In the beginning, there was only Stack Overflow. The name of the entity running it was called Stack Overflow Internet Services (SOIS).
Some time later, it created a new site, Server Fault, and it was good.
Eventually, there was a need for a meta discussion site: Meta Stack Overflow was created. Since most people were on Stack Overflow and the company name was Stack Overflow, it made sense to call it that. A third site—Super User—was created, but there was still no need to change the name.
Then SOIS launched a product called Stack Exchange, where people could create stacks on anything and everything as long as they agreed to pay a monthly fee at some point later in the future. This is what is now referred to as Stack Exchange 1.0. Like the stacks before it, it too received a meta-discussion site, Meta Stack Exchange. This was more about getting support with Stack Exchange sites, which operated under a different set of rules than the original trilogy of sites.
After a few months, this product was deemed a failure and a new project, Stack Exchange 2.0, was born. Area 51 was created to launch sites under this moniker with Area 51 Discuss intended to be the discussion site about creating sites. Each new site got their own child meta discussion site as part of this process, to allow each community to discuss issues specific to them.
Since Meta Stack Exchange was being used for Stack Exchange 1.0 sites and Area 51 Discuss was being used for discussion about creating sites, Meta Stack Overflow continued to be the best place to discuss the engine itself and the overall community.
Eventually, SOIS changed their name to Stack Exchange and it was determined that Meta Stack Exchange being solely for sites that were destined for the trashbin was leading to a certain amount of confusion, so they killed it and redirected it to here, where everyone's been talking about the network in general from the beginning.