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Sunday, November 17, 2024

Once upon a time, the Greeks and Romans looked up to the Egyptians, flocking to their land to soak up wisdom and culture.


Once upon a time, the Greeks and Romans looked up to the Egyptians, flocking to their land to soak up wisdom and culture.

But what starts as admiration often morphs into envy and disdain. Take a good look at the likes of Plato, Pythagoras, and Thales—all immersed in Egyptian teachings, drinking deeply from the well of knowledge that included philosophy, geometry, and medicine. 

The famous Pythagorean Theorem? Those clever Egyptians were using it to construct their monumental pyramids over a millennium before Pythagoras even graced this earth with his presence. 

Plato himself admitted that studying in Egypt made students sharper and more humane, practically begging his peers to follow suit. But oh, how the tides turned! Egypt's generosity was brutally repaid with devastation as foreign invaders torched libraries and tore apart the fabric of its society.

 Once heralded as the cradle of civilization, Egypt watched helplessly as its invaluable knowledge was dispersed and diminished, a victim of incessant invasions that would forever alter its legacy. 

What a tragic irony for a civilization that once held the keys to human progress!

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