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         Aristaeus The Elder:     more detail
  1. Aristaeus the Elder: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001

41. Euclid - Books I-IX
It is the work of three men, Euclid the author of the Elements, Apollonius ofPerga, and aristaeus the elder, and proceeds by way of analysis and synthesis.
http://www.headmap.org/unlearn/euclid/before/nature.htm
@import url(../../../ul-css/3-col-nn4-new-main.css); the teS Euclids elements BOOKS I-IX translated by T.L. Heath BACKGROUND euclid and the traditions about him. euclid's other works. greek commentators on the elements ... modern algebraic interpretations [see also: equations - Diophantus; conics - Appolonius] HEADMAP home unlearning EUCLID BOOK I BOOK II BOOK III BOOK IV ... BOOK IX OVERVIEW book 1, triangles book 2, quadratics books 3 and 4, circles book 5, theory of proportion book 6, geometry and the theory of proportion books 7, 8 and 9 ,number theory GEOMETRICAL ALGEBRA book II identities gemetrical solution of quadratics application of areas transformation of areas ... Book V notes Book VII notes Book VIII notes Book IX notes [p. 114]
CHAPTER IX.
§ 1. ON THE NATURE OF ELEMENTS.
It would not be easy to find a more lucid explanation of the terms element and elementary , and of the distinction between them, than is found in Proclus , who is doubtless, here as so often, quoting from Geminus. There are, says Proclus, in the whole of geometry certain leading theorems, bearing to those which follow the relation of a principle, all-pervading, and furnishing proofs of many properties. Such theorems are called by the name of elements ; and their function may be compared to that of the letters of the alphabet in relation to language, letters being indeed called by the same name in Greek (stoicheia).

42. Bio Links - Letter A
Arieh, Ben www.pixiport.com/bioarieh.htm; aristaeus the elder,www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Aristaeus.html; Aristarchus ofSamos,
http://www.ebiog.com/links/link-a.htm
LETTER A

43. Biographies For Famous People Starting With The Letter A
aristaeus the elder, Biography Aristarchus of Samos, Biography Aristotle,Biography Arizin, Paul Biography Arkless, Simon Biography
http://www.biographycorner.com/biography_a.html
Biographies for Famous People Starting with the Letter A
Browse by Biography Last Name: A B C D ... Z
BIOGRAPHIES FOR FAMOUS PEOPLE BEGINNING WITH LETTER A
Aachen, Hans von Biography Aachen, Hans von Biography Aamodt, Kjetil Andre Biography Aaron, Henry L. Biography ... Newest Lyrics Here!

44. Cronologie Di Psicopolis
Translate this page Arbuthnot, John (251*) Archimedes of Syracuse (3190*) Archytas of Tarentum (1366*)Arf, Cahit (1452*) Argand, Jean (951) aristaeus the elder (588) Aristarchus
http://www.psicopolis.com/timeline/alfabmatem.htm

45. Search Results For Euclid
of the Elements. Aristaeus aristaeus the elder was probably older than,but still a contemporary of, Euclid. and also claims (if
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Search/historysearch.cgi?SUGGESTION=Euc

46. A Index
aristaeus the elder (588) Aristarchus of Samos (1548) Aristotle (3445*) Arnauld,Antoine (1492*) Aronhold, Siegfried (234*) Artin, Emil (2621*)
http://www.angelfire.com/rnb/syndrome_vinc3/A.html
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Search: Lycos Angelfire Dating Search Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
Names beginning with A
The number of words in the biography is given in brackets. A * indicates that there is a portrait. Abbe , Ernst (602*)
Abel
, Niels Henrik (2899*)
Abraham
bar Hiyya (641)
Abraham, Max

Abu Kamil
Shuja (1012)
Abu Jafar

Abu'l-Wafa
al-Buzjani (1115)
Ackermann
, Wilhelm (205)
Adams, John Couch

Adams, J Frank
Adelard of Bath (1008) Adler , August (114) Adrain , Robert (1317*) Adrianus , Romanus (419) Aepinus , Franz (822) Agnesi , Maria (2018*) Ahlfors , Lars (725*) Ahmed ibn Yusuf (660) Ahmes Aida Yasuaki (696) Aiken , Howard (665*) Airy , George (2362*) Aitken , Alec (825*) Ajima , Naonobu (144) Akhiezer , Naum Il'ich (248*) al-Baghdadi , Abu (947) al-Banna , al-Marrakushi (861) al-Battani , Abu Allah (1333*) al-Biruni , Abu Arrayhan (3002*) al-Farisi , Kamal (1102) al-Haitam , Abu Ali (2490*) al-Hasib Abu Kamil (1012) al-Haytham , Abu Ali (2490*) al-Jawhari , al-Abbas (627) al-Jayyani , Abu (892) al-Karaji , Abu (1789) al-Karkhi al-Kashi , Ghiyath (1725*) al-Khazin , Abu (1148) al-Khalili , Shams (677) al-Khayyami , Omar (2140*) al-Khwarizmi , Abu (2847*) al-Khujandi , Abu (713) al-Kindi , Abu (1151) al-Kuhi , Abu (1146) al-Maghribi , Muhyi (602) al-Mahani , Abu (507) al-Marrakushi , ibn al-Banna (861) al-Nasawi , Abu (681) al-Nayrizi , Abu'l (621) al-Qalasadi , Abu'l (1247) al-Quhi , Abu (1146) al-Samarqandi , Shams (202) al-Samawal , Ibn (1569) al-Sijzi , Abu (708)

47. History Of Mathematics Chronology Of Mathematicians
c. 350) *SB; Speusippus (d. 339); Aristotle (384322) *SB *MT; aristaeus the elder(fl. c. 350-330) *SB *mt; Eudemus of Rhodes (the Peripatetic) (fl. c. 335) *SB
http://www.cs.herts.ac.uk/~comqcln/chronology_math.html

48. Search Results For Dispute*
Heath s opinion that the aristaeus referred to by Hypsicles this is aristaeusthe elder has been disputed by some historians, and there is a possibility
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Search/historysearch.cgi?SUGGESTION=

49. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
Antiphon Arf aristaeus Aristarchus Aristotle Barocius Cleomedes Conon Pliny the elder Next to Aristotle, Pliny the elder was probably the single most
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue.pl?term1=Aristotle&li

50. Dionysus 2, Greek Mythology Link.
But some say that it was aristaeus who discovered honey, them mad in such away that Athamas 1 hunted his elder son Learchus as a deer, killing him;
http://homepage.mac.com/cparada/GML/Dionysus2.html
Greek Mythology Link - by Carlos Parada, author of Genealogical Guide to Greek Mythology Dionysus 2 Dionysus 2 "... Wait a moment while I fetch you some mellow wine , so that you may first make a libation to Zeus and the other immortals and then, if you like, enjoy a drink yourself. Wine is a great comfort to a weary man ..." Hecabe 1 to Hector 1 . Homer, Iliad "O Cyclops, son of the sea-god, come see what kind of divine drink this is that Greece provides from its vines, the gleaming cup of Dionysus." Odysseus to Polyphemus 2 . Euripides, Cyclops Polyphemus 2 Who is this Dionysus? Is he worshipped as a god?
Odysseus
Yes, the best source of joy in life for mortals.
[Euripides, Cyclops "This is the effect of your for wine is a crazy thing. It sets the wisest man singing and giggling like a girl; it lures him on to dance and it makes him blurt out what were better left unsaid." Odysseus to Eumaeus 1 . Homer

51. Apollo - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
By Cyrene, Apollo had a son named aristaeus, who became the patron god of cattle, Philostratus the elder, Images i.24 Hyacinthus (AD 170 245);
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo
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Apollo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
For other uses, see Apollo (disambiguation)
Greek deities
series Primordial deities Titans Aquatic deities Chthonic deities ... Zeus and Hera Poseidon Hades Hestia ... Athena Apollo Artemis Ares Hephaestus Hermes ... Dionysus Apollo Greek Ap³llōn ) is a god in Greek and Roman mythology, the son of Zeus and Leto , and the twin of Artemis (goddess of the hunt). In later times he became in part confused or equated with Helios god of the sun , and his sister similarly equated with Selene goddess of the moon in religious contexts. But Apollo and Helios /Sol remained quite separate beings in literary/mythological texts. In Etruscan mythology , he was known as Aplu
Contents

52. Apollonius (250 - 200 B.C.)
Euclid, the elder aristaeus, and Archimedes devoted much attention to thesecurves; the quadrature of the parabola being one of the most remarkable
http://www.usefultrivia.com/biographies/apollonius_001.html
APOLLONIUS APOLLONIUS of Perga, in Pamphylia, so called from the place of his birth, was a younger contemporary of Archimedes , and probably survived him about ten years. Of the details of his life little is known. He studied mathematics at Alexandria under the successors of Euclid . Much of his life was spent in Pergamum. His great work on Conic Sections is dedicated to a certain Eudemus of that city. This work is in eight books, of which, in the time of Descartes, the first four only were known to be extant. Shortly afterwards the fifth, sixth, and seventh books were discovered in their Arabic translationan important discovery, since they reveal mathematical powers which the students of the first four had hardly suspected. Apollonius wrote many other works on mathematical subjects, of which little more than the title has come down to us. In one of these he endeavours, as Archimedes had done, to enlarge and improve the Greek system of numeration. A fragment of another work, on irrational quantities, has been discovered has been discovered in Arabic: and it is possible that others may yet be restored from a similar source. By contemporaries and successors he was spoken of as the Great Mathematician. Apollonius was accused by some of founding his reputation on unacknowledged debts to these great predecessors. That he had studied their works is obvious: not less so is it that he made the subject his own by exhaustive handling, and by original development of it. The names which the Conic Sections now bear are in all probability due to him. Before his time each of the three curves was regarded as resulting from a plane cutting the side of the cone at right angles; and only right cones

53. Who Was Who In Roman Times: Images
Arion aristaeus Aristides Aristobulus Aristotle Arsinoe Artemisia Jairus James the elder James the Lesser James the Righteous
http://www.romansonline.com/PersImg.asp?tp=*

54. Myths Of Thebes
Ino was married to Athamas, Autonoe to aristaeus, and Agave to Echion. But Hera indignantly drove them mad, and Athamas hunted his elder son Learchus as
http://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/engl131.5/Reading/Background/Myths_Theb

55. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2000.07.24
The elder Pliny mentions the Pramnian wine, which he places in the region Its interpretation of Virgil s aristaeus, however, has failed to convince me,
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2000/2000-07-24.html
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2000.07.24
Llewelyn Morgan, Patterns of Redemption in Virgil's Georgics . Cambridge: University Press, 1999. Pp. x + 255. ISBN 0-521-65166-2. $59.95.
Word count: 3965 words
One cannot accuse Llewelyn Morgan of being coy. He begins the printed version of his doctoral thesis written at Cambridge under the supervision of Philip Hardie by proposing to read Virgil's four books on agriculture "as a thoroughgoing exercise in Octavianic propaganda, a precise response to the requirements of the regime headed by Octavian which at the time of the poem's completion was emerging from the chaos of the Civil Wars; a text, in other words, capable of yielding a highly optimistic purport". Hereby he not only turns against the predominant interpretation of the Georgics as a document of Virgil's dark vision of the world, but also against "the current author-orientated emphasis" (p.13). It seems doubtful, however, whether the Georgics can be explained simply by referring to the contemporary political necessities. Such an interpretation does not leave any room for e.g. what Friedrich Klingner has called Virgil's "innere Zwiesprache mit Lucrez". It seems equally difficult to account for what the same scholar termed "Die Einheit des Virgilischen Lebenswerkes".

56. Hebrew Bible / Old Testament The History Of Its Interpretation
The Epistle of aristaeus A Hermeneutic Programme 2.1. Author, Place, Date, andNature of the The elder Antiochene School 2. Diodore of Tarsus 3.
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/gopher/other/courses/rels/735/scripture/hbottc.txt
, edited by Magne Saebo. Volume I: From the Beginnings to the Middle Ages (Until 1300) , in cooperation with Chris Brekelmans and Menahem Haran. Part 1: Antiquity Goettingen 1996 [summer]

57. 220401myth.html
he became jealous of his elder brother Tautoru, because he saw that he ardently aristaeus le meilleur essayé de violer Eurydike (Graves 28.c).
http://www.geocities.com/acgyles/myth.html
T R A C I N G . H U M A N . W A N D E R I N G S ARCHAEOLOGY AND MYTHOLOGY ARCHAEOLOGY ET MYTHOLOGIE Andrew Gyles Return to main index page C O N T E N T S CLICK ON TITLE TO GO STRAIGHT TO ARTICLE - The Argo voyages to a source of elektron ... - Parallels in broad plot and fine detail between a Greek myth and a Maori myth CLIQUETEZ SUR LE TITRE POUR ALLER DIRECTEMENT À L'ARTICLE (Ces articles en français ont été traduits de l'anglais par un ordinateur Internet. Je fais des excuses pour tous les infelicities d'expression.) - L'oreichalkos de Platon   - Parallèles entre un mythe grec et un mythe maori  ARTICLES ARE ARRANGED BELOW BY DATE OF PUBLICATION, NEWEST AT TOP CONTENTS The Argo voyages to a source of elektron oreichalkos or boric acid?) Two contributors to sci.archaeology Was oreichalkos amber? A subscriber to the internet discussion group sci.archaeology, Eric Stevens, posted on 21st April 2001 some of his thoughts on oreichalkos, including the following excerpt: 'Whether the ancient Greek word "orichalc" meant copper, bronze, brass, a gold-silver alloy or amber, has been much debated in this news group. The following (translated) quotation from Pausanias, "Description of Greece" 5.7 ff may explain at least some of the source of the confusion ... '"This amber of which the statue of Augustus is made, when found native in the sand of the Eridanus, is very rare and precious to men for many reasons; the other 'amber' is an alloy of gold and silver".

58. A&A | Search Results
aristaeus Mourning the Loss of his Bees aristaeus Mourning the Loss of hisBees Caillé, Joseph Michel Monument to William Pitt the elder
http://www.artandarchitecture.org.uk/search/results.html?_keywords=CIAT_>.4.1.3.

59. Apollo: Biography And Much More From Answers.com
Apollo was the father of aristaeus, Asclepius, and, in some legends, Orpheus, Philostratus the elder, Images i.24 Hyacinthus (AD 170 245);
http://www.answers.com/topic/apollo
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Business Entertainment Games Health ... More... On this page: Personalities Dictionary Technology Encyclopedia Mythology WordNet Wikipedia Best of Web Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Apollo Personalities View Poster Apollo Mythical Figure
  • Born: 700 B.C. Birthplace: Ancient Greece Best Known As: The Sun God
After the mighty Zeus himself, Apollo is the best-known Greek God. Famously handsome and an expert archer, Apollo was the son of Zeus and the Titan Leto. Headstrong at first, he grew to represent music, poetry, medicine and the civilized arts. He is also known as the Sun God, as according to legend he drove the fiery chariot that was the sun across the sky each day. His name was borrowed for the American space program that put the first man on the moon. Apollo is twin brother to the goddess Artemis... Apollo had the same name in both Greek and Roman mythology... He appears in Homer 's epics The Iliad and The Odyssey FOUR GOOD LINKS

60. John Addington Symonds
Allusions to Harpocrates, Lunus, aristaeus, Philesius, Vertumnus, Castor, His cult was parasitic upon elder cults. He was the colleague of greater
http://www.liminalityland.com/symonds.htm
John Addington Symonds Prophet-Scholar of Holy Homoeros [As of yet, I have not been able to consult too many of Symonds' works first-handespecially A Problem in Greek Ethics and thus I rely greatly on the words of others for the details of his life. However, I have excerpted the majority of his essay on Antinous below, so that one can read not only of the glories of the Bithynian, but also see Symonds' scholarship and the way in which his exposition of Antinous prefigures many ideas which are being realized in the modern cult of Antinous and the practices of the Ecclesia Antinoi. Any of his words I have been able to find excerpted in other works, meanwhile, will have to do; and I have not limited myself to those which simply cast him in a good light, in an effort to get to know the real person behind our bestowed laurels of sanctity.] From Conner, Sparks, and Sparks, Cassell's Encyclopedia of Queer Myth, Symbol, and Spirit Symonds, John Addington Homoerotically inclined British writer and classicist. in a letter to Edmund Gosse dated February 28, 1890, Symonds wrote: "You will not doubt, I am sure, that what you call 'the central Gospel' of that essay on the Greeks, has been the light and leading of my own life." Symonds' journey toward the recognition of his own homosexuality, as well as the interrelationship of homoeroticism and the realm of spirit, commenced around 1848, when he began having dreams in which naked sailors would appear to him and he would have sex with them. Around this time, he was also experimenting in same-sex eroticism with an older cousin, especially fellatio. Around 1855, these dreams faded, but were replaced by dreams of a "beautiful ideal youth, who clasped him round." Later, this vision was displaced by dreams of "the large erect organs of naked young grooms or peasants." In 1858, when Symonds was eighteen, he read both the

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