| | I posted a reply to an old essay that came to top at log-out, Jeff Landauer on "Aristotle and the Highest Good." I wrote:
According to the common knowledge bank at Wikipedia It is during this period in Athens from 335 to 323 BC when Aristotle is believed to have composed many of his works.[5] Aristotle wrote many dialogues, only fragments of which survived. The works that have survived are in treatise form and were not, for the most part, intended for widespread publication, as they are generally thought to be lecture aids for his students. His most important treatises include Physics, Metaphysics, Nicomachean Ethics, Politics, De Anima (On the Soul) and Poetics.
Citations include Jonathan Barnes, "Life and Work" in The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle (1995), p. 9. Terence Irwin and Gail Fine, Cornell University, Aristotle: Introductory Readings. Indianapolis, Indiana: Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. (1996), Introduction, pp. xi-xii. McLeisch, Kenneth Cole (1999). Aristotle: The Great Philosophers. Routledge. p. 5. ISBN 0-415-92392-1. Bertrand Russell, "A History of Western Philosophy", Simon & Schuster, 1972
And according to the New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia (1) "Ethica Nicomachea"; (2) "Politica". The "Eudemian Ethics" and the "Magna moralia" are not of directly Aristotelean authorship. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01713a.htm
So, what "Aristotle" said or did not say must be separated from the historical Aristotle. It might not make much difference, but we are sticklers for details. I agree that Aristotle represented the high point of learning at that time. If you actually read him on factual topics, such as the shape of the Earth, you know that after an introduction, he catalogs what was said before by significant philosophers, then he gives his observations and reasons.
Peter Reidy used the word "Hellenic" not "Hellenistic" and maybe that means something. To me, the Mycenaean Era ran from perhaps 1600 BCE to 1100 BCE, from the arrival of the Dorians to the fall of Troy. Then followed the Heroic (or "Dark") Age until about 750 BCE, when people woke up, looked at the alarm clock and said, "Hey, honey, they Archaic Age has begun! Let's study philosphy,mint coins, choose tyyants and rent ourselves out as hoplite mercenaries." The Archaic Age ended in 480 BCE with the Persian Invasion. (Maybe it ended in 500 BCE with the collapse of the Ionian Revolt.) The Hellenistic Era, does begin with the Death of Alexander. When it becomes the "Roman" Era is subject to question. Some look at the Roman Conquest of Greece, but the Greeks themselves long considered not the peninsula but all of "Helliadas" from the Crimea to Spain, including both shores of the Mediterranean, so you might have to look at the Roman conquest of Egypt... if not Mauretania, when the daughter of Mark Antony and Cleopatra, Cleopatra Selene married King Juba II..
All of that being as it may,I have to agree with Harley Robert that one follows a philosopher best by not following them.
So, I ask Bob Palin the one question he must be waiting to answer: "How?"
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