Miletus: one of the wealthiest and most important towns in ancient
Greece. It was here, on the Aegean coast of Asia Minor, in the 6th
century BC, that the great traditions of Greek science and philosophy
sparked into life, setting in motion a chain of knowledge that would
change the world, forever.
This is the extraordinary story of Greek science from its earliest
beginnings through its development in classical Athens and Hellenistic
Alexandria and its subsequent diffusion to the wider world. Most
histories of Greek science end with the collapse of the Graeco-Roman
world in late antiquity and the closing of all classical schools of
"pagan" philosophy in A.D. 529. But acclaimed historian John Freely here
continues the story to tell of how the elements of Greek scientific and
philosophical learning were adopted by the Islamic world and the
transmission of Graeco-Islamic science to western Europe, as well as the
preservation of Hellenic culture in Byzantium and its profound influence
on the European renaissance and our modern world.