[170] Zeller, op. cit., p. 513.
[171] Ibid., p. 407.
[172] Written before the appearance of Teichmüller’s Lit. Fehden (already referred to in the preceding chapter).
[173] Zeller’s opinion that all the Platonic Dialogues except the Laws were composed before Aristotle’s arrival in Athens, does not seem to be supported by any satisfactory evidence. [Since the above was first published I have found that a similar view of the Parmenides had already been maintained by Tocco (Ricerche Platoniche, p. 105); and afterwards, but independently, by Teichmüller (Neue Studien, III. 363). See Chiapelli, Della Interpretazione panteistica di Platone, p. 152.]
[174] Teichmüller infers, from certain expressions in the Panathenaicus of Isocrates, that Aristotle had returned from Mitylênê to Athens and resumed his former position as a teacher of rhetoric when the summons to Pella reached him. (Lit. Fehden, 261.)
[175] Gesch. d. Phil., II., 302.
[176] Zeller, op. cit., p. 25.
[177] Cf. Teichmüller, Lit. Fehden, 192.
[178] Zeller, p. 38.
[179] Ritter and Preller, Hist. Ph., p. 329.