Knowledge begins with the confession of ignorance. Socrates understood that the wisest person is not the one who claims to know everything, but the one who recognizes the vast expanse of what remains unknown. At the knowledge bar, every question is a drink worth savoring.
The ancient Greeks called it episteme -- structured understanding that transcends mere opinion. Here, we return to that tradition: not quick answers but deep conversations, not summaries but explorations.
Every experiment is a question asked of the universe in its own language -- mathematics. The scientific method is not a rigid formula but a living process of observation, conjecture, and relentless testing against reality.
From the falling apple to the bending of spacetime, scire is the thread that connects all discovery: the burning desire to know what lies beneath the surface of things.
History is not a list of dates and battles -- it is the narrative of human understanding unfolding across time. Every era believed itself to be the pinnacle of knowledge, only to be humbled by the revelations of the next.
To study history is to learn humility: we stand on the shoulders of giants, and the view from here is magnificent but incomplete.