POLITICS OF ARISTOTLE

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should be permanent, 45 ; aimed
(in the Republic) at an almost
impossible strictness in the re-
lation of the sexes, 53 ; supposed
the inventions of arts and laws
to have been made many times
over, 55 ; did not consider the
question of slavery, 59; had a
wider conception ofthe state than
Aristotle, 59 :-the Kepublic in-
adequately summarised by Aris-
totle, ib. :-criticised by Aristotle,
2, 39, 40, 473 48, 50, 51, 54, 56,
57, 58, 59, 60, 64, 65.. 1039 15%
265, 270, ‘90, ism Aristotle) :-
quoted, Alcibiades I, 131E, jo :-
Gorgias, jrj. 516, IOI :-Hip-
pias (The Lesser), 368A, 73:-
Laws i. 634 D, 78 : ii. 6j7, 272 :
iii. 677 foll., 55 ; 680, 6 ; 691, 87 ;
692, 8;: iv. 712, 64: v. 731E,
53;738C,261; 747D,264:vi.767
A, 105 : ib. C, 74; 776 C, 78 ; 7j7,
41 ; 778 I), 275 ; 780, 80 : VIII.
8454 53: xii. 951, 162 :--hIeno,
73,39 ; 9j E, 50 :-Phaedo, 63 D,
243 :-Phaedrus, 250 D, 18 :-
Politicus,z59A, 131 : ib.C,z ; 263
Republic, i. 349, 350. 28 ; ii. 370 c,
78 ; 371 B, 29 : 374.45 ; 37jE,
265 ; 378,291 : iv, 423 A, 47 ; ib.
E. 214 ; 435 E, 264 : v, 463E,
47; 469B.21: vi.495AtB,11:
viii. 544 D, roo; 548 E, 299;
556D, 214: s. 601 D, E, 118;
607 C, 138:-Sophist, 222 C,
~6:-Sy1nposium, 191 D, 16j ; 193
A, 44 :-Theaetetus, I j4 A, 77 ;
174 A, 37 ; 182 A, I I :---Tiniaeus,

Pleonastic espressions and repe-
titions, zj, roj, 138, 160,163,211,
235, 238, 253. 266, 278.
Plot, the Popish, 77.
Plutarch, quoted (Agesilaus, 31), 82;
(Agis, 5),83 ; (Cleomenes,Ioi, 168;
(?io, 71, E4 ; (Lycurgus, 3), 169 ;
(ib. 26), 86; (Solon, 20), 167 :
(Apophth. Lac.215 D), 118 ; (ib.
219 A), 275.
Poetics, The, quoted (1448 a. 5),
301; (1451 a. 3), 261; (1454 b.
IO), 170.
Political and judicial institutions,
connesion between, 181.


D, 26 ; 27s I), I j ; 301 E, IzZ :--


19 33, 5j ; 24 C, ?64.


Pclitical discoveries, danger of re-
warding, 77.
Politics, The, written not earlier
than 336 B.C., 218, 222 : probably
unfinished, 260,304; dislocaiions,
36 ; unfulfilled promises, 41, ,63,
66, 93, 181, 272, 303; genuine-
ness or spuriousness of 11, c. I?,
103 ; the references to other works
of Aristotle, possibly interpola-
tions, 45 ; passages remarkable
for smoothness and regularity, j4 ;
repetitions, 226 ; inconsistencles,
63, 78, 90, 95, 101,~ 166, 169,
224,232,~ j6,260; variations inthe
use of language, 223; casuistry.
124 ; suppressed dialogue, 127;
the supposed dittographies, 132 :
references to discussions not
found in the present test, IjI;
erroneous additions of numbers,
230 ; unsymmetrical divisions,
332 ; irregularities in the order of
discussion of subjects, 188 ; cha-
racter of Book VI, 234, 247;
general innccuracy of style, 244 ;
passages omitted or altered by
those who change the order of the
books. ib. ; opening chapters of
Book VII, 2j1.
‘Polities,’ The, quoted, (1559 b. 2S),
88; (1568 a. II), 271 ; (ib. b. 19),
228.
Polybius, quoted, (vi. 45), 88, 9;;
(ib. 561, 99.
Polycrates, tyrant of Samos, 225.
Postgate, 287.
Prior and posterior, 7, 9, 107.
Promises, unfulfilled, in the Politics,
Proverblorum Centuna, quoted, 4.
Pseudo-Deniosthenes, quoted (1460,
261, 36.
Psychology, made the basis of
politics by Aristotle and Plato,
16.
Pythagorean brotherhoods, 54.
Pythagoreans, the, used the term
dvrrmriovdbs in an ethical sense,4$.

41, 63: 66, 933 181, 2723 303.

Q.
Quantity, divided into continuous
and discrete by Aristotle, I 5.
Quotations, Aristotle’s use of, 1 I 5,
120, I j9:-fromHomer, not found
in our test, 139, 296.
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