Anaximenes of Miletus
585–528 BC
Pre-Socratic·Graecia
Anaximenes was the third of the Milesian philosophers, student of Anaximander. Where his predecessors proposed water or the infinite as the primary substance, Anaximenes chose air — pneuma — as the arché. His insight was not merely physical but proto-scientific: change is not transformation into something other, but condensation and rarefaction of the same substance. The universe breathes.
Key Ideas
01
Air as arché — the first principle of all things
02
Change through condensation and rarefaction
03
The cosmos as a living, breathing system
04
Continuity of substance beneath apparent change