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 1    Abbr              |               Theaetetus.~Arist. = Aristotle; Nic. Eth. = Nicomachean
 2     Int,       I     |          modelled on Isocrates and Aristotle; and the poem on his consulship,
 3     Int,       I     |     Atticus had, beneath a bust of Aristotle, than in the ivory chair
 4     Int,       I     |            been allowed to drop45. Aristotle is especially mentioned
 5     Int,      II     |     example of the Old Academy and Aristotle80. Those who demand a dogmatic
 6     Int,      II     |            himself to be following Aristotle. This partly arose from
 7     Int,      II     |            most important works of Aristotle had fallen111. Still, Cicero
 8     Int,      II     |        Stoic physics by a study of Aristotle and Plato. For a thorough
 9     Int,      II(111)|                            Grote's Aristotle, vol. I. ch. 11.~
10     Int,      IV     |         The systematic rhetoric of Aristotle and Theophrastus is most
11     Not,       1     |          same charge is brought by Aristotle against the Atomists, Met.
12     Not,       1     |            supposed to be found in Aristotle, see the passages quoted
13     Not,       1     |           dissent from his view of Aristotle's evidence], also Schwegler'
14     Not,       1     |          63. Perscripti: Cic. like Aristotle often speaks of Plato's
15     Not,       1     | Academico-Peripatetic school, viz. Aristotle, Theophrastus, Speusippus,
16     Not,       1     |    rejecting the Idea of the Good, Aristotle did away with what Plato
17     Not,       1     |            found this in Plato and Aristotle is difficult to see; that
18     Not,       1     |          the Good, while so far is Aristotle from founding his system
19     Not,       1     |           from the βιος τελειος of Aristotle. The τριας in this distinct
20     Not,       1     |            division is practically Aristotle's, who severs αρεται into
21     Not,       1     |           πολιτικον ζωον theory of Aristotle. For Cic. cf. D.F. III.
22     Not,       1     |           last a passive function. Aristotle added a fifth (26). Underlying
23     Not,       1     |    footnotes. The clearest view of Aristotle's doctrine is to be got
24     Not,       1     |           an aliquid, a τοδε τι as Aristotle calls it. Passive matter ‛
25     Not,       1     |            represent the belief of Aristotle and Plato. The ιδεαι for
26     Not,       1     |            do not exist in space. (Aristotle explicitly says this, Phys.
27     Not,       1     |          says this, Phys. III. 4). Aristotle also recognised much as
28     Not,       1     |          aside many refinements of Aristotle which will be found in R.
29     Not,       1     |            the ‛υποκειμενη ‛υλη of Aristotle, from which our word subject-matter
30     Not,       1     |           Plato'sυλη and that of Aristotle. Eoque interire: so MSS.;
31     Not,       1     |           through the authority of Aristotle, the doctrine of the infinite
32     Not,       1     |          245). Chrysippus followed Aristotle very closely (R. and P.
33     Not,       1     |          Emp. Adv. Math. VII. 214. Aristotle denied the existence of
34     Not,       1     |         Antiochus closely followed Aristotle, whose ideas may be gathered
35     Not,       1     |            D. I. 33), Cic. charges Aristotle with the same inconsistency.
36     Not,       1     |           all extent". Sempiterna: Aristotle held this: see II. 119 and
37     Not,       1     |          might with advantage read Aristotle's Physica II. ch. 46, with
38     Not,       1     |      explanation, for the views of Aristotle about τυχη and το αυτοματον,
39     Not,       1     |           utrisque) which included Aristotle held the doctrine of ιδεαι,
40     Not,       1     |       ιδεαι, and next, in 33, that Aristotle crushed the same doctrine,
41     Not,       1     |          between Plato's ιδεαι and Aristotle's τα καθαλου would naturally
42     Not,       1     |       might have been made both by Aristotle and Plato, though each would
43     Not,       1     |           the ιδεαι only, while in Aristotle it is τον καθολου; cf. Anal.
44     Not,       1     |            distinction drawn after Aristotle in R. and P. 265, note b.
45     Not,       1     |          philosophy with Plato and Aristotle (one might almost add, with
46     Not,       1     |        Politicus and Sophistes, to Aristotle from the passages quoted
47     Not,       1     |          knowledge of the whole of Aristotle's philosophy. Verborum explicatio:
48     Not,       1     |        Mundo, which however is not Aristotle's). The word ετυμολογια
49     Not,       1     |    originatio (Quintil. I. 6, 28). Aristotle had already laid down rules
50     Not,       1     |          altera parte: a trans. of Aristotle's αντιστροφος in the beginning
51     Not,       1     |         still continued to include Aristotle in the supposed old Academico-Peripatetic
52     Not,       1     |        virtutes more perfectae are Aristotle's ηθικαι αρεται. Trans. "
53     Not,       1     |            powers, as in Plato and Aristotle, but a civil war carried
54     Not,       1     |             cf. the description of Aristotle's finis in D.F. II. 19.
55     Not,       1     |           ουσια or πεμπτον σωμα of Aristotle, who proves its existence
56     Not,       1     |        which is the very name that Aristotle gives to the fifth element (
57     Not,       1     |           of giving this out to be Aristotle's opinion. The error once
58     Not,       1     |     confirm it, while the works of Aristotle had fallen into a strange
59     Not,       1     |            Now the only thing with Aristotle which is αεικινητος in eternal
60     Not,       1     |            then, in the absence of Aristotle's works, to conclude that
61     Not,       1     |            the αεικινητος αιθηρ of Aristotle! Arist. had guarded himself
62     Not,       1     |          except by the recovery of Aristotle's lost works, which did
63     Not,       1     |            re-published in Grote's Aristotle.) Zeno's εννοιαι were all
64     Not,       2     |           This was clearly seen by Aristotle alone of the ancients; see
65     Not,       2     |        reprinted in Vol II. of his Aristotle.~§92. Nata sit: cf. 28,
66     Not,       2     |        sunlight. If he holds this, Aristotle will pronounce him mad;
67     Not,       2     |        defend the Stoics and spurn Aristotle from you, while you will
68     Not,       2     |    constant judgment of Cic. about Aristotle's style. Grote, Aristot.
69     Not,       2     |          criticism to the works of Aristotle which we possess. Nulla
70     Not,       2     |             i.e. more than man (of Aristotle's η θεος η θηριον), if he
71     Not,       2     |    Mediocritates: μεσοπετες, as in Aristotle; cf. T.D. III. 11, 22, 74.
72     Not,       2     |            saying is attributed to Aristotle (iram calcar esse virtutis).
73     Not,       2     |      λεγεις and βοσκηματων βιος in Aristotle. The meaning of pecus is
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