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Western
Culture Global Presents
The Top
100 Heroes of Western Culture
These individuals have most contributed to replacing
ignorance with knowledge, savagery with civilization,
disease with health, tyranny with liberty, poverty with
abundance, and despair with happiness.
#3: Thales (624-546 BC)
Thales (624 BC-546 BC) lived in Ancient Greece and was arguably the
world's first philosopher and scientist.

Prior to Thales, supernaturalism was considered to be the cause of
most if not all things. For example, the answer to a question such
as, "Why does the wind blow?" or "What caused the epidemic?"
would invariably involve a supernatural explanation such as, "It
is the will of the gods."
Explanations based on supernaturalism, however, are not really explanations
at all. They represent non-rational, untestable assertions (such as
god's motives) and, consequently, make the possibility of scientific
advance impossible.
Thales rejected the pseudo-science of supernaturalism and put forth
a radically different explanation of causes, one from which an advance
in knowledge could occur. Specifically, Thales believed that water
is ultimately the cause of all things. While this belief is incorrect,
Thales's idea was revolutionary because it implied that natural
forces are the cause of events, not supernatural ones.
In other words, Thales is the father of theories -- objective
statements about the world that can be subject to criticism, revision
or rejection based on internal consistency and sensory evidence.
Largely because of the contributions of Thales, both philosophy and
science soon developed on a grand scale, laying the intellectual foundation
for the Greco-Roman civilization as well as the modern world.
Go to #4: Galileo
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100 Western Culture Heroes Home
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