Simul, meaning of, [105]; as between parts and whole, [602].

Skêpsis, Aristotle’s books and manuscripts long kept buried there, [36].

Smell, operated through a medium, [467]; stands below sight and hearing, [468]; action of, [469]; organ of, [470].

Sokrates, reference to his fate by Aristotle, [16]; his exposure of equivocal phraseology, [58]; called for, but did not supply, definitions, [141]; his conception and practice of Dialectic, to the neglect of Didactic, [263]; Elenchus of, [263], [437], [441]; did nothing but question, [418]; Greek philosophy before, [426]; first broke ground for Logic, [426]; his part in the development of Greek Philosophy, [436] seq.; peculiarities of, according to Aristotle, [437]; first inquired into the meaning of universal terms, [551], [552].

Sokrates, the younger, false analogy of, in defining animal, [604].

Solecism, sophistic charge of, [385]; how to repel, [413].

Sophist, the, as understood by Aristotle, [376], [377], [381]; as understood by Plato, [376]; five ends ascribed to, [384]; not really distinguished by Aristotle from the Dialectician, [382], [393] seq.

Sophistes of Plato, theory of Proposition in, [135].

Sophistic, busied about accidents, [98], [593]; as understood by Aristotle, [376], [382]; given as one of four species of debate, [377]; Aristotle’s conception of, both as to purpose and subject matter, disallowed, [382], [393] seq.; Loci bearing on, [408]; debate, difficulties in, [416]; borders on Dialectic, [417].

Sophistici Elenchi, last book of Topica, [56], [262]; subject of, [376]; last chapter of, [417] seq.