Andronikus of Rhodes, source of our Aristotle, [35]; sorted and corrected the Aristotelian MSS. at Rome, [37], [39]; Peripatetic Scholarch, [39]; difficulties of his task — the result appreciated, [43]; placed theological treatises first, [55]; put Relation above all the Categories, [84].
Animâ, Treatise de, referred to in the De Interpretatione, [109].
Anonymus, his catalogue of Aristotle’s works, compared with that of Diogenes and with the extant works, [29] seq.
Antipater, friend and correspondent of Aristotle, [7], [8]; victor in the Lamian war, occupied Athens, [12]; letter to, from Aristotle at Chalkis, [16]; letter of, in praise of Aristotle, [16]; executor under Aristotle’s Will, [17].
[Antiphasis], pair of contradictory opposites, [111]; rule of, as regards truth and falsity, [112], [113]; made up of one affirmation and one negation corresponding, [113]; does not hold for events particular and future, because of irregularity in the Kosmos, [113] seq.; quaternions exhibiting each two related cases of, [118] seq., [170]; forms of, in Modals, [127]; involves determination of quantity, [135]; not understood before Aristotle, [136]; the two members of, can neither be both true nor both false, argued at length by Aristotle in Metaph. Γ., ii. [586]-92.
Antisthenes, declared contradiction impossible, [136], [137]; allowed definition only of compounds, [611].
Antonius, Marcus, authority for Stoical creed, [654]; on active beneficence, [662].
Apagoge (Abduction), [202].
Apellikon, of Teos, a Peripatetic, bought Aristotle’s MSS., &c., from heirs of Neleus, [36]; exposed them at Athens and had copies taken, [36]; wrote a biography of Aristotle, [37]; library of, composite, [43].