Peripatetic
41peripatetic — walking about, usually while studying …
42Peripatetic — /pɛripəˈtɛtɪk/ (say pereepuh tetik) adjective 1. of or relating to the philosophy or the followers of Aristotle, who taught while walking in the Lyceum of ancient Athens. –noun 2. a member of the Aristotelian school. {Middle English, from Latin… …
43peripatetic — a. walking about or from place to place; British, travelling to teach in several schools; belonging to Aristotle s school of philosophy; n. such person …
44Peripatetic school — The school founded by Aristotle in Athens in 335 BC, supposedly named after the peripatos or covered walk in the garden of the Lyceum, where he lectured. Apart from Aristotle its important members were Theophrastus, Eudemus of Rhodes, and Strato… …
45PERIPATETIC PHILOSOPHY — the name given to the philosophy of Aristotle, from his habit of walking about with his disciples as he philosophised in the shady walks of the Lyceum …
46Peripatetic philosophers — (mashsha’un) See Aristotle; philosophy …
47Peripatetic Philosopher — Aristotle …
48Peripatetic Pope — John Paul II …
49Sosigenes the Peripatetic — was a philosopher living at the end of the 2nd century AD. He was the tutor of Alexander of Aphrodisias and wrote a work On Revolving Spheres , from which some important extracts have been preserved in Simplicius s commentary on Aristotle s De… …
50Satyrus the Peripatetic — Satyrus ( el. Σάτυρος). A distinguished Peripatetic philosopher and historian, who lived in the time of Ptolemy IV Philopator (c. 210 BC), if not later. He wrote a collection of biographies, among which were lives of Philip and Demosthenes, and… …