Biography of Aristotle
Aristotle
Aristotle
was born in 384 BCE(before comman era), in Stagira, near Macedonia at the
northern end of the Aegean Sea. His father, Nicomachus, was the family
physician of King Amyntas of Macedonia. It is believed that Aristotle's
ancestors had been the physicians of the Macedonian royal family for several
generations. Having come from a long line of physicians, Aristotle received
training and education that inclined his mind toward the study of natural
phenomena. This education had long-lasting influences, and was probably the
root cause of his less idealistic stand on philosophy as opposed to Plato.
Aristotle's father died when he was a boy, and Aristotle was left under the
care of his guardian Proxenus.
When
Aristotle was seventeen, Proxenus sent him to study at Plato's Academy in
Athens, the heart of the intellectual world at the time. Aristotle remained at
the Academy for twenty years, until Plato's death in 347 BC. Although Aristotle
was Plato's most promising student, Aristotle did not succeed Plato as head of
the Academy because of their opposing views on several fundamental
philosophical issues, specifically regarding Plato's theory of ideas. As has
already been noted, Aristotle was more concerned than Plato with the actual
material world, and did not believe that the only thing that mattered is the
realm of ideas and perfect forms.
After
leaving the Academy, Aristotle was invited to go live in the court of his
friend Hermeas, ruler of Atarneus and Assos in Mysia. Aristotle remained there
for three years, during which time he married Pythias, the niece and adopted
daughter of the king. Later in life Aristotle married Herpyllis, with whom had
a son, named Nicomachus after his father. When Hermeas' kingdom was taken over
by Persians, Aristotle moved to Mytilene. King Amyntas invited Aristotle to
tutor his thirteen-year old son, Alexander. Aristotle tutored Alexander for
five years until King Amyntas died and Alexander came to power. In gratitude
for Aristotle's services, Alexander provided Aristotle generously with means
for the acquisition of books and for the pursuit of scientific inquiry. While
the extent to which Aristotle's tutoring influenced Alexander's successes in
conquering an empire is disputable, Alexander did try to organize much of his
empire along the model of the Greek city-state.
In
335 BC Aristotle went back to Athens, where he found the Academy flourishing
under Xenocrates. Aristotle founded his own school, the Lyceum, and ran it for
twelve years. The school is often called the Peripatetic School, because
Aristotle used to like walking around and discusses his ideas with his
colleagues. Peripatetics are "people who walk around." Aristotle
would have detailed discussions with a small group of advanced students in the
mornings, and larger lectures in the evenings. During his time at the Lyceum,
Aristotle wrote extensively on a wide range of subjects: politics, metaphysics,
ethics, logic and science.
Aristotle
agreed with Plato that the cosmos is rationally designed and that philosophy
can come to know absolute truths by studying universal forms. Their ideas
diverged, however, in that Aristotle thought that the one finds the universal
in particular things, while Plato believed the universal exists apart from
particular things, and that material things are only a shadow of true reality,
which exists in the realm of ideas and forms. The fundamental difference
between the two philosophers is that Plato thought only pure mathematical
reasoning was necessary, and therefore focused on metaphysics and mathemtics.
Aristotle, on the other hand, thought that in addition to this "first
philosophy," it is also necessary to undertake detailed empirical investigations
of nature, and thus to study what he called "second philosophy,"
which includes such subjects as physics, mechanics and biology. Aristotle's
philosophy therefore involved both inductive and deductive reasoning, observing
the workings of the world around him and then reasoning from the particular to
a knowledge of essences and universal laws. In a sense, Aristotle was the first
major proponent of the modern scientific method. The Lyceum was an
unprecedented school of organized scientific inquiry. There was no comparable
scientific enterprise for over 2,000 years after the founding of the Lyceum.
In
323 BC Alexander the Great died unexpectedly and the government of Athens was
overthrown by anti-Macedonian forces. Having had close connections with the
Macedonian royal family, Aristotle was associated with the Macedonians and was
unpopular with the new ruling powers. The new government brought charges of
impiety against Aristotle, but he fled to his country house in Chalcis in
Euboea to escape prosecution. Aristotle commented that he fled so that
"the Athenians might not have another opportunity of sinning against
philosophy as they had already done in the person of Socrates." About a
year later, Aristotle died after complaints of a stomach illness.
Aristotle's
writings were preserved by his student Theophrastus, his successor as leader of
the Peripatetic School. Theophrastus' pupil Neleus and his heirs concealed the
books in a vault to protect them from theft, but they were damaged by dampness,
moths and worms. The books were found around 100 BC by Apellicon, who brought
them to Rome. In Rome, scholars took interest in the works and prepared new
editions of them. The writings of Aristotle that we have today are based on
this collection. Overall, Aristotle wrote three types of works: dialogues or
other works of a popular character, collections of scientific data and
observations, and systematic treatises. His philosophy can be divided into four
main areas: 1) Logic; 2) Theoretical Philosophy, including Metaphysics, Physics
and Mathematics; 3) Practical Philosophy, such as Ethics and Politics; and 4)
Poetical Philosophy, covering the study of poetry and the fine arts.
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