Book Review: Alexander At the End of the World

Douglas C. Bates
4 min readAug 2, 2024

The Years of Forgetting Aristotle

Alexander At the End of the World: the Forgotten Final Years of Alexander the Great, by Rachel Kousser, published in July, 2024, is a biography of Alexander the Great that picks up his life story with his conquest of Persia through to his death. The focus of the narrative is, of course, on Alexander himself, most particularly, his military and political actions. The story is told well, and makes for a captivating read.

As this blog about philosophy, this review will focus on the tiny part of the book that concerns philosophy. The key facts in this story are that Aristotle personally tutored Alexander for several years when Alexander was a teenager, and all during the period covered by this book, Alexander had with him in his traveling court several philosophers, most notably, Callisthenes, Aristotle’s nephew; Onescritus, the Cynic; the Democritean philosopher, Anasarchus, and his protege, Pyrrho; and for a couple of years, Kalanos, an Indian philosopher.

As other reviewers have noted, the choice of subtitle, “the forgotten years” is strange. As Steve Donoghue points out, “there’s nothing ‘forgotten’ here, since every single bowl of gheymeh Alexander ever slurped during those years has been the subject of multi-volume studies over the last 2000 years.” These were the years where Alexander was at the pinnacle of his success. How can they be said to have been forgotten? For the purposes of this review, a better subtitle would be “The Years of…

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Douglas C. Bates

Ancient Greek philosophies of life. http://www.pyrrhonism.org Author of “Pyrrho’s Way: The Ancient Greek Version of Buddhism.”