1media/Aristotle_Altemps_Inv8575_thumb.jpg2022-10-22T01:13:38-07:00Elizabeth Palomino97f5cc41f822c98012020ee3f1612be0c7950d52406365Bust of Aristotle. Marble, Roman copy after a Greek bronze original by Lysippos from 330 BC; the alabaster mantle is a modern addition.plain2022-10-23T11:33:22-07:00after 330 BCsculpturemarble, alabasterRome, ItalyLudovisi Collectionafter Lysippos20060916103913Museo nazionale romano di palazzo AltempsElizabeth Palomino97f5cc41f822c98012020ee3f1612be0c7950d52
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12022-11-09T13:50:47-08:00MS C189 Text 211plain2022-12-13T16:21:26-08:00 Text 2: ff. 8r-19r Title: Praedicamenta (also known as Categoriae or Categories) Author:Aristotle(translated by Boethius) Language: Latin
Praedicamenta "[rubric] Incipit liber p[re]dicame[n]to[rum]. [incipit] [E]quivoca dicu[n]t[ur] quo[rum] nom[en] solu[m] co[mmun]e est ... [explicit] s[ed] q[ui] [con]sueveru[n]t dici pene om[ne]s enum[er]ati s[unt]."
The set of doctrines in the Categories, provides the framework for Aristotle’s philosophical questions Aristotle frames his categories through 10 different lenses:
Aristotle was born in 384 BCE, and he lived on the Chalcidic peninsula of Macedonia, in northern Greece. He moved to Athens in 367 and joined the Academy of Plato, where he stayed for 20 years as Plato’s pupil and colleague. Aristotle wrote on a range of disciplines, from philosophy, rhetoric and ethics through aesthetics, botany and zoology, and into fields such as political science and metaphysics.