Beneath the soil of every continent lie buried the ruins of fallen civilizations. The Sumerians, Akkadians, Mayans, Assyrians, Babylonians, Minoans, Romans: all of them, faded memories of past grandeur and glory. History records the collapse of at least 32 major civilizations that once thrived and prospered before our time.
The famous 4th century Greek philosopher Diogenes lived an extremely simple life even to the point of living inside a barrel. He was the archetype of the Cynics, a philosophical school that rejected wealth and promoted self-sufficiency as a means to contentment. One day, the philosopher Aristippus, who had won a place at the court of Dionysius of Syracuse, confronted Diogenes. He said to Diogenes, “If you would learn to compliment Dionysius, you would not have to live on lentils.” Diogenes replied, “But if you would only learn to live on lentils, you wouldn’t have to flatter Dionysius.”
Aristotle, the famous Greek philosopher who lived four centuries before Christ, proposed the scientific theory of
horror vacui. Based on his observations, he concluded that nature fills every empty space with something, even if it is only air. In his works
Gargantua and
Pantagruel, the Renaissance priest, doctor and scientist Rabelais popularized this idea with the phrase
Natura abhorret vacuum (“nature abhors a vacuum”).