01577 a2200265 4500001001100000005001700011008003900028020001800067037003600085040000700121041000800128072001600136072001500152072001400167072001300181072002100194072001500215100002600230245012500256250000600381260003200387300001000419520086900429999001301298113894239120250317100351.0250312042017GB eng  a9781138942394 bTaylor & FranciscGBP 45.99fBB a01 aeng7 aQDHA2thema7 aGBC2thema7 aHPCA2bic7 aGBC2bic7 aPHI0000002bisac7 a1852bisac1 aAnton-Hermann Chroust10aAristotle: New Light on His Life and On Some of His Lost Works, Volume 2bObservations on Some of Aristotle's Lost Works a1 aOxfordbRoutledgec20170801 a522 p bOriginally published in 1973. Aristotle’s early works probably belong to the formative era of his philosophic thought and as such contribute vitally to the understanding and evaluation of the development of his philosophy. This book shows that the philosophy propagated in these lost works indicates an undeniable Platonism, and thus seems to conflict with the basic doctrines in the traditional treatises collected in the Corpus Aristotelicum . Was the author of the lost early works and the later preserved treatises one and the same person, or were some of these treatises written by members of the Early Peripatus? This, the second of two volumes, discusses in detail certain decisive aspects of Aristotle’s early works. Fascinating hypotheses and conjectures put forward here provoke discussion and further investigation in the ‘Aristotelian Problem’. c160d160