Aporia comes from ancient Greek and literally means “without a passage” or “no way through.”
Here’s the clean breakdown:
Etymology
- Greek: ἀπορία (aporia)
- From:
- ἀ- (a-): “without,” “lacking,” “not”
- πορός (poros): “path,” “way,” “passage,” “means of going through”
Literal meaning
“Without a path.”
“Lacking a way forward.”
“No passage.”
Philosophical meaning
In philosophy—especially in Plato and Aristotle—aporia refers to:
- A state of puzzlement,
- A dead end of thought,
- A moment where reason hits a wall and must be re-examined.
Plato uses it to describe the moment in a dialogue when Socrates leads someone to realize they don’t know what they thought they knew.