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         Aristotle:     more books (97)
  1. Aristotle's Best Regime: Kingship, Democracy and the Rule of Law (Political Traditions in Foreign Policy) by Clifford Angell, Jr. Bates, 2003-01
  2. Aristotle: Greece 384-322 B.C. (Audio Classics Series) by Charlton Heston, 1990-06
  3. Commentary on Aristotle's Politics by Aquinas, Saint Thomas, 2007-03
  4. On the Heavens and On Generation and Corruption by Aristotle, 2006-01-01
  5. Aristotle's 'Politics': A Reader's Guide (Reader's Guides) by Judith A. Swanson, C. David Corbin, 2009-07-21
  6. The Greek Philosophers: From Thales to Aristotle (Up) (Volume 0) by W.K.C. Guthrie, 1968-05-01
  7. Poetics I With the Tractatus Coislinianus: A Hypothetical Reconstruction of Poetics II (Creative Classic Series) (Bk. 1) by Aristotle, 1988-02
  8. Aristotle on the Common Sense (Oxford Aristotle Studies) by Pavel Gregoric, 2007-08-02
  9. The Complete Works of Aristotle: The Revised Oxford Translation (Bollingen Series, Vol. 71, No. 2) (2nd Volume Set) by Aristotle, 1984
  10. Coffee with Aristotle (Coffee with...Series) by Jonathan Barnes, 2008-03-04
  11. Aristotle: Political Philosophy (Founders of Modern Political and Social Thought) by Richard Kraut, 2002-04-18
  12. What Would Aristotle Do? Self-Control Through the Power of Reason by Elliot D. Cohen, 2003-05
  13. Explanation and Teleology in Aristotle's Science of Nature by Mariska Leunissen, 2010-10-11

121. PLAT0
Sophia Project. aristotle. This page has been temporarily removed from the Sophia Project web site. To reach the Project s main page click here.
http://www.molloy.edu/academic/philosophy/sophia/aristotle/aristotle.htm
Sophia Project ARISTOTLE This page has been temporarily removed from the Sophia Project web site. To reach the Project's main page click here "Whatever is proper to the nature of each thing is best and pleasantest for that thing. Since it is reason that is most truly man, a life according to reason must be best and pleasantest for man. Such a life therefore will be the most truly happy." — Ethics Department of Philosophy Sophia Project Site Information: mrusso@molloy.edu

122. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Osborne, George
Information about the Shadow Whip and MP for Tatton includes contact details and biography plus voting record and parliament job history.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/0,,-6138.html
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MPs Conservative George Osborne George Osborne
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Shadow whip Constituency: Tatton Labour target 112 Liberal Democrat target 132 George Osborne says (on maiden speech)"The lessons that I learn from my family's past are these: one must not impose political systems on peoples who are unwilling to accept them¿ and one cannot afford to stop listening" Elections Most recent election: The 2001 general election Stood for Conservative in Tatton Candidacies since 1992 Their life in parliament Jobs and committees How have they voted?

123. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Argyropulos, John
Humanist, and translator of aristotle, born at Constantinople, 1416; died at Rome about 1486.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01707a.htm
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John Argyropulos
Humanist, and translator of Aristotle , born at Constantinople, 1416; died at Rome about 1486. It is certain that he was a teacher at Padua in 1434, although it is not clear why he returned to Constantinople in 1441. After the conquest of his native city by the Turks (1453) he joined the band of scholars who took refuge in Italy. In 1456 he was summoned to Florence by Cosimo de' Medici for the purpose of teaching ( Aristotelian ) philosophy and instructing the youthful Pietro and Lorenzo. In 1471 a plague broke out in Florence: this was the occasion of his leaving Florence for Rome, where he was kindly received by Pope Sixtus IV . There he continued his career as teacher, having among his pupils many cardinals and bishops and some distinguished foreigners, such as Reuchlin. He died at Rome; the year of his death is uncertain, but 1486 is the most probable date. He was one of those who contributed most to the revival of Greek learning in Italy. After Manuel Chrysoloras, he and George of Trebizond and George Gemistius had the largest share in making known to Western Europe the treasures of ancient Greek literature. Like all other humanists, he was somewhat intemperate in his zeal for his chosen subject. In his desire to extol the excellence of Greek literature, he expressed his contempt for the literature of ancient Rome; he was especially severe in his criticism of Cicero. His most serviceable works are his translations of many of

124. Aristotle's Poetics: Notes On Homer's Iliad And Odyssey
CLAS3152 FURTHER GREEK LITERATURE II aristotle s Poetics. Notes on Homer s Iliad and Odyssey. 1. What does aristotle say?
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/resources/poetics/poet-hom.htm
Aristotle's Poetics : Introduction Aristotle's ... : Seminar Notes
CLAS3152: FURTHER GREEK LITERATURE II: Aristotle's Poetics
Notes on Homer's Iliad and Odyssey
1. What does Aristotle say?
Aristotle makes the following references to Homer: (i) ch. 2 ( ): object: Homer imitates men 'better than we are';
(ii) ch. 3 ( ): mode: narrative, but with impersonation of the characters;
(iii) ch. 4 ( ): Homer's excellence he uniquely achieves pre-eminence in both the serious and comic traditions of poetry, and his quasi-dramatic style points the way to tragedy and comedy in the strict sense;
(iv) ch. 8 ( ): Homer's excellence: unity of plot (contrasted with defective plots based on a single person);
(v) ch. 15 ( ): an inappropriate use of divine intervention in the Iliad
(vi) ch. 15 ( ): Homer's portrayal of Achilles;
(vii) ch. 16 ( ): the use of the scar in the recognition of Odysseus by the nurse (combined with reversal) and the swineherds ;
(viii) ch. 16 ( ): the recognition of Odysseus in Alcinous' palace;
(ix) ch. 18 (

125. Aristotle Poetics: A Bibliography
aristotle Poetics a bibliography. Index. Introduction. Tragic emotions. Emotion in aristotle some general references. Pleasure. Katharsis.
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

126. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Ancram, Michael
Presents the voting record, jobs and committees, election history, full biography and contact details for the MP for Devizes, Shadow Secretary of State for International Affairs, Shadow Foreign Secretary and Deputy Leader.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/person/0,,-77.html
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MPs Conservative Michael Ancram Michael Ancram
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Party: Conservative
Shadow foreign secretary, deputy leader and shadow secretary of state for international affairs Constituency: Devizes Liberal Democrat target 84 Labour target 118 Michael Ancram says (on William Hague) "He is the most inspiring, yet at the same time down-to-earth, politician of his generation."

127. Aristotle
aristotle. Michael Fowler. U. Va. Physics. Notice that this approach to physics is not heavily dependent on observation and experiment. aristotle and Alexander.
http://www.phys.virginia.edu/classes/109N/lectures/aristot2.html
Aristotle
Michael Fowler U. Va. Physics Index of Lectures and Overview of the Course
Link to Previous Lecture
Beginnings of Science and Philosophy in Athens
Let us first recap briefly the emergence of philosophy and science in Athens after around 450 B.C. It all began with Socrates , who was born in 470 B.C. Socrates was a true philosopher, a lover of wisdom, who tried to elicit the truth by what has become known as the Socratic method, in which by a series of probing questions he forced successive further clarification of thought. Of course, such clarity often reveals that the other person's ideas don't in fact make much sense, so that although Socrates made a lot of things much clearer, he wasn't a favorite of many establishment politicians. For example, he could argue very convincingly that traditional morality had no logical basis. He mostly lectured to the sons of well-to-do aristocrats, one of whom was Plato , born in 428 B.C. Plato was a young man when Athens was humiliated by Sparta in the Peloponnesian War, and Plato probably attributed the loss to Athens being a democracy, as opposed to the kind of fascist war-based state Sparta was. Plato founded an Academy. The name came (at least in legend) from one Academus , a landowner on whose estate Plato and other philosophers met regularly. The important point is that this was the first university. All the people involved were probably aristocrats, and they discussed everything, politics, economics, morality, philosophy, mathematics and science. One of their main concerns was to find what constituted an ideal city-state. Democracy didn't seem to have worked very well in their recent past. Plato's ideas are set out in the

128. JOHN PHILOPONUS
Article by Dan Graves, employing Philoponus as an example of the power of the creationist view.
http://www.rae.org/philop.html
JOHN PHILOPONUS,
ARISTOTLE'S EARLY CREATIONIST CRITIC Author: Dan Graves
Subject: History
Date: 6/24/1998

Essays by Author

Essays by Subject

Essays by Date
Article adapted from the Dan Graves' book, Scientists of Faith The first to present his case seems right until another comes forward and questions him. Proverbs 18:17. The power of the creationist view can be better seen at the very outset of Western science in the person of John Philoponus. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), the ancient Greek philosopher and scientist whose views still reverberate today, did more than perhaps any other thinker to shape pre-Christian science. But his theories, while innovative for his day, often combined brilliant insights with a good deal of nonsense-nonsense that opposed several fundamental tenets of first Judaism and then Christianity. Significantly, Aristotle's most serious critic in the first seven hundred years was John Philoponus, an Alexandrian Christian. In response to Aristotalian error, Philoponus forged a sustained attack against Aristotle's chief proponent during the seventh century A.D., a Greek philosopher named Simplicius. Fortunately for modern science, Simplicius often responded to those attacks with long quotations from Philoponus, inadvertantly preserving his opponent's work for posterity. Philoponus's application of Christian theology to physics prefigured a new era in science. The Alexandrian scholar was the first to combine scientific cosmology (the study of the nature of the universe) with monotheism and the Christian doctrine of creation. In doing so, Philoponus anticipated not only the findings but also the methods of modern science. He controlled his observations in the manner of genuine research, although it is not certain he ever progressed beyond thought experiments-that is, experiments carefully thought out, but not actually performed.

129. The Nicomachean Ethics :: Aristotle
aristotle. information. author aristotle title The Nicomachean Ethics publisher Clarendon Press, 1908 subject Ethics Philosophy language English alt.
http://nothingistic.org/library/aristotle/nicomachean/
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author: Aristotle title: The Nicomachean Ethics publisher: Clarendon Press, 1908 subject: Ethics - Philosophy language: English alt. author: William David Ross, trans.
other notes
William David Ross's translation of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics was made available by Clarendon Press in 1908 as part of a collection of the works by Aristotle. In designing and editing the Nicomachean Ethics for the web I left the translation intact and provided Ross's table of contents in toto, with some small changes for clarity. Additionally, the Ethics was edited so that each block of text does not exceed 25k in size. This text was last revised the 15th of July, 2003.
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130. Aristotle Bibliography
Now you are able to search over 100 years of Aristotelian scholarship with ease. 1900 to 2000 and beyond This international bibliography
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131. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Curry, David
Voting record, jobs and committees, election history, full biography and contact details for the Skipton and Ripon MP and Shadow Secretary of State for Local and Devolved Government Affairs.
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Shadow secretary of state for local and devolved government affairs Constituency: Skipton and Ripon Liberal Democrat target 96 Labour target 197 David Curry says On his proudest achievment in parliament since 1997: "Under my chairmanship the agriculture select committee has set the standard in short, punchy, politically urgent reports. In the constituency we defeated the attempt to introduce comprehensive education in Ripon by uniting not dividing the schools concerned and enhancing opportunity at the 'secondary modern' school."

132. Electronic Passport To Aristotle
Socrates, Plato, and aristotle were Greek thinkers who are responsible for a great deal of the ideas. Lean about aristotle. aristotle was
http://www.mrdowling.com/701-aristotle.html
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Aristotle Aristotle was the greatest scientist of the ancient world. He is considered the father of the natural sciences. Aristotle believed in using logic and reason, rather than the anger or pleasure of gods, to explain events.
Aristotle was born in Macedonia, a mountainous land north of the Greek peninsula. At that time, many Greeks believed Macedonia was a backward place with no culture. Aristotle moved to Athens and studied at Plato's Academy. He remained at the school for more than twenty years until shortly after Plato died.
Aristotle then returned to Macedonia, where King Philip hired him to prepare his thirteen-year-old son, Alexander, for his future role as a military leader. His student would one day be known as known as Alexander the Great, one of the greatest military conquerors of all time. Once Alexander became King of Macedonia, Aristotle returned to Athens and opened a school he called the Lyceum. For the next twelve years, Aristotle organized his school as a center of research on astronomy, zoology, geography, geology, physics, anatomy, and many other fields.

133. Nicole Oresme - On The Heavens
An excerpt from the Menut and Denomy translation of Oresme's commentary on De Caelo.
http://web.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhatch/pages/02-TeachingResources/HIS-SCI-STUDY-GU
NICOLE ORESME ON THE BOOK OF THE HEAVENS
AND THE WORLD OF ARISTOTLE BOOK II. CHAPTER 25. Afterwards he [Aristotle] sets forth another opinion. Text: And some say the earth is at the center of the universe and revolves and moves circularly around the pole established for this, as written in Plato's Timaeus. Gloss: This was the opinion of one called Heraclides of Pontus who proposed that the earth is moved circularly and that the heavens are at rest. Aristotle does not here refute these opinions; it perhaps seemed to him that they have little [root in] appearance and are well refuted elsewhere in philosophy and astronomy. But it seems to me, subject to correction, that one could well support and give luster to the last opinion, namely that the earth, and not the heavens, is moved with a daily movement. Firstly, I wish to state that one could not demonstrate the contrary by any experience (expenence) Secondly, [I will show that the contrary cannot be demonstrated] by reasoning. And thirdly, I will put forth reasons in support of it (that is, the diurnal rotation of the earth).
It seems to me that by [using] what I shall say regarding these experiences, one could respond to all the other [experiences] which might be adduced in this matter

134. Guide To Philosophers - Aristoteles
philosophers. aristotle was born at Stagira, in Macedonia, the son of a physician to the royal court. aristotle on the Web. Picture
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.

135. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Fox, Liam
Voting record, jobs and committees, election history, full biography and contact details for the MP for Woodspring and Cochairman of the Conservative party.
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Conservative party co-chairman Constituency: Woodspring Liberal Democrat target 52 Labour target 88 Dr Liam Fox says "Tony Blair's idea of a consultation seems to be limited to asking the condemned man his method of execution." Others say: "assiduous, articulate, displaced partisan" (Andrew Roth, The Guardian)

136. Quote DB :: Authors :: Aristotle
Quote DB, Click Here. Quote DB Authors A aristotle, aristotle. Quotes 55 (ranking 6th) Search through this author s quotes. Sponsored Links.
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137. Ethics Of Isocrates, Aristotle, And Diogenes By Sanderson Beck
An article about his life and context by Sanderson Beck.
http://www.san.beck.org/EC22-Aristotle.html#7
BECK index
Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes
This chapter is part of the book ANCIENT WISDOM AND FOLLY, which has now been published. For information on ordering click here.
Hippocrates
Isocrates

Aristotle
...
Diogenes
Hippocrates
Mentioned by Plato The writings attributed to Hippocrates apparently were collected at Cos from early scientific observations by Hippocrates and other physicians of his era. The Hippocratic Oath has had a tremendous influence on the ethics of medical practice from that day to this. Although Hippocrates criticized traditional beliefs that the gods cause illnesses, the oath begins by swearing to the gods of health. In the Hippocratic oath physicians promise to benefit patients and abstain from whatever is harmful, to give no deadly medicine nor give a woman a pessary to induce an abortion. In entering homes to benefit the sick they must abstain from any voluntary mischief including seduction. Hippocrates recommended that physicians study nature and the whole subject of medicine that shows what people are in relation to food and drink and other occupations with the effects of each. He noted that large quantities of undiluted wine make one feeble, although he occasionally prescribed some wine. General rules often have exceptions. Cheese, for example, is not equally injurious to everyone. The physician should know the effects of fasting or eating various amounts or drinking soups, and so on. His most famous aphorism is the very first one: Life is short, and art long;

138. Introduction To Aristotle
Philosophy 433 Philosophy of aristotle. University of Washington. Introduction to aristotle. aristotle was born of a well
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.

139. Philosophy 433: Aristotle
Philosophy 433 Philosophy of aristotle. University of Washington. This site has moved to a new Web Address. After clicking on the
http://faculty.washington.edu/smcohen/phil433.htm
Philosophy 433
Philosophy of Aristotle
University of Washington
This site has moved to a new Web Address . After clicking on the link, please note the address change in your Bookmarks or Favorites folder.

140. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | MacLean, David
Voting record, jobs and committees, election history, full biography and contact details of the Chief Whip and MP for Penrith and The Border.
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Opposition chief whip Constituency: Penrith and The Border Liberal Democrat target 203 Labour target 205 David Maclean says On beggars: "I always give them something - I give them a piece of my mind." On cannabis smokers: "inadequate, weedy souls" On Northern Ireland: "the evil scum of the IRA" Others say: Ewan Mackaskill in the Guardian: "In his political career so far he has managed to offend church leaders, Scots (even though he is one himself), the Irish, and anyone else he feels fails to fit into his Thatcherite view of the world."

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