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         Aristotle:     more books (97)
  1. Ethics by Aristotle, 2009-10-04
  2. Politics: A Treatise on Government: A Powerful Work by Aristotle (Timeless Classic Books) by Aristotle, Timeless Classic Books, 2010-08-28
  3. THE WORKS OF ARISTOTLE THE FAMOUS PHILOSOPHER: CONTAINING HIS COMPLETE MASTERPIECE AND FAMILY PHYSICIAN; HIS EXPERIENCED MIDWIFE; HIS BOOK OF PROBLEMS AND HIS REMARKS ON PHYSIOGNOMY by ARISTOTLE, 1111-01-01
  4. Poetics. English by Aristotle, 2009-10-04
  5. Aristotle on the art of poetry by Aristotle, 2004-10-01
  6. Nicomachean Ethics by Aristotle, 2009-09-16
  7. Poetics by Aristotle, 2008-10-31
  8. The Basic Works of Aristotle (Modern Library Classics) by Aristotle, 2001-09-11
  9. Rhetoric by Aristotle, 2010-09-18
  10. Aristotle for Everybody by Mortimer J. Adler, 1997-06-01
  11. Complete Works of Aristotle, Vol. 1 by Aristotle, 1971
  12. The Complete Works of Aristotle: The Revised Oxford Translation, Vol. 2 (Bollingen Series LXXI-2) by Aristotle, 1984-09-01
  13. Aristotle's Poetics for Screenwriters: Storytelling Secrets From the Greatest Mind in Western Civilization by Michael Tierno, 2002-08-21
  14. Categoriae. English by Aristotle, 2010-02-13

141. Aristotle
aristotle was wellversed in a broad range of subjects including science, aristotle is also credited with the use of logic as a method for conducting
http://home.echo-on.net/~smithda/aristotle.html
Aristotle
Aristotle (384-322 BC), a Greek philosopher and scientist, shares with Plato the distinction of being the most famous of the ancient philosophers. Aristotle was well-versed in a broad range of subjects including science, anatomy and philosophy. He established the first empirical guidelines for the conduct of scientific investigations. In this regard, his approaches pre-dated the modern scientific method by several centuries. Aristotle is also credited with the use of logic as a method for conducting research. He also devised the idea of dividing areas of study into separate categories with specific methods of study for each field. Aristotle wrote over 400 books on every branch of learning, including logic, ethics, politics, metaphysics, biology, physics, psychology, poetry, and rhetoric. Aristotle, like Plato, made regular use of the dialogue in his earliest years at the Academy, but lacking Plato's imaginative gifts, he probably never found the form congenial. Apart from a few fragments in the works of later writers, his dialogues have been wholly lost. Aristotle also wrote some short technical notes, such as a dictionary of philosophic terms and a summary of the doctrines of Pythagoras. Of these, only a few brief excerpts have survived. Still existing, however, are Aristotle's lecture notes for carefully outlined courses treating almost every branch of knowledge and art. The texts on which Aristotle's reputation rests are largely based on these lecture notes, which were collected and arranged by later editors.

142. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Kirkbride, Julie
Information about the MP for Bromsgrove and Opposition Spokesman for Culture, Media and Sport includes contact details and biography plus parliament jobs and committees, voting record and entries in the Register of Members' Interests.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/0,9290,-2939,00.html
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143. ILTweb - Publications
aristotle Nicomachean Ethics Translated by WD Ross Oxford, Clarendon Press. Copyright © 1908 Clarendon Press. HTML markup copyright 1995 ILT Digital
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Rousseau, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 1712-78, Swiss-French philosopher and political theorist; b. Geneva. A member of DIDEROT's circle, he was one of the great figures of the French enlightenment and probably the most significant of those who shaped 19th-cent. ROMANTICISM, influencing such figures as Kant, GOETHE, ROBESPIERRE, TOLSTOY, and the French revolutionists. Aristotle: Nicomachean Ethics
Translated by W. D. Ross
Oxford, Clarendon Press.
Dante: The Divine Comedy
ILTweb Digital Dante Project

Original text in Italian. Written c. 1306-21.
English translation by H. W. Longfellow.
Multimedia translation begun 1994, ILT Digital Classics.
Dewey: Democracy and Education
Locke: Of the Conduct of the Understanding

Teachers College Press Classics in Education Series Foreword by Lawrence A. Cremin

144. Roger's Collection Of Famous Quotations
Quip, proverbs and sayings by famous and not so famous people that ranges from aristotle to Warren Zevon featuring Albert Einstein, Mae West and W.C. Fields.
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This page is your navigation center for the quotations pages. You have four links on each page, next, previous, home and back here. The quotations are listed in alphabeticle order by author. I hope you enjoy the quotes and I hope you find the navigation easy. If you would like to add a quotation to this collection then please send it to me via e-mail and I will add it.
This page, surprisingly to me, has visiters from all over the world so I have added a translator to the bottom of the page. It will translate one word or a complete page. I appreciate all your kind words and support and I am very glad some find this page useful. Peace.
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145. GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography Of Aristotle
Short biography of aristotle written by Harvard students.
http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_aristotle.html
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Biography of Aristotle
Aristotle Aristotle was born in 384 BC, in Stagira, near Macedonia at the northern end of the Aegean Sea. His father, Nicomachus, was the family physician of King Amyntas of Macedonia. It is believed that Aristotle's ancestors had been the physicians of the Macedonian royal family for several generations. Having come from a long line of physicians, Aristotle received training and education that inclined his mind toward the study of natural phenomena. This education had long-lasting influences, and was probably the root cause of his less idealistic stand on philosophy as opposed to Plato. Aristotle's father died when he was a boy, and Aristotle was left under the care of his guardian Proxenus. When Aristotle was seventeen, Proxenus sent him to study at Plato's Academy in Athens, the heart of the intellectual world at the time. Aristotle remained at the Academy for twenty years, until Plato's death in 347 BC. Although Aristotle was Plato's most promising student, Aristotle did not succeed Plato as head of the Academy because of their opposing views on several fundamental philosophical issues, specifically regarding Plato's theory of ideas. As has already been noted, Aristotle was more concerned than Plato with the actual material world, and did not believe that the only thing that mattered is the realm of ideas and perfect forms.

146. Ancient History Sourcebook: Aristotle: On A Good Wife, From Oikonomikos, C. 330
from aristotle, The Politics Economics of aristotle, Edward English Walford John Gillies, trans., (London G. Bell Sons, 1908).
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/greek-wives.html
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Ancient History Sourcebook:
Aristotle: On a Good Wife,
from Oikonomikos , c. 330 BCE
A good wife should be the mistress of her home, having under her care all that is within it, according to the rules we have laid down. She should allow none to enter without her husband's knowledge, dreading above all things the gossip of gadding women, which tends to poison the soul. She alone should have knowledge of what happens within. She must exercise control of the money spent on such festivities as her husband has approved-keeping, moreover, within the limit set by law upon expenditure, dress, and ornament-and remembering that beauty depends not on costliness of raiment. Nor does abundance of gold so conduce to the praise of a woman as self-control in all that she does. This, then, is the province over which a woman should be minded to bear an orderly rule; for it seems not fitting that a man should know all that passes within the house. But in all other matters, let it be her aim to obey her husband; giving no heed to public affairs, nor having any part in arranging the marriages of her children. Now a virtuous wife is best honored when she sees that her husband is faithful to her, and has no preference for another woman; but before all others loves and trusts her and holds her as his own. And so much the more will the woman seek to be what he accounts her. If she perceives that her husband's affection for her is faithful and righteous, she too will be faithful and righteous towards him. Therefore it befits not a man of sound mind to bestow his person promiscuously, or have random intercourse with women; for otherwise the base-born will share in the rights of his lawful children, and his wife will be robbed of her honor due, and shame be attached to his sons.

147. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Luff, Peter
Information about the MP for Mid Worcestershire includes contact details and biography plus parliament jobs and committees, voting record and entries in the Register of Members' Interests.
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148. Sense Cognition: Aristotle Vs. Aquinas
An article by Mortimer J. Adler. Appeared in The New Scholasticism 42 (Autumn 1968) 578591.
http://ditext.com/adler/sense.html
Sense Cognition: Aristotle vs. Aquinas
by Mortimer J. Adler
Appeared in The New Scholasticism 42 (Autumn 1968): 578-591. It is seldom that an author learns anything from a review or discussion of his book. I am most grateful to John Deely for providing an exception to this rule. I learned three important things from his discussion of The Difference of Man and the Difference It Makes , which appeared in the Spring, 1968, issue of The New Scholasticism (Vol. XLII, pp. 293-306). (1) I learned that I had made a logical mistake in rejecting the argument for the incorporeality of the intellect based on the simultaneous presence of contraries in a single act of the understanding (see Deely, p. 305, fn. 41 (2) I learned that I had overlooked, either from ignorance or inadvertence, a crucial text in Aquinas (much commented on by such contemporary Thomists as Jacques Maritain and Yves Simon) which asserts the immateriality of the quo in sense cognition as well as the immateriality of the quo in intellectual cognition, and which indicates also that the immateriality involved in sense cognition cannot be the same as the immateriality involved in intellectual cognition (see Deely, pp.

149. 350 BC RHETORIC By Aristotle Translated By W. Rhys Roberts Book I
350 BC RHETORIC by aristotle translated by W. Rhys Roberts Book I 1 RHETORIC the counterpart of Dialectic. Both alike are concerned with such things as come
http://eserver.org/philosophy/aristotle/rhetoric.txt

150. A Slice Of Philosphy: Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Biography and a listing of the works of aristotle.
http://www.findlink.dk/aristotle/aristotle.htm
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Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Aristotle's writings.

The Complete Works of Aristotle.

Separate listing of Aristotle's Works.

Secondary literature on Aristotle.

"Being is said in many ways" is a standard formulation of Aristotle. It sounds rather superfluous and straightforward to state this, but this is actually due to Aristotle and this fact makes Aristotle very interesting to study. You and I have height, colour, a certain number of arms, legs, fingers, ears etc.. We have different ways of behavior, taste, interests and so on. We are said to be different and equal in various aspects. From Plato we learn that a man is good, due to his participation in The Good (in greek, to anypothon ). Aristotle rejected the theory of forms (eidos) as known from Plato. In Aristotle's ontology there is only concrete substances (this horse, that cup, this vase etc.) and in talking of the particular substances we use concepts, but the things - substances - is prior to the concepts or forms which we ascribe to them. Plato worked the other way around. For Plato the forms (eidos) were prior and necessary conditions which formed a intelligible realm in contrast the phenomenal realm. The more exact theory of Plato is highly ingenious and much of Aristotle's critique were probably addressed to other students of Plato (for a further discussion, Jonathan Barnes "Metaphysics" in Cambridge Companion to Aristotle ). In his formulation of his own theory Aristotle developed his own terminology, invented grammatical forms and a system of classification (primary substance, secondary substance; the categories). In addition Aristotle invented and created the classical logic as we know it today. The logical, semantical and metaphysical aspects is closely connected in Aristotle's way of expressing being.

151. 350 BC POETICS By Aristotle Translated By SH Butcher POETICS 1 I I
350 BC POETICS by aristotle Translated by SH Butcher POETICS 1 I I PROPOSE to treat of Poetry in itself and of its various kinds, noting the essential
http://eserver.org/philosophy/aristotle/poetics.txt

152. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Letwin, Oliver
Contact details and biography plus parliament jobs and committees, voting record and entries in the Register of Members' Interests of the West Dorset MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Economic Affairs and Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/0,9290,-3095,00.html
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153. Aristotle Poetics: A Bibliography
Emotion in aristotle some general references. Pleasure. Katharsis. aristotle as poet. 19. Miscellaneous topics Composition and date. Method.
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/resources/poetics/poetbib.htm
Aristotle's Poetics : Introduction Malcolm Heath
Aristotle Poetics : a bibliography
Index
Introduction
This bibliography does not pretend to provide a comprehensive record of everything that has been written on the Poetics (still less of everything relevant to the Poetics ). So serious researchers will need to consult the wonderfully thorough and informative bibliography by O.J. Schrier (1998), which covers publications up to 1996. However, there is quite a lot here for the interested reader to make a start with (I confess, with shame, that I have not yet read everything listed here myself). The bibliography is divided into two parts. The first part includes publications up to 1996, and is therefore mainly a (very limited) subset of items included by Schrier. The second part includes publications from 1996 onwards (so that there is a 1-year overlap between the two parts), together with some earlier items not listed by Schrier (these are mostly due to my less systematic criteria for inclusion, rather than any oversight on Schrier's part). Hence the second provides a supplement to Schrier - although it will not be equally thorough in its coverage. Users should treat with some caution the way items have been distributed under different headings and sub-headings. The classification has developed in an unplanned way as the bibliography has grown over a number of years; there are doubtless many anomalies. One day I will work out a more satisfactory way of doing it; until then, it seems better to keep an

154. Aristotle Central Home
Supports human resources through solutions for integrating technology, content and best practices that are aligned with the career life cycle. Includes events and virtual tours.
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VA Call: 703-461-9227 Aristotle Central develops Job Fair Site for Virginia Aristotle Central working in conjunction with the Northern Virginia Employer Advisory Committee created a cutting edge job applicant and employer matching center . The system allows job applicants and employers to sign up for the job fair on line, and do prescreening and networking before hand in order to expedite connections at the job fair. For more information contact Cindy Gurne Visit our Demonstration Site Click for Aristotle Central Career and Performance Management Center Take a tour of the Aristotle Central City Click on a building below to go to the Aristotle Central Tour.

155. Aristotle's Poetics
aristotle s Poetics Introduction. aristotle s Poetics. adapted from the translation by SH Butcher. Section 1. Introduction
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/resources/poetics/poettran.htm
Aristotle's Poetics : Introduction
Aristotle's Poetics
[adapted from the translation by S.H. Butcher] Section:
Introduction

Poetry as a species of imitation

The anthropology and history of poetry

Tragedy: definition and analysis
...
Comparative evaluation of epic and tragedy

Chapter
1. Introduction
I propose to treat of poetry in itself and of its various kinds, noting the essential quality of each, to inquire into the structure of the plot as requisite to a good poem; into the number and nature of the parts of which a poem is composed; and similarly into whatever else falls within the same inquiry. Following, then, the order of nature, let us begin with the principles which come first.
2. Poetry as a species of imitation
Epic poetry and tragedy, comedy also and dithyrambic poetry, and the music of the flute and of the lyre in most of their forms, are all in their general conception modes of imitation. They differ, however, from one another in three respects - the medium, the objects, the manner or mode of imitation, being in each case distinct. 2.1 Medium:

156. Aristotle
University of Michigan site explaining how the Greek philosopher believed in a geocentric universe and four elements.
http://www.windows.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/tour_def/people/ancient_epoch/aristotle.html
Aristotle
Portrait of Aristotle
Courtesy of Corbis-Bettmann. Aristotle was a Greek philosopher who lived between 384-322 B.C. He was one of the greatest thinkers of the world and his written works encompassed all major areas of thought. Aristotle mistakenly believed that the Earth was at the center of the universe and made up of only four elements: earth, water, air, and fire. He also thought that celestial bodies such as the sun moon , and stars, were perfect and divine, and made of a fifth element called ether.
Last modified December 10, 2000 by the Windows Team
The source of this material is Windows to the Universe , at http://www.windows.ucar.edu/

157. Works By Aristotle
Read classic literature by aristotle at 4literature.net.
http://www.4literature.net/Aristotle/
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158. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Widdecombe, Ann
Includes quotes, voting record, facts and constituency information. MP for Maidstone and The Weald.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/0,9290,-5516,00.html
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159. Introduction To Aristotle
Theophrastus, at first aristotle’s pupil and then his closest colleague, Of aristotle’s writings, only about one fifth to one quarter have survived.
http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/433/arintro.htm
Philosophy 433
Philosophy of Aristotle
University of Washington
Introduction to Aristotle
The events of the next five years are uncertain. Perhaps Aristotle stayed at the court; perhaps he went back to Stagira. But in 335, after the death of Philip, he returned to Athens for his second long sojourn. Just outside the city he rented some buildings and established his own school, the Lyceum, where he lectured, wrote, and discussed philosophy with his pupils and associates. Under his direction, they carried out research on biological and other philosophical and scientific topics. Theophrastus worked on botany, Aristoxenus on music; Eudemus wrote a history of mathematics and astronomy, Meno of medicine, and Theophrastus of physics, cosmology, and psychology. In addition, Aristotle and his group produced a monumental account of the constitutions of 158 Greek city-states - an account Aristotle draws on in his own Politics Aristotle was above all driven by a desire for knowledge and understanding in every possible realm. His works are teeming with detailed observations about the natural world as well as abstract speculations of the most general sort. As both a scientist and a philosopher, Aristotle could easily make the transition from describing the feeding behavior of eels and limpets to theorizing about the divine intellect that is the uncaused cause of everything else in the universe. But his philosophical and scientific interests are rooted in the natural world - about one quarter of the surviving works deal with topics in biology. This he combined with an unshakeable confidence in the ability of the human mind, aided by the system of deductive logic he invented and by close and detailed observation of natural phenomena, to comprehend the fundamental nature of objective reality.

160. Aristotle Bibliography
The Crossroads Of Norm And Nature Essays On aristotle’s Ethics And Metaphysics (Lanham, Miller, FD “Did aristotle have the Concept of Identity?
http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/433/433bibl.htm
Philosophy 433
Philosophy of Aristotle
University of Washington
Articles on Aristotle
To browse through the entire bibliography, simply page down. Or, click on one of the links below to jump directly to the topic of your choice. Be sure to check the listings for related topics. E.g., for articles on substance , look also under essence . Happy browsing. Logic Philosophy of Science Metaphysics Philosophy of Mind ...
Thought
Journal Abbreviations AP Ancient Philosophy AGP AJP Australasian Journal of Philosophy APQ American Philosophical Quarterly BACAP Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy CJP Canadian Journal of Philosophy HPL History and Philosophy of Logic HPQ History of Philosophy Quarterly JHP Journal of the History of Philosophy JHS Journal of Hellenic Studies JP Journal of Philosophy JPL Journal of Philosophical Logic JSL Journal of Symbolic Logic NDJFL Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic NS The New Scholasticism OSAP Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy PAS Aristotelian Society Proceedings PASS Aristotelian Society Proceedings, Supplementary Volume

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