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  1. Aristotle, 384 BC-322 BC ; Great Western Political Thinker
  2. Aristotelis - Stagyritae Libri Physicorum Octo: Cum Sinulorum Epitomatis... by Aristotle (384-322 BC) - Aristotelis, 1542-01-01
  3. ARISTOTELISCHE STUDIEN. I - V. In Two Volumes. by H[ermann. 1814 - 1888]. [Aristotle [384 BC Ð 322 BC]. Bonitz, 1867-01-01
  4. Poetics Of AristotleThe- S. H. Butcher by S. H. Butcher, 2010-01-31

1. MedHist: The Gateway To Internet Resources For The History Of Medicine
Aristotle 384322 BC. I swear by Apollo Physician Greek medicinefrom the Gods to Galen. Aristotle 384-322 BC;. The Wellcome Trust,
http://medhist.ac.uk/browse/byname/476e4770fe4460f3866547edf9be8823.html
low graphics
The gateway to Internet resources for the History of Medicine
Aristotle 384-322 B.C.
"I swear by Apollo Physician..." : Greek medicine from the Gods to Galen This online exhibition from the U.S. National Library of Medicine offers a character-driven introduction to the subject of Greek medicine, with a concentration on the primary associated figures such as Galen, Aristotle and Hippocrates. The sections give brief biographical portraits of each of these individuals, along with images of their works and other miscellany. These features can all be clicked onto and enlarged for closer examination. A short bibliography of thirteen works is also provided for further reading. This exhibit was prepared by Michael North of the History of Medicine Division of the National Library of Medicine. History of Medicine, Ancient Greek World Exhibitions [Publication Type] Bibliography ... A romantic natural history
Description supplied by the Humbul Humanities Hub: Science Natural History History of Medicine, Modern History of Medicine, Medieval ... Electronic scholarly publishing Electronic scholarly publishing is an online publishing project making available "scientific and other scholarly materials" via its Web site, with a specific emphasis on the history of science, genetics and computational biology. A range of materials are available via this site, including digitised books and journal articles. Most texts are in Adobe PDF format and require the Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to view them, although some texts are available in HTML format. As well as general articles on genetics and the history of genome research, there is a substantial selection of primary works, including texts by Aristotle, Galen, Francis Bacon, Malthus and Darwin. A timeline is also available which outlines the major developments in genetics and places them in the context of general historical events. The Project is sponsored by the US Department of Energy. The site makes use of HTML frames.

2. MedHist: UK's Gateway To Resources For The History Of Medicine
Aristotle 384322 BC. I swear by Apollo Physician Greek medicinefrom the Gods to Galen. This online Aristotle 384-322 BC;.
http://medhist.ac.uk/text/browse/byname/476e4770fe4460f3866547edf9be8823.html
high graphics
MedHist
Aristotle 384-322 B.C.
"I swear by Apollo Physician..." : Greek medicine from the Gods to Galen This online exhibition from the U.S. National Library of Medicine offers a character-driven introduction to the subject of Greek medicine, with a concentration on the primary associated figures such as Galen, Aristotle and Hippocrates. The sections give brief biographical portraits of each of these individuals, along with images of their works and other miscellany. These features can all be clicked onto and enlarged for closer examination. A short bibliography of thirteen works is also provided for further reading. This exhibit was prepared by Michael North of the History of Medicine Division of the National Library of Medicine. History of Medicine, Ancient Greek World Exhibitions [Publication Type] Bibliography ... A romantic natural history
Description supplied by the Humbul Humanities Hub: Science Natural History History of Medicine, Modern History of Medicine, Medieval ... Electronic scholarly publishing Electronic scholarly publishing is an online publishing project making available "scientific and other scholarly materials" via its Web site, with a specific emphasis on the history of science, genetics and computational biology. A range of materials are available via this site, including digitised books and journal articles. Most texts are in Adobe PDF format and require the Adobe Acrobat Reader in order to view them, although some texts are available in HTML format. As well as general articles on genetics and the history of genome research, there is a substantial selection of primary works, including texts by Aristotle, Galen, Francis Bacon, Malthus and Darwin. A timeline is also available which outlines the major developments in genetics and places them in the context of general historical events. The Project is sponsored by the US Department of Energy. The site makes use of HTML frames.

3. Aristotle, 384-322 B.C.
Aristotle 384322 BC. Aristotle was born in Stagirus, or Stagira,or Stageirus, on the Chalcidic peninsula of northern Greece. His
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Aristotle
384-322 B.C. Writings by Aristotle Categories, The On The Art Of Poetry Poetics, by Aristotle Treatise On Government

4. Glossary Of People: Ar
patents. Aristotle 384322 BC. Encyclopaedic philosopher and founderof science of logic and several other branches of science. Marx
http://www.marxists.org/glossary/people/a/r.htm
MIA Encyclopedia of Marxism : Glossary of People
Ar
Arkwright, Richard (1732-1792) English entrepeneur who was accused of stealing several patents. Aristotle 384-322 BC Encyclopaedic philosopher and founder of science of logic and several other branches of science. Marx called him the greatest thinker of antiquity; wavered between materialism and idealism; recognised four "prime causes" - matter (passive possibility of becoming), form (essence, activity), the beginning of motion and aim; regarded nature as successive transitions from "matter" to "form" and back; saw logical forms as forms of Being, a view which is close to consistent materialism; in theory of knowledge distinguished between Established (apodictic) and Probable (opinion) truth, connected by Language. Armand, Inessa (1874-1920) Inessa Armand, the daughter of an actor, was born in Paris on 8th May, 1874. Her father died when she was only five and she was brought up by an aunt living in Moscow. At the age of nineteen she married Alexander Armand and together they opened a school for peasant children. She also joined a charitable group helping destitute women in Moscow.

5. A Slice Of Philosphy: Aristotle (384-322 BC)
back home Aristotle (384322 BC).
http://www.findlink.dk/aristotle/aristotle.htm
back home
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.

6. Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Aristotle (384322 BC) Special thanks to the Microsoft Corporation for their contribution to our site Aristotle (384-322 BC), Greek philosopher and scientist, who shares with Plato
http://www.connect.net/ron/aristotle.html
Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Special thanks to the Microsoft Corporation for their contribution to our site.  The following information came from Microsoft Encarta. Here is a hyperlink to the Microsoft Encarta home page.   http://www.encarta.msn.com Aristotle (384-322 BC), Greek philosopher and scientist, who shares with Plato and Socrates the distinction of being the most famous of ancient philosophers. Aristotle was born at Stagira, in Macedonia, the son of a physician to the royal court. At the age of 17, he went to Athens to study at Plato's Academy. He remained there for about 20 years, as a student and then as a teacher. Works 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 extant, 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.

7. Aristotle (384-322 BC) Quotations, Famous Quotes - Quote Database.
Aristotle (384322 BC) quotes - from quotation databese with over 15 000 quotes. Aristotle (384-322 BC) quotations directory. Over 15 000 Quotations and Famous Quotes. Aristotle (384-322 BC) quotes and quotations and it is not everyone who can do it." Aristotle (384-322 BC), Greek philosopher
http://www.quoteworld.org/author.php?thetext=Aristotle (384-322 BC)

8. Aristotle Of Stagira (384-322 BC) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific B
Nationality. Greek. Aristotle of Stagira (384322 BC) one of the greatest philosophers of all times. Aristotle studied at the Academy, but disagreed with Plato, feeling that
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~eww6n/bios/Aristotle.html
Branch of Science Philosophers Nationality Greek
Aristotle of Stagira (384-322 BC)

Greek philosopher usually upheld as one of the greatest philosophers of all times. Aristotle studied at the Academy, but disagreed with Plato , feeling that one could obtain knowledge about the natural world. He distinguished between two types of philosophers: the physiologoi (natural philosophers) who study nature (e.g. Thales Anaximander , and Anaximenes ) and the theologoi who used gods and myths (e.g. Homer and Hesiod ). Aristotle believed that there exists a "golden mean," or desirable middle ground between any two extremes. He founded his own school in Athens called the Lyceum (or "peripatetic school," since Aristotle used to lecture while walking) which emphasized natural philosophy. Aristotle's lectures were compiled into 150 volumes including Physics, Metaphysics, and De Caelo et Mundo (On the Heavens and Earth). Aristotle philosophized on virtually every other subject. He classified animals in a "Scala Naturae" or "Chain of Being" which consisted of God, man, mammals, oviparous with perfect eggs (e.g., birds), oviparous with non-perfect eggs (e.g., fish), insects, plants, and non-living matter. He considered each link in the chain as a "species." He also made extensive taxonomic studies of more than 500 animal species, dissecting many of them. The observations he published in Generation of Animals and Historia Animalum (Investigation of Animals) were meticulous, and his classification scheme conspicuously modern, departing from the prior Greek practices of using categories such as with feet/footless and winged/wingless. Aristotle achieved such a feat in biology by making use of the same principles of logic (whose systematic study he was the founder of) that he applied in his physical investigations. He did not, however, make a real classification system for plants.

9. Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Aristotle (384 322 BC) Ancient Greek philosopher, born in Stageira, Chalcidice, Macedonia, Greece in 384 B.C later Alexander the Great. Aristotle returned to Athens around 334 B.C
http://seds.lpl.arizona.edu/messier/xtra/Bios/aristotle.html
Aristotle (384 - 322 BC)
Ancient Greek philosopher, born in Stageira, Chalcidice, Macedonia, Greece in 384 B.C. His father was court physician to the King of Macedonia. He went to Athens in 367 B.C. to study with Plato, then returned to Macedonia in 342 B.C. to serve as tutor of prince Alexander, the later Alexander the Great. Aristotle returned to Athens around 334 B.C. and founded Lyceum. He died at Chalcis, Euboea, Greece 322 B.C. He found and summarized arguments for a spherical Earth, thus ruling out older models with a flat Earth. Moreover, he constructed a world system of concentric spheres around Earth in the center (i.e., a geocentric system), carrying planets and the outermost the "Fixed" stars - thus forming a finite spherical universe. He believed that "nebulous" objects like comets or the Milky Way belonged to the near-Earth space, the domain of meteorology instead of astronomy. He considered meteorological phenomena short-lived, while the "heavenly" spheres would never change. Aristotle's view of the world was more dogmatic than empirical. These philosophic views, further developed and enriched with

10. This Is The Aristotle Page.
Aristotle (384322 BC). Aristotle (384-322 BC), Greek philosopher andscientist, who shares with Plato and Socrates the distinction
http://www.connect.net/ron/aristotl.html
Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Aristotle (384-322 BC), Greek philosopher and scientist, who shares with Plato and Socrates the distinction of being the most famous of ancient philosophers. Aristotle was born at Stagira, in Macedonia, the son of a physician to the royal court. At the age of 17, he went to Athens to study at Plato's Academy. He remained there for about 20 years, as a student and then as a teacher. When Plato died in 347 BC, Aristotle moved to Assos, a city in Asia Minor, where a friend of his, Hermias, was ruler. There he counseled Hermias and married his niece and adopted daughter, Pythias. After Hermias was captured and executed by the Persians in 345 BC, Aristotle went to Pella, the Macedonian capital, where he became the tutor of the king's young son Alexander, later known as Alexander the Great. In 335, when Alexander became king, Aristotle returned to Athens and established his own school, the Lyceum. Because much of the discussion in his school took place while teachers and students were walking about the Lyceum grounds, Aristotle's school came to be known as the Peripatetic (“walking” or “strolling”) school. Upon the death of Alexander in 323 BC, strong anti-Macedonian feeling developed in Athens, and Aristotle retired to a family estate in Euboea. He died there the following year. Works 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 extant, 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.

11. Aristotle (384-322 BC).
A Blupete Biography Page Back To A List Of Philosophers Aristotle(BC, 384322) Locke concluded that Aristotelianism was perplexed
http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Philosophy/Aristotle.htm

[Back To A List Of Philosophers]

Aristotle
(BC, 384-322) Locke concluded that Aristotelianism was "perplexed with obscure terms and useless questions"; to the Swiss psychologist, Jean Piaget (1896-1980), Aristotle had "a naive and childlike animistic view of the world." In more recent times an evolutionary approach to the understanding of our world has progressively displaced the stationary Aristotelian view. "As a young man, we are told, he [Aristotle] squandered his patrimony in riotous living; he joined the army, and was thrown out of it; for a while he sold drugs and nostrums to make a living. Finally, at the age of thirty, he ended up in college in Plato's Academy At Alexander's death, 323 BC, Aristotle found himself connected to the wrong crowd; he fled Athens, and just in time for charges of "impiety" were brought against him; the same charges, which, 76 years earlier, had led to the death of Socrates. He did not live long in exile: he died within the year. Ethically, Aristotle figured that "happiness is the goal of life. Pleasure, fame, and wealth, however, will not bring one the highest happiness"; it is achieved by a contemplative and monastic way of life. ( Benet's Aristotle had an extraordinary impact on both the people of his day and those who followed him down through the centuries; it is to be attributed to his logistical way of thinking, his rigorous scientific procedure. His premises, however, were not correct. If you are a believer in the proposition that all men are created equal, then Aristotle is not your man. Aristotle considered slavery to be entirely natural, simply because "some men are adapted by nature to be the physical instruments of others." Further, and more generally, Aristotle had "an intense conviction of the natural inferiority of the 'barbarian.'"

12. Guide To Philosophers - Aristoteles
Aristotle (384322 BC), Greek philosopher and scientist, who shares with Plato the distinction of famous of ancient philosophers. Aristotle was born at Stagira, in Macedonia, the
http://www.nyu.edu/pages/linguistics/courses/v610051/aristote.html
Biography
ARISTOTLE (384-322 BC), Greek philosopher and scientist, who shares with Plato the distinction of being the most famous of ancient philosophers. Aristotle was born at Stagira, in Macedonia, the son of a physician to the royal court. At the age of 17, he went to Athens to study at Plato's Academy. He remained there for about 20 years, as a student and then as a teacher. One of the most distinctive of Aristotle's philosophic contributions was a new notion of causality. Each thing or event, he thought, has more than one "reason" that helps to explain what, why, and where it is. Earlier Greek thinkers had tended to assume that only one sort of cause can be really explanatory; Aristotle proposed four. (The word Aristotle uses, aition, "a responsible, explanatory factor" is not synonymous with the word cause in its modern sense.) Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics is an analysis of character and intelligence as they relate to happiness. Aristotle distinguished two kinds of "virtue," or human excellence: moral and intellectual. Moral virtue is an expression of character, formed by habits reflecting repeated choices. A moral virtue is always a mean between two less desirable extremes. Courage, for example, is a mean between cowardice and thoughtless rashness; generosity, between extravagance and parsimony. Intellectual virtues are not subject to this doctrine of the mean. Aristotle argued for an elitist ethics: Full excellence can be realized only by the mature male adult of the upper class, not by women, or children, or barbarians (non-Greeks), or salaried "mechanics" (manual workers) from whom, indeed, Aristotle proposed to take away voting rights.

13. Aristotle Quotations, Famous Quotes - Quote Database.
time and with the right object and in the right waythat is not easy, and it isnot everyone who can do it. Aristotle (384322 BC), Greek philosopher More
http://www.quoteworld.org/author.php?thetext=Aristotle

14. Aristotle Of Stagira (384-322 BC) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific B
Aristotle of Stagira (384322 BC), Greek philosopher usually upheld asone of the greatest philosophers of all times. Aristotle studied
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Aristotle.html
Branch of Science Philosophers Nationality Greek
Aristotle of Stagira (384-322 BC)

Greek philosopher usually upheld as one of the greatest philosophers of all times. Aristotle studied at the Academy, but disagreed with Plato , feeling that one could obtain knowledge about the natural world. He distinguished between two types of philosophers: the physiologoi (natural philosophers) who study nature (e.g. Thales Anaximander , and Anaximenes ) and the theologoi who used gods and myths (e.g. Homer and Hesiod ). Aristotle believed that there exists a "golden mean," or desirable middle ground between any two extremes. He founded his own school in Athens called the Lyceum (or "peripatetic school," since Aristotle used to lecture while walking) which emphasized natural philosophy. Aristotle's lectures were compiled into 150 volumes including Physics, Metaphysics, and De Caelo et Mundo (On the Heavens and Earth). Aristotle philosophized on virtually every other subject. He classified animals in a "Scala Naturae" or "Chain of Being" which consisted of God, man, mammals, oviparous with perfect eggs (e.g., birds), oviparous with non-perfect eggs (e.g., fish), insects, plants, and non-living matter. He considered each link in the chain as a "species." He also made extensive taxonomic studies of more than 500 animal species, dissecting many of them. The observations he published in Generation of Animals and Historia Animalum (Investigation of Animals) were meticulous, and his classification scheme conspicuously modern, departing from the prior Greek practices of using categories such as with feet/footless and winged/wingless. Aristotle achieved such a feat in biology by making use of the same principles of logic (whose systematic study he was the founder of) that he applied in his physical investigations. He did not, however, make a real classification system for plants.

15. Aristotle, 384-322 B.C.
Aristotle, 384322 BC. Born at Stagira, a Greek colony on the peninsulaof Chalcidice, Aristotle was the son of Nicomachus, the friend
http://www.historyguide.org/ancient/aristotle.html
Aristotle, 384-322 B.C.
Born at Stagira, a Greek colony on the peninsula of Chalcidice, Aristotle was the son of Nicomachus, the friend and physician of Amyntas II, king of Macedon, father of Philip, and grandfather of Alexander the Great. At 18 years of age, Aristotle left Stagira for Athens and three years later, he became a pupil at Plato's Academy. During his twenty years in Athens he established a school of rhetoric. To this period belong some of his dialogues, including the Eudemus (and its Platonic influence). Upon Plato's death in 347, Aristotle left Athens. He spent three years with an old friend, the despot of Lesbos, at Atarneus in Asia Minor, and married his niece. In 342, Aristotle was invited by Philip of Macedon to educate his son, Alexander. The two parted when Alexander set out on his expedition into Asia in 334. Aristotle returned to Athens in 335 and set up a school called the Lyceum, so named from its proximity to the temple of Apollo Lyceius. His followers were called Peripetetics. After the death of Alexander, the anti-Macedonian party accused Aristotle of impiety. With the example of Socrates behind him, Aristotle escaped (322) to Chalcis in Euboea, where he died in the same year. Trained as a physician, Aristotle brought to his philosophy a respect for fact, which he based on his doctrines. Plato, on the other hand, created a philosophic system grounded in the theory of forms. Aristotle, it is said, brought Plato down to earth. He was the first to work out a theory of reasoning which, with modifications over time, has survived to our own day as deductive logic. His

16. Aristotle (384-322 BC)
Aristotle (384 322 BC). Ancient Greek philosopher, born in Stageira,Chalcidice, Macedonia, Greece in 384 BC His father was court
http://www.seds.org/messier/xtra/Bios/aristotle.html
Aristotle (384 - 322 BC)
Ancient Greek philosopher, born in Stageira, Chalcidice, Macedonia, Greece in 384 B.C. His father was court physician to the King of Macedonia. He went to Athens in 367 B.C. to study with Plato, then returned to Macedonia in 342 B.C. to serve as tutor of prince Alexander, the later Alexander the Great. Aristotle returned to Athens around 334 B.C. and founded Lyceum. He died at Chalcis, Euboea, Greece 322 B.C. He found and summarized arguments for a spherical Earth, thus ruling out older models with a flat Earth. Moreover, he constructed a world system of concentric spheres around Earth in the center (i.e., a geocentric system), carrying planets and the outermost the "Fixed" stars - thus forming a finite spherical universe. He believed that "nebulous" objects like comets or the Milky Way belonged to the near-Earth space, the domain of meteorology instead of astronomy. He considered meteorological phenomena short-lived, while the "heavenly" spheres would never change. Aristotle's view of the world was more dogmatic than empirical. These philosophic views, further developed and enriched with

17. Famous Authors Quotes By Categories
Aristotle (384322 BC) Categories
http://www.famous-quotations.com/asp/acategories.asp?author=Aristotle (384-322 B

18. Famous Quotes By Famous People
Aristotle (384322 BC) All Quotations Mail difference. Aristotle (384-322BC) Mail This Quote It is unbecoming for young men to utter maxims.
http://www.famous-quotations.com/asp/acquotes.asp?author=Aristotle (384-322 B.C.

19. Island Of Freedom - Aristotle
Aristotle. 384322 BC.
http://www.island-of-freedom.com/ARISTOT.HTM
Aristotle
384-322 B.C.
Literature on Aristotle and Virtue Ethics
On-line Works by Aristotle

Aristotle was born in Stagira in northern Greece in 384 B.C. His father, Nicomachus, was a physician, under whose influence Aristotle developed his great observational talents. For twenty years he was a member of Plato's Acadamy as a student and teacher. When Plato died in 347 BC, Aristotle moved to Assos, a city in Asia Minor, where a friend of his, Hermias, was ruler. There he counseled Hermias and married his niece and adopted daughter, Pythias. After Hermias was captured and executed by the Persians in 345 BC, Aristotle went to Pella, the Macedonian capital, where he became the tutor of the king's young son Alexander, later known as Alexander the Great. In 335, when Alexander became king, Aristotle returned to Athens and established his own school, the Lyceum. Because much of the discussion in his school took place while teachers and students were walking about the Lyceum grounds, Aristotle's school came to be known as the Peripatetic ("walking" or "strolling") school. Upon the death of Alexander in 323 B.C., strong anti-Macedonian feeling developed in Athens, and Aristotle retired to a family estate in Euboea. He died there the following year.
The early writings of Aristotle were intended for the general public, some written in dialogue form, with a largely Platonic outlook. Very few of these writings survived; the works that we read are his systematic treatises which were intended for serious students. They are basically lecture notes which have been edited several times over several generations, which makes the chronology of his writings very complicated. His approach to philosophy is systematic yet not dogmatic; he constantly questioned his conclusions and found difficulties, and it is in this constant analysis and acute argument that he gained his reputation as one of the most influential philosophers in Western thought.

20. ThinkQuest : Library : The Philosopher's Lighthouse - Shedding Light On Philosop
The Philosopher s Lighthouse, Site Map About . The Life of Aristotle. Aristotle sThoughts On. Reality, Morality. Bodies, Society. Personality, Religion.
http://library.thinkquest.org/18775/aristotle/
Index Philosophy
The Philosopher's Lighthouse - Shedding Light on Philosophy
In order to understand yourself you need to understand the thoughts of those around you. This site presents the thoughts of famous philosophers such as Plato, Descartes, Kant, Aristotle, and Augustine on topics such as reality, morality, society, religion, knowledge, and freedom. After reading about the thoughts of these famous philosophers voice your opinion in the Philosophical Ponderings section. Visit Site 1998 ThinkQuest Internet Challenge Languages English Students Christina L. Hanford Joint Union High School, Hanford, CA, United States Terry Anglican High School, Singapore, Singapore Keith Lees Summit High School, Lees Summit, MO, United States Coaches Bienvenido Hanford Joint Union High School, Hanford, CA, United States Eugene Anglican High School, Singapore, Singapore Clint Lees Summit High School, Lees Summit, MO, United States Want to build a ThinkQuest site? The ThinkQuest site above is one of thousands of educational web sites built by students from around the world. Click here to learn how you can build a ThinkQuest site.

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