Aristotle
| Sex or gender | male |
|---|---|
| Name in native language | Ἀριστοτέλης |
| Given name | Aristotelis |
| Family name | no value |
| Date of birth | 384 BCE |
| Place of birth | Stageira |
| Date of death | 322 BCE |
| Place of death | Chalcis |
| Manner of death | natural causes |
| Cause of death | intestinal disease |
| Place of burial | Stageira |
| Father | Nicomachus |
| Sibling | Arimneste, Arimnestos |
| Spouse | Pythias |
| Unmarried partner | Herpyllis |
| Child | Nicomachus, Pythias |
| Relative | Nicomachus |
| Languages spoken, written or signed | Ancient Greek |
| Writing language | Attic Greek |
| Occupation | philosopher |
| Field of work | philosophy, natural philosophy |
| Educated at | Platonic Academy |
| Student of | Πλάτων |
| Residence | Athens, Athens, Assos |
| Work location | Chalcis |
| Ethnic group | Greeks |
| Medical condition | stuttering |
| Handedness | left-handedness |
| Movement | peripatetic school |
| Culture | Ancient Greece |
| Owner of | Aristotle's library, lyceum |
| Attested in | Mare Magnum (vol. 82) |
| Copyright status as a creator | copyrights on works have expired |
| Stack Exchange tag | https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/tags/aristotle |
Aristotle (Attic Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης, romanized: Aristotélēs) du̱ryya cci tsat bu swak a̱nunai bu a̱naai- cci tsat bu swak nhwa bu a̱hwa a̱zanson bu Yesu (384–322 BC) A̱ yin yet a̱ntyok nnyai a̱nyyi Greek u̱ a̱ yin yet a̱ngwak a̱huhwa ni. Du̱jem nu ti yin sshi a̱ntazwa nkyang ba̱gu̱ngang nyyai yya nkyang ka̱sa ryyat wap bu̱ yya a̱bvwan bu̱ bra̱ng ka̱byen. Na yin yet a̱ntyok u̱ a̱ yin tup ka̱tsan du̱nok ka̱ccet ka̱zzu bu̱ ka̱kpri du̱twang ndang a̱huhwa Peripatetic ka ni ka̱ya Lyceum ka̱yat Athens, a̱ yin nwwa yya tada a̱gba̱dang ka̱zzu ntada Aristotelian ji yin ntssup ni, nyyi ji yin sak ka̱tsan du̱nok ka u̱ ba bu̱ ka̱srak bu̱ ya ka̱son a̱nyyi sains a̱zu̱ka̱pfun ni.
Ba bvwo kyang a̱nta̱zwa Aristotle bat ba. Ba yin ku byin a̱gba̱dang ka̱nkrang Stagira a̱za̱gbang du̱tyin Greece ka̱ram ncei Classical. A̱tyyi nu nu̱, Nicomachus, a̱ yin kkwu Aristotle na̱ yet ka̱bawon, wwon a̱yanyet nu a̱ yin ku gho. Ka̱ram ka na bu̱ n tat a̱ryya swak bu a̱nunai ni 18, na̱ nwwa ka̱ccet ka̱zzu Plato swak bu a̱yring 11 ka̱ya Athens wwon a̱ ya ka̱son ka̱yemi su kpang za nswak ntat bu̱ a̱tu̱yring (c. 347 BC). Ka̱baram ba̱cincong bu̱ du̱kkwu Plato, Aristotle a̱ wwon Athen, ̃ Philip II of Macedon, nu ȧ̱ yin ku naai. Na zza̱k ka̱won nu a̱ngwak Alexander the Great nyyai u̱ du̱ryya cci tsat bu swak nnaai bu a̱tat a̱zanson ba Yesu 343 BC. A yin yrang bat saai a̱kpa bu̱ du̱twang ka̱yat Lyceum, nkpa a̱ yin ku brang na n wwang a̱ku̱kwak a̱kpa nu a tankwo papyrus a.
Du̱ na̱ yin jem nkyang bā̱gungang ni ba ga na zzu,bu̱ a̱tswa a̱yring ka̱yat a̱tat a̱mi a̱ shot a̱ bu̱ kpang ka̱pfun, du̱ yring ku n sshi ba nu zzu ba.
Little is known about Aristotle's life. He was born in the city of Stagira in northern Greece during the Classical period. His father, Nicomachus, died when Aristotle was a child, and he was brought up by a guardian. At around eighteen years old, he joined Plato's Academy in Athens and remained there until the age of thirty seven (c. 347 BC). Shortly after Plato died, Aristotle left Athens and, at the request of Philip II of Macedon, tutored his son Alexander the Great beginning in 343 BC. He established a library in the Lyceum, which helped him to produce many of his hundreds of books on papyrus scrolls.
Though Aristotle wrote many treatises and dialogues for publication, only around a third of his original output has survived, none of it intended for publication. Aristotle provided a complex synthesis of the various philosophies existing prior to him. His teachings and methods of inquiry have had a significant impact across the world, and remain a subject of contemporary philosophical discussion.
Aristotle's views profoundly shaped medieval scholarship.