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Vidéo : Introduction à la philosophie

Introduction to Philosophy

To philosophise is to wonder. Born in ancient Greece, philosophy is the art of questioning what we take for granted: existence, freedom, justice, goodness, and truth. It does not seek to reassure — it seeks to awaken, to transform doubt into curiosity.

Unlike religion, which rests on faith, or science, which measures and experiments, philosophy argues, dialogues, and questions. It does not provide definitive answers — it sharpens the questions. Over 25 centuries, Western, Arab, Indian, Chinese, and African traditions have each shed light on fundamental enigmas: Who am I? How should I act? What is truth?

LaPhilo.fr offers a journey through time and cultures, with interactive timelines, accessible texts, videos, and podcasts to understand how human thought has been built, century after century.

✦ Explore Philosophy ✦

Definition · Branches

What is Philosophy?

Metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, politics, aesthetics, logic, language… Seven great branches to explore the fundamental questions of existence. An ideal entry point for any beginner or curious mind.

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VIe av. J.-C. → aujourd'hui

The Philosophers

From the Greek pre-Socratics to thinkers from all horizons — Eastern, ancient, modern, contemporary — discover the great figures who questioned existence, truth, and freedom throughout the ages.

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650 BC → XXIst century

Western Thought

From the pre-Socratic cosmos to contemporary wokism, trace the currents that have shaped Western culture and society through the centuries.

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Asia · Africa · Arab World

Eastern Thought

Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism, Ubuntu, Sufism… non-Western traditions with profound and distinct answers to the essential questions of human existence.

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Ancient Egypt → XXIst century

Interactive Timelines

Navigate the interactive chronological timelines: philosophers by country and era, major schools of Western and Eastern thought.

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Vidéo : 2500 ans de philosophie

2500 years of philosophy

The history of philosophy is not a catalogue of dead ideas — it is a living conversation to which you are invited. Understanding how ideas evolved, how they clashed and nourished one another, is to understand why we think the way we think today.

From the pre-Socratics who dared to seek a rational explanation for the cosmos, to contemporary philosophers interrogating artificial intelligence, transhumanism, or new forms of digital power — each generation has taken up the torch of questioning. These questions are not reserved for academics: they inhabit each of us whenever we take the time to ask why we believe what we believe, or what truly justifies our moral and political choices.

✦ Frequently Asked Questions

Accessible answers to essential questions about philosophy

What exactly is philosophy?

Philosophy is the discipline that interrogates the foundations of our existence, knowledge, and values. It produces no measurable results like science, nor dogmas like religion — it advances through questions, arguments, and dialogues. To philosophise is to refuse ready-made answers and think for oneself, with rigour and intellectual honesty.

What is the difference between philosophy and religion?

Religion rests on faith, revelation, and sacred texts to answer the great questions. Philosophy, by contrast, accepts only rational arguments — it questions everything, including God, the soul, and the afterlife, without relying on any external authority. This does not mean they are opposed: many great philosophers were believers, and certain religious traditions have developed highly rigorous philosophical thought (medieval Scholasticism, Sufi philosophy, Buddhist philosophy).

Who are the 3 most important philosophers in history?

It is impossible to rank them objectively, but three names recur invariably in every history of philosophy: Socrates (founder of the dialectical method and of self-examination), Plato (who founded idealist metaphysics and influenced two millennia of Western thought), and Aristotle (who laid the foundations of logic, biology, ethics, and politics). Beyond this Greek triad, Kant is often regarded as the other indispensable pivot of modern philosophy.

What use is philosophy in concrete life?

Philosophy sharpens critical thinking: it teaches how to distinguish a solid argument from a sophism, detect rhetorical manipulation, clarify one's own values, and make more coherent decisions. The Greek Stoics developed concrete practices for facing anxiety and adversity that are being rediscovered today by cognitive psychology. Philosophical ethics helps navigate complex moral dilemmas. In short: philosophy does not change the world directly, but it changes the way we perceive it and act within it.

What is the difference between Eastern and Western philosophy?

Western philosophy, born in Greece, tends to distinguish the thinking subject from the external world, to prize formal logical argumentation, and to seek universal truths. Eastern philosophy (Confucian, Taoist, Buddhist, Vedānta…) places greater emphasis on harmony with nature, the dissolution of the ego, spiritual practice, and lived wisdom rather than conceptualised knowledge. These are broad tendencies, not absolute rules: both traditions have produced metaphysical systems as rigorous as they are diverse, and have increasingly influenced one another since the 19th century.

How do you begin studying philosophy?

The best entry point is often to read the foundational texts directly, rather than textbooks. Plato's dialogues (start with the Apology of Socrates or the Meno) are highly accessible. For modern philosophy, Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy or Seneca's Letters to Lucilius are ideal gateways. The LaPhilo.fr interactive timelines are also excellent tools for finding one's bearings across this vast territory.