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         Aristotle:     more books (97)
  1. The Athenian Constitution (Dodo Press) by Aristotle, 2008-05-23
  2. Aristotle the Philosopher (OPUS) by J. L. Ackrill, 1981-10-01
  3. Introduction to Aristotle: Edited with a General Introduction and Introductions to the Particular Works by Richard McKeon, 2nd Revised & EnlargedEdition by Aristotle, 1974-02-15
  4. Aristotle's Ethics (Cliffs Notes) by Charles H. Patterson, 1966-03-25
  5. The Blackwell Guide to Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics (Blackwell Guides to Great Works)
  6. Commentary on Aristotle's Physics (Aristotelian Commentary Series) by St. Thomas Aquinas, Richard J. Blackwell, et all 1999-10-15
  7. Metaphysica by Aristotle, 2010-02-23
  8. Aristotle's Physics: A Guided Study (Masterworks of Discovery) by Joe Sachs, 1995-03-01
  9. Essays on Aristotle's Ethics (Philosophical Traditions)
  10. Politica (Oxford Classical Texts) by Aristotle, 1957-12-31
  11. Nemesis: The True Story of Aristotle Onassis, Jackie O, and the Love Triangle That Brought Down the Kennedys by Peter Evans, 2005-05-01
  12. Aristotle: On the Soul. Parva Naturalia. On Breath. (Loeb Classical Library No. 288) by Aristotle, 1957-01-01
  13. Aristotle (The Routledge Philosophers) by Christopher Shields, 2007-05-16
  14. The Philosophy of Aristotle (Signet Classics) by Renford Bambrough, J. L. Creed, 2003-06-03

61. The Philosophy Of Aristotle - Page 1
A series of essays on aristotle and Aristotelian philosophy, and criticism from a radical perspective.Category Society Philosophy Philosophers aristotle...... The Philosophy of aristotle. TABLE OF CONTENTS. I. The Life of aristotle.aristotle (picture) was born at Stagira, a Greek colony of
http://radicalacademy.com/philaristotle1.htm
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62. Aristotle's Virtue Ethics
Notes by Charles Ess.
http://www.drury.edu/faculty/ess/Reason/Aristotle.html
Aristotle's Virtue Ethics
Dr. Charles Ess - Philosophy and Religion Department - Drury University
An Aristotelian vocabulary: "virtue" ( arete excellence in fulfillment of a particular function "happiness" (eudaimonia ) = a sense of well-being, resulting from achieving excellence in the fulfillment of one's functions, including the "species-specific" functions of reason (both theoretical and practical) Epistemological comment: Aristotle observes that each "science" ("knowledge," episteme ) such as mathematics, ethics, politics, psychology, biology, physics, etc. admits of a given degree of certainty and demonstration. ("Knowledge comes in different flavors.") It is the mark of an educated human being - i.e., one who has explored the different sciences with some care - to know what degree of certainty and demonstration is appropriate to each one. In particular, the educated human being will know that the same degree of certainty and demonstration is not possible in ethics that is possible in mathematics. There are important reasons for this claim - reasons surrounding the following passage. In speaking of the mean (between excess and defect) towards which our actions should aim, Aristotle notes:

63. Aristotle Et Al.
Jacques Maritain Center. aristotle et al. Readings for Philosophers andCatholics. aristotle and the Christian Church by Brother Azarias (1888).
http://www.nd.edu/Departments/Maritain/aristotl.htm
Jacques Maritain Center
Aristotle et al.
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64. Ethics Of Isocrates, Aristotle, And Diogenes
An article about his life and context by Sanderson Beck.
http://www.san.beck.org/EC22-Aristotle.html#7

65. Category [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Used to describe fundamental divisions, was coined by aristotle then explored by Kant, Hegel, Pierce, Whitehead, and Ryle.
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/c/category.htm
Category
The term "category" comes from the Greek word kategoria , which is derived from kata ("against") and agoreuein ("to assert"). In Philosophy, the term means ultimate or fundamental divisions or kinds. Several schemes of categories have been offered in the history of philosophy. These schemes are sometimes descriptions of different kinds of things. At other times, they are different ways of thinking or talking about things in the world. To say that two things belong to completely different categories is to say that they have literally nothing in common, and we cannot apply the same descriptions to both unless we speak metaphorically. Aristotle was the first to use the term category in philosophy. He adapted "categoria" from the legal language, which meant "accusation," and used it to mean that which is asserted about something. Aristotle distinguished between several types of categories including kind, quality, quantity or size, relation, location, time or date, action, and undergoing. For Kant, a category is any of the twelve forms or relating principles of the understanding, constituting necessary conditions of experience. Kant sought to derive an exhaustive list of pure forms of the understanding from the forms of judgment in the traditional logic: quantity, quality, relation, and modality. His list comprises three of each. Hegel meant by categories the ideas which explain reality. He used a triad principle and generated around 272 categories. But Hegel also stated that categories were many and their exact number cannot be determined until the system of reality is completely explained. He thus marks a shift in the meaning of "category" as simply any basic notion, concept, or principle in a system of philosophy. Pierce held that categories are the most general terms into which experience can be divided. They reflect three types of predicates or relations, and his three main categories are "firstness," "secondness," and "thirdness." These terms stand for "monadic," "dyadic," and "polyadic" respectively.

66. ClassicNotes: Aristotle
Short biography of aristotle written by Harvard students.Category Society Philosophy Philosophers aristotle...... aristotle. Biography of aristotle. About the Author. aristotle was born in 384BC, in Stagira, near Macedonia at the northern end of the Aegean Sea.
http://www.gradesaver.com/ClassicNotes/Authors/about_aristotle.html
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Biography of Aristotle
About the Author

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.

67. Aristotle's Christmas On The Web 2003
In the spirit of the season aristotle brings you tasty recipes, Christmas Trivia,a tale of Santa Claus, postcards to send to friends and family around the
http://www.saint-nick.com/
In the spirit of the season Aristotle brings you tasty recipes, Christmas Trivia, a tale of Santa Claus, postcards to send to friends and family around the world and more. Seasons Greetings from all of us
at Aristotle. Santa Through the Ages Postcards Holiday Stories
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68. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Election 2001
Full coverage news, comment and analysis, audio and video, campaigns, manifestos, candidates, polls, debates and archives. Interactive Ask aristotle feature.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/election2001/
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69. Christmas Recipes - The 12 Tastes Of Christmas From Aristotle
Choose from a delicious assortment of recipes for your holiday goodie trayCategory Home Cooking Holidays Christmas......Here are some favorite recipes from aristotle friends family. Day 1 PlumCake. Sponsored by aristotle Designed and Programmed by aristotle®.
http://www.saint-nick.com/recipes/
Day 1: Plum Cake Day 2: Chocolate Turtle Cheesecake Day 3: Pumpkin Pie Day 4: Peanut Butter Balls Day 5: Chocolate-Chip Cake Day 6: Stained Glass Cookies Day 7: Fudge Day 8: Forgotten Cookies Day 9: Cheese Ball Day 10: Cocktail Cheese Biscuits Day 11: Chocolate Chip and Cherry Cookies Day 12: Frozen Peppermint Cheesecake The Twelve Tastes of Christmas 1999 Recipe Archives Santa Through the Ages Postcards ... Email
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70. Aristotle Travel -- Biblical And Christian Tours, Student Groups Travel, Cruises
A travel agency that deals mainly with Christian, Biblical and Classical Tours. We specialize in Greece, Category Regional Europe Travel Services Travel Agents......aristotle Travel is a tour operator specializing in biblical and christiantours, student groups travel, cruises to Greece. aristotle
http://www.aristotle.gr/
Aristotle Travel Ltd is a Greek wholesale tour operator specializing in christian tours, biblical and religious tours, offering a variety of combinations for all group sizes as well as leisure and recreational packages for individual hotel reservations. We offer a wide range of tourist services including educational tours, university and student tours, study abroad programs, holy-land, pIIgrimage tours, classical tours, archaeological tours, incentive travel and cruises.
We offer a wide range of tourist services including educational tours, university tours, student tours, Holy Land tours, classical tours, archaeological tours, cruise bookings for both groups and individual travelers. Destinations including Greece, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt, Italy, Israel and the Greek Islands.
Email us at info@aristotle.gr

71. Encyclopædia Britannica
aristotle Encyclopædia Britannica Article. More than any other thinker,aristotle determined the orientation and the content of Western…,
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=114501

72. Aristotle. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
2001. aristotle. ( r´´ st t´ l) (KEY) , 384–322 BC, Greek philosopher, b.Stagira. 1. Life. aristotle’s father, Nicomachus, was a noted physician.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ar/Aristotl.html
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73. Aristotle's Metaphysics
aristotle's notions of category and substance; by S. Marc Cohen.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/aristotle-metaphysics/
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Aristotle's Metaphysics
Metaphysics Physics ta phusika ). In this entry, we discuss the ideas that are developed in Aristotle's treatise. [Not yet available]
  • Bibliography Other Internet Resources Related Entries
  • In Metaphysics sophia ) to deal with the first causes ( aitia ) and the principles ( archai Physics Physics x qua y , then, is a study of x that concerns itself solely with the y aspect of x .2, Aristotle adds that for this this reason it studies the causes and principles of substances ( ousiai Finally, we may note that in Book B, Aristotle delineates his subject matter in a different way, by listing the problems or perplexities ( aporiai Metaphysics contains definitive solutions to all of these perplexities.
    To understand the problems and project of Aristotle's Metaphysics , it is best to begin with one of his earlier works, the Categories . Although placed by long tradition among his logical works (see the discussion in the entry on Aristotle's logic ), due to its analysis of the terms that make up the propositions out of which deductive inferences are constructed, the

    74. Aristotle's Astronomy
    aristotle's Astronomy. by Thomas Fowler. Look at the comments on thispaper. aristotle argued that the universe is spherical and finite.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/GreekScience/Students/Tom/AristotleAstro.html
    Aristotle's Astronomy
    by Thomas Fowler
    Look at the comments on this paper. To the modern reader, Aristotle 's views on astronomy, as presented in Metaphysics Physics De Caelo On the Heavens ) and Simplicius' Commentary , will most likely seem very bizarre, as they are based more on a priori philosophical speculation than empirical observation. Although Aristotle acknowledged the importance of "scientific" astronomy - the study of the positions, distances and motions of the stars - he nevertheless treated astronomy in the abstract, linking it to his overall philosophical world picture. As a result, the modern distinction between physics and metaphysics is not present in Aristotle, and in order to fully appreciate him we must try to abandon this pre-conception. De Caelo Book II , chapter 14) That the celestial bodies must also be spherical in shape, can be determined by observation. In the case of the stars, Aristotle argued that they would have to be spherical, as this shape, which is the most perfect, allows them to retain their positions. ( De Caelo Book II , chapter 11) By Aristotle's time

    75. V. Markin. Aristotle's Singular Negative Syllogistic And Free Logic
    Article by V.I. Markin, Moscow State University.
    http://www.logic.ru/Engl/depart/Markin1.htm
    Department of Logic. Moscow State University Vladimir I. Markin
    Aristotle's Singular Negative Syllogistic and Free Logic
    (In: Logical Investigations. Vol. 4. Moscow: Nauka, 1997, in Russian) Abstract Assertoric Aristotle's syllogistic formulated in the opening chapters of Prior Analytics deals with categorical propositions containing only general positive (primitive) terms. However, some fragments of his tractates contain many examples of reasoning including propositions with singular and negative terms, he pointed out certain types of valid and invalid inferences of this kind, formulated truth definitions for such propositions. The purpose of the paper is to reconstruct Aristotelian type singular negative syllogistic by means of modern logic. I introduce the formal language of syllogistic with singular and negative terms that reflects the peculiarity of their usage by Aristotle. According to him, a singular term occurs only as a subject but never as a predicate, singular propositions are considered as a special kind of propositions which couldn't be reduced to universal or particular ones, negative terms can be constructed only from general terms. The alphabet contains a list of primitive general terms, a list of singular terms, term negation operator (it forms general negative term S from a general term S ), usual syllogistic constants

    76. NON-CONTRADICTION.COM - Aristotle And Aristotelianism
    Database of information about aristotle and Aristotelian philosophy.Category Society Philosophy Philosophers aristotle......A free central place for information about aristotle and Aristotelianphilosophy. format. Take aristotle along on your PocketPC.
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    Nicomachean Ethics (new) Audio Versions of Aristotle's Works ... (new) Aristotle's Works Search the Works List of Aristotelian Works The Categories (E. M. Edghill) De Interpretatione (E. M. Edghill) ... Athenaion Politeia Ancient Greece Review of Ecclesiazusae by Aristophanes Perseus: Primary Greek Text Index Philosophy Search Tools Fonts and Downloads Greek Fonts Downloads News Newspaper Clipping about Aristotle's Politics (mid 1980's) News Articles Microsoft Internet Explorer optimized Microsoft Web Embedding Fonts Tool About non-contradiction.com He who examines the most general features of existence, must investigate also the principles of reasoning. For he who gets the best grasp of his respective subject will be most able to discuss its basic principles. So that he who gets the best grasp of existing things qua existing must be able to discuss the basic principles of all existence; and he is the philosopher. And the most certain principle of all is that about which it is impossible to be mistaken... It is clear, then, that such a principle is the most certain of all and we can state it thus: "It is impossible for the same thing at the same time to belong and not belong to the same thing at the same time and in the same respect."

    77. Perseus Encyclopedia
    Similar pages More results from www.perseus.tufts.edu CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA aristotle Click here. aristotle. During the thirteen years (335322) which he spent as teacherat the Lyceum, aristotle composed the greater number of his writings.
    http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/encyclopedia?entry=Aristotle

    78. Aristotle
    University of Michigan site explaining how the Greek philosopher believed in a geocentric universe Category Society Philosophy Philosophers aristotle......
    http://www.windows.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/tour_def/people/ancient_epoch/aristotle.html
    Aristotle
    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.
    Portrait of Aristotle
    Courtesy of Corbis-Bettmann.
    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/

    79. Guardian Unlimited Politics | Aristotle | Luff, Peter
    Information about the MP for Witney 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,,-3228.html
    Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer Home Ask Aristotle Whitehall Parliament ... This week
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    80. Library Of Living Philosophers Hans-Georg Gadamer
    This volume sheds new light on Gadamer's relation to Plato, aristotle, Kant, Hegel, and especially on his complex relationship to Heidegger.
    http://www.siu.edu/~philos/llp/HGG.html

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