Results 291 to 300 of about 334,422 (345)
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Did Aristotle Endorse Aristotle’s Thesis? A Case Study in Aristotle’s Metalogic

Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, 2022
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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Aristotle’s problem

Beiträge zur Algebra und Geometrie / Contributions to Algebra and Geometry, 2014
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Hulpke, Alexander, Pambuccian, Victor
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Aristotle's Anomaly

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
To the Editor.— Intrigued by the description of Aristotle's anomaly inThe Journal(1982;248:89), I set out to confirm his observation. My initial assumption was that the index and middle fingers should be crossed. I did this both ways and inserted the pencil between the shafts of the fingers and between the tips of the fingers (except that I could not
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Was Aristotle Named ‘Aristotle’?

Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 1976
Yes, Aristotle was named ‘Aristotle’. I want to show that since ‘Aristotle’ is a proper name, this is true by definition. My theory of proper names is a version of Russell's, a theory that a name is equivalent in meaning to definite description(s) which single out the individual, if there is one, to which the name refers. (“When I say,e.g.
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Aristotle

Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series, 1986
Aristotle (384–322 BC) was born in Stagira, Macedonia. He went to Athens and entered Plato's Academy when he was eighteen. He remained there until Plato's death in about 347 BC, when he left Athens to spend the next five years at Assos in Asia Minor and at Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, working on philosophy and biology.
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Aristotle

2020
Aristotle (384–322 bce) was a younger disciple and colleague of Plato. They are the two most famous and important ancient philosophers, and Aristotle is the only Platonic disciple whose works have been transmitted to us. The relationship between the two thinkers is complex: they share some basic ideas but the disciple is a strong critic of some aspects
Carlo Natali, Gaia Bagnati
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Aristotle

1994
AbstractThis chapter examines Aristotle's view of the nature and religious function of the stars. In the De Caelo, he believes that a series of concentric spheres are responsible for heavenly movement. Aristotle believed that each one was a body and referred to this substance as ‘the first body’, ‘the first element’, or ‘ether’.
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Aristotle

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
M A, Shampo, R A, Kyle
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Aristotle

2001
Abstract Aristotle’s thoughts about justice are given most systematically in Book V of theNicomachean Ethics.The treatment is not as clear as one would like. There is, first, the general obstacle presented by the form of Aristotle’s works as they have come down to us.
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