On the morning of May 28, 585 B.C.E., two armies stood on an Anatolian plain, deep into the sixth year of a grinding war between the Medes and the Lydians. Then, according to ancient accounts, day turned to night. Both sides stopped fighting. They negotiated peace. And one man, a philosopher from the Greek city of Miletus, had supposedly told people it was coming.
What the evidence shows
- Eclipse of Thales: The solar eclipse of 585 B.C.E. is the earliest recorded instance in which an eclipse was allegedly predicted in advance — making it a landmark moment in the history of rational inquiry, even if the details remain disputed.
- Herodotus’s account: The Greek historian writing roughly 150 years after the event claimed Thales “forewarned the Ionians,” fixing the very year of the eclipse — but provided no location for the battle and no explanation of Thales’s method.
- Solar eclipse prediction: Modern astronomers have confirmed a solar eclipse did occur on May 28, 585 B.C.E., whose umbral path reached southwestern Anatolia — but whether any person could reliably have predicted it for a specific location using knowledge available at the time remains deeply uncertain.
Who was Thales, and why does this story matter
Thales of Miletus is often called the first philosopher in the Western tradition — a thinker who, unusually for his era, sought natural explanations for natural phenomena rather than supernatural ones. He lived in Miletus, a prosperous Greek city on the Aegean coast of what is now Turkey, at a time when the eastern Mediterranean was a crossroads of cultures, ideas, and trade routes.
Whether or not the prediction happened exactly as described, the story carries enormous weight. It represents one of humanity’s earliest recorded attempts to bring the movements of the cosmos under the domain of human reasoning. Isaac Asimov called it “the birth of science.” That framing may be generous, but the underlying idea — that the sky follows rules, and those rules can be learned — was genuinely revolutionary.
Thales is also credited with bringing geometric knowledge from Egypt to Greece, with early theories about the nature of matter, and with practical wisdom in navigation and engineering. He was, in the words of later Greek tradition, one of the Seven Sages. His eclipse prediction, real or embellished, became the story that defined what a philosopher could aspire to: mastery over time itself.
The problem with the prediction
Here is what makes the story so complicated: at the time Thales supposedly made his prediction, no one on Earth yet knew that solar eclipses are caused by the Moon passing between the Earth and the Sun. That understanding would not emerge for more than a century, attributed later to Anaxagoras or Empedocles.
Without that knowledge, predicting a solar eclipse for a specific location was essentially impossible using any systematic method. Some scholars have proposed that Thales may have drawn on the Saros cycle — a roughly 18-year pattern in eclipse periodicity — or that he had access to Babylonian astronomical records. But Babylonian astronomers of that era could predict whether an eclipse might occur somewhere on Earth; they could not reliably predict whether it would be visible from any particular location. Modern scholars conclude that if Thales did predict the eclipse accurately, it was most likely luck, or the story was improved in the retelling.
There is also a competing theory: that Herodotus’s text was misread, and the battle was actually interrupted not by a solar eclipse but by a lunar one — possibly on September 3, 609 B.C.E., or July 4, 587 B.C.E. Under this reading, the entire chronology shifts, and the famous date of 585 B.C.E. disappears.
Lasting impact
Whatever the truth of Thales’s prediction, the story became foundational. It entered the intellectual tradition of ancient Greece as proof that the cosmos was knowable — that careful observation and reasoning could, in principle, anticipate the movements of the heavens. That idea seeded everything from Aristotelian natural philosophy to Hellenistic astronomy to the eventual development of modern science.
The eclipse also ended a war. The peace agreement that followed the Battle of the Eclipse — sometimes called the Battle of Halys — established the Halys River (today the Kızılırmak River in Turkey) as the border between the Median and Lydian kingdoms. Alyattes’s daughter Aryenis married Cyaxares’s son Astyages, sealing the peace dynastically. A moment of astronomical wonder became the hinge on which two empires rotated toward coexistence.
Subsequent ancient writers reinforced the story’s importance. Cicero credited Thales with being the first to successfully predict a solar eclipse. Diogenes Laërtius noted that Xenophanes — a near-contemporary of Thales — was impressed by the feat. Pliny the Elder confirmed the prediction in his own writings. Across centuries of ancient scholarship, the story held.
The deeper legacy may be this: Thales became the archetype of the person who looks at something everyone else takes as fate — a terrifying darkness swallowing the sun — and says, I knew this was coming. That posture of confident inquiry, even when its mechanisms were imperfect or unknown, helped define what intellectual courage could look like.
Blindspots and limits
The story of the eclipse of Thales comes entirely through sources written long after the fact, filtered through Greek traditions that had strong reasons to celebrate Thales as a founding figure of their intellectual heritage. Babylonian astronomers, who had been tracking eclipse cycles for generations before Thales was born, receive almost no credit in the ancient Greek accounts — yet they almost certainly contributed the observational foundation that made any Greek prediction conceivable. The eclipse story, in other words, may tell us as much about how ancient Greeks constructed intellectual heroes as it does about what actually happened on that Anatolian plain in 585 B.C.E.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Eclipse of Thales — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized ahead of COP30
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the ancient world
About this article
- 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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