The Teaching of Ptahhatp ought to begin the list of the world's classics of philosophy, yet it has been largely forgotten since its rediscovery in the nineteenth century. Manley's new translation corrects this oversight, making accessible for the first time the Old Kingdom vizier Ptahhatp's concise, helpful insights into the human condition.
New translations of two further texts--The Dialogue Between a Man and His Soul, in which a man asks himself, "What is the point of living?," and Why Things Happen, the oldest surviving account of creation from anywhere in the world--demonstrate how Ptahhatp's philosophy was founded in ancient Egyptian beliefs about truth and reality. Manley introduces the vizier and the world within which he operated, as well as the significance of the "oldest book of the world," preserved in a scroll now known as the Papyrus Prisse in the Bibliotheque Nationale de France. Together these works by Ptahhatp provide a new perspective on the Pyramid Age and overturn traditional stereotypes about the origins of Western philosophy.