, and I consider the theses of the Great Divergence and the High-Level Equilibrium Trap from this perspective.
Quora: https://philosophyofhistory.quora.com/
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#philosophy #history #PhilosophyofHistory #Proclus #ProclusLycius #axiomatics #Euclid #GreatDivergence #HighLevelEquilibriumTrap #PhilosophyofMathematics #neoplatonism