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Breaking Light

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Discloses the ways in which opacity and relation in the thought of Thales, Anaximandros, and Anaximenes depart from the predominant understanding of philosophy as clarity.In Breaking Light D. M. Sp...
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  • 02 November 2026
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Discloses the ways in which opacity and relation in the thought of Thales, Anaximandros, and Anaximenes depart from the predominant understanding of philosophy as clarity.

In Breaking Light D. M. Spitzer discloses the ways in which opacity and relation orient the thought of Thales, Anaximandros, and Anaximenes. In so doing, Breaking Light departs from a predominant understanding of philosophy as constituted by the principle of clarity—a principle already operative in Plato’s and Aristotle’s interpretations of the shadowy figures from the Greek east identified as the first philosophers, the Milesians. Drawing on opacity and relation as articulated by Martinican thinker Édouard Glissant and enhanced by the insights of Martin Heidegger and contemporary feminisms in the (trans-)continental tradition(s), Breaking Light lets the central terms orienting Milesian thinking—ὕδωρ, ἄπειρον, ἀήρ—radiate with the energies of provisionality, uncertainty, and abundance—of opacity. A comparative approach attends to figures like Pherekydes and texts from Egypt and the Near East that are understudied in the continental traditions.

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Price: £27.50
Pages: 180
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Ancient Greek Philosophy
Publication Date: 02 November 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9798855807387
Format: Paperback
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"By demonstrating the unusual 'light' of opacity, the clarity of darkness, and the shimmering of shadows in pre-Socratic philosophy, Spitzer destabilizes the common views on the beginning of the Western philosophical tradition, which mostly rely on the belief that this beginning coincides with the birth of light itself. Breaking Light opens new paths for our reading of ancient Greek philosophy and enables a criticism of the common idea that philosophical thought is committed solely to clarity." — Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback, Södertörn University

D. M. Spitzer is Lecturer of Arts and Humanities at Pennsylvania State University, Mont Alto. He is the author of Parmenides and Translation: Figures of Motion, Figures of Being and the editor of Studies in Ancient Greek Philosophy: In Honor of Professor Anthony Preus.

Acknowledgments
Notes, Editions, and Abbreviations

Introduction: Breaking Light

1. Divining: Thalean ὕδωρ

2. Spanning: Anaximandrean ἄπειρον

3. Hovering: Anaximenean ἀήρ

Conclusion: Breaking Light, Unclosing Opacity

Bibliography
Index