Abstract
McClay asserts that students of Plato will remember Socrates's encounter with the young prodigy Theaetetus, who would become one of the most influential mathematicians of the ancient world. As Plato tells the story, Theaetetus became so enthralled with Socrates's dialectical riddles that he confessed himself "dizzy" with "wondering" whether these mysteries could ever be unraveled. To which Socrates responded with an approving pat on the head, "This sense of wonder is the mark of the philosopher. Philosophy indeed has no other origin." Yet the connection between the sense of wonder and the drive for knowledge has not stayed constant in subsequent years. Aquinas himself hinted that wonder might cease once the "causes of things were known." Some six centuries later, Max Weber followed up on that prediction, lamenting that the rationalizing spirit of modern life--one of the proudest of the West's intellectual achievements--had led to the "disenchantment of the world," a cold and forbidding view devoid of all shadows of mystery.