Story of Aristotle's Philosophy

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Will Durant 1923
English
  • A Word to the Reader
  • Ch. 1: The Historical Background
  • Ch. 2: The Work of Aristotle
  • Ch. 3: The Foundation of Logic
  • Ch. 4: The Organization of Science
  • Ch. 5: Metaphysics and the Nature of God
  • Ch. 6: Psychology and the Nature of Art
  • Ch. 7: Ethics and the Nature of Happiness
  • Ch. 8: Politics, Pt. 1
  • Ch. 8: Politics, Pt. 2
  • Ch. 9: Criticism
  • Ch. 10: Later Life and Death
This little Blue Book No. 39, by Will Durant, deals with Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.), a Macedonian pupil of Plato, who became the teacher of Prince Alexander. While his pupil went off to conquer the world, Aristotle returned to Athens and founded his school, the Lyceum. There he amassed the first great collection of plants and animals and laid the foundations of biology, logic, literary theory, ethics, and political science. Departing from abstract Platonic universals, Aristotle described such natural processes as the developing embryo of the chick. He saw the universe as matter in motion with God as its first impulsive force. Aristotle was skeptical of Utopias. Social evils do not "arise out of the possession of private property," he wrote, but "from quite another source--the wickedness of human nature." At the theater he said we enjoy tragedies which elicit pity and terror, but in everyday life Aristotle counseled balance, reason, dignity and the golden mean in all things. (Pamela Nagami, M.D.)

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