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Paleophilosophy

The Dawn of Thought

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Paleophilosophy

By: Boris Kriger
Narrated by: Steven Gillen
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About this listen

Paleophilosophy: The Dawn of Thought is a book that restores to us the forgotten dignity of ancient humanity. It makes a simple and radical claim: philosophy is older than cities, temples, and alphabets; it begins not with libraries, but with silence around the fire, with palms pressed against stone, with the rhythm of the dance, with the care given to the dead, and with dreams in which humankind first encountered the “other.”

This book reveals that Homo sapiens has always thought as boldly and deeply as Plato or Kant—just in a different language: the language of gesture, flame, cave walls, and the recurring cycles of the heavens. It does not attempt to reconstruct lost treatises—it teaches us instead to hear a voice that has never left our side.

The dawn of thought is not something buried in the past; it rises anew every time a human asks “why?” and refuses to settle for a ready-made answer. Against the arrogant myth of “primitiveness,” it offers another vision: endurance as wisdom, cycles as ontology, imagination as the first tool of knowledge, ritual as silent reasoning about justice, death, time, and beauty.

It is an invitation to listen to not only text, but trace; not only words, but silence; not only history, but presence. This is a book for those willing to abandon the illusion of linear progress and to see in the Paleolithic not the “childhood of reason,” but its unbroken maturity—and perhaps the key to the future.

©2025 Boris Kriger (P)2025 Boris Kriger
Anthropology Civilization Greek & Roman History Philosophy World
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