POLITICS OF ARISTOTLE

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INDEX TO THE KOTES. I.


A.
Abbott, Mr. E., emendation of, 179.
Abydos, revolution at, 202, 204.
Acarnania, village communities in,
5.
Accusative, the remote, jz ; of
measure, 246 :-accusativus pen-
dens, 205.
Aetolia, village communities in, 5.
Agathias, Epigram of, quoted, 8.
Age for marriage in Plato and Aris-
totle, 288.
Agis 11, King of Sparta, 95.
Alcaeus, quoted (Fr. so), 88.
Alexander Aphrodisiensis, 126 ;
quoted (j39-b. IZ), 45. ’
Alexander the Great, 95, 169.
Alfred the Great, all old English
institutions popularly attributed
Amasis, King of Egypt, 38.
Amateur, the, and the artist, which
is the better judge? 131.
Ambracia, foundation of, 197.
Ainphipolis, revolutions at, 193.
Amyntas the Little (probably
Anacoluthon, 13, 39, 119, 125, 130,
‘Analytics, Posterior,’ quoted (71 a.
Andreas, tyrant of Sicyon, 229.
‘Anima, De,’ quoted (405 b. 8),
Antecedent, the vague, 2,3, 4, 25,
121, 152, 157, 159, 160, 203, 206,
270; the inexact, common in
Aristotle, 26.
Antithesis, the, of Xo’yoc and ?pyov,
in Aristotle’s philosophy, 15.
Aphytis, 242.
Apodosis of a sentence, omitted,


to, 78.

Amyntas 11), 217.
143, 302.
I), I.

294; (412 b. Zj), 214.
32,337 49, 50166, 70, 83, 108, 112,
211, 213, 237, 247, 256, 258, 259,

36, 53, 125, 132.
T-OL. 11. x

Apollodorus, cited, 135.
Arcadia, 44 ; village colnmunities
in, 5.
Archelaus, King of hlacedonia,
218.
Archidamus 111, King of Sparta,
saying of, quoted, 275.
Areopagus, the Council of, said by
Aristotle (according to Plutarch)
to have paid tlie sailors before
the battle of Salamis, 196.
Aretino, Latin translation of, cited,
160, 266, 282. zgj, 301.
Argos, admission of I’erioeci to
citizenship at, 79 ; the chmge
of government after the first
battle of hIantinea, 197 ; tyranny
of Pheidon, 215.
Aristides, ostracism of, 137 ; said
to have extended the right of
voting to the fourth class, after
the battle of Salamis, 196.
Aristophancs, quoted, Knights
(347), 109 ; (372 and Schol. ad
loc.), 73; (?23), 244: Clouds
(1286),33 :- I‘hcsmoph.(846), 33.
Aristotle : begins his aorks with a
general statement, I ; proceeds
by the historical as \vel1 as by
the analytical method, 4; his
style praised by Cicero, 251 ; in-
consistent in his use of language,
7, IO; sometimes states contra-
dictory propositions without re-
conciling them, m, 127 ; gave a
new sense to old words, II ;
often uses pleonastic expressions,
25, xoj; fond of geographical
digressions, 90, 271 ; supposed
the inventions of arts and laws
to have been made many times
over, 55, 272 : overmastered by
his own logical distinctions, 107,
184; peculiarities in his use of
quotations, 115, 120, 159; was
ignorant of etymology, 123; often
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