Aristotle view of women

    • [DOC File]PHIL 414

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      Aristotle’s treatise On the Soul is placed among the works on natural philosophy, but should be read with Metaphysics VII-IX. In Aristotle’s view, disputes about soul and body are simply a special case of the more general disputes about form and matter.

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle

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      Aristotle condemned the women of Sparta for living in comparative independence and controlling their state's financial affairs. A bit later, in 195 B.C., the consul Cato warned the men of Rome that women's rights were destroying the very fabric of society: "Suppose you allow them to acquire or to extort one right after another, and in the end ...

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    • [DOC File]Bard College at Simon's Rock

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      Aristotle’s Considered View of the Path to Knowledge. Two apparent discrepancies mar Aristotle’s discussion of ‘the path to knowledge’—i.e. the means by which one attains a complete and accurate grasp of a subject. First, while the account in the Posterior Analytics focuses on constructing the special kinds of syllogisms that qualify ...

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle 'On Tragedy'

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      Aristotle termed such forced motion “violent” motion as opposed to natural motion. The term “violent” here connotes that some external force is applied to the body to cause the motion. (Of course, from the modern point of view, gravity is an external force that causes a …

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    • Aristotle's views on women - Wikipedia

      SLAVES and WOMEN: Aristotle’s ethical and political theory is marked by an oppressive view of slaves and women. For Aristotle, slaves are a natural part of the family, ruled over by a master. It is natural, he believes, for Greeks to rule over non-Greeks; non-Greeks captured during war were taken home as slaves.

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    • [DOCX File]FAMILY LIFE: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE

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      Given the received view – from Aristotle to Montesquieu – that sortition was the appointment method characteristic of a democracy, it’s difficult to understand Professor Lane’s focus on the election and inspection of officials. Indeed her interpretation of Aristotle’s chapter on the ‘wisdom of crowds’ is that the many are better ...

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    • [DOCX File]Commentary on Melissa Lane, ‘Rethinking Offices: Athenians ...

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      Aristotle, from Poetics: Tragedy is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete, and possessing magnitude; in embellished language, each kind of which is used separately in the different parts; in the mode of action and not narrated; and bringing about through pity and fear the catharsis of such emotions.

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle (384-322 BC)

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      Aristotle "On Tragedy" [This is a selection from Aristotle’s book called The Poetics.] ... For actions determine whether men are happy or not [and Tragedy has to do with very happy and very unhappy men and women!]. ... The magnitude [i.e. the unity and size of it] must be easily embraced in one view. A Tragic plot must have a length which can ...

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    • [DOC File]Aristotle’s Politics

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      With regards to their bodies, Aristotle did not view men and women as being two distinct types of people with separate bodies, but rather one kind of person with slightly different physical characteristics. A man and a woman were significantly different from one another, but not enough to …

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