Aristotle: Metaphysics, Fester Einband
Metaphysics
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- Übersetzung:
- Hugh Tredennick
- Verlag:
- Harvard University Press, 01/1933
- Einband:
- Fester Einband, ,
- ISBN-13:
- 9780674992993
- Gewicht:
- 364 g
- Maße:
- 245 x 116 mm
- Stärke:
- 29 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 1.1.1933
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Klappentext
First things.
Aristotle, great Greek philosopher, researcher, reasoner, and writer, born at Stagirus in 384 BC, was the son of a physician. He studied under Plato at Athens and taught there (367¿347); subsequently he spent three years at the court of a former pupil in Asia Minor. After some time at Mitylene, in 343¿342 he was appointed by King Philip of Macedon to be tutor of his teen-aged son Alexander. After Philip¿s death in 336, Aristotle became head of his own school (of ¿Peripatetics¿), the Lyceum at Athens. Because of anti-Macedonian feeling there after Alexander¿s death in 323, he withdrew to Chalcis in Euboea, where he died in 322.
Nearly all the works Aristotle prepared for publication are lost; the priceless ones extant are lecture-materials, notes, and memoranda (some are spurious). They can be categorized as follows:
I Practical : Nicomachean Ethics; Great Ethics (Magna Moralia); Eudemian Ethics; Politics; Economics (on the good of the family); On Virtues and Vices.
II Logical : Categories; Analytics (Prior and Posterior); Interpretation; Refutations used by Sophists; Topica.
III Physical : Twenty-six works (some suspect) including astronomy, generation and destruction, the senses, memory, sleep, dreams, life, facts about animals, etc.
IV Metaphysics : on being as being.
V Art : Rhetoric and Poetics.
VI Other works including the Constitution of Athens; more works also of doubtful authorship.
VII Fragments of various works such as dialogues on philosophy and literature; and of treatises on rhetoric, politics, and metaphysics.
The Loeb Classical Library edition of Aristotle is in twenty-three volumes.