[1] Cf. Snouck Hurgronje, “Mekka”, II, p. 228 sq. [↑]

[2] [Job XXXVIII]. [↑]

[3] [Gen. XV:5]. [↑]

[4] The dialogue has received this name from the circumstance that during the conversation Aristotle holds in his hand an apple, the smell of which keeps awake what remains of his vital powers. At the close, his hand drops powerless, and the apple falls to the ground. [↑]

[5] Farther, an epitome of the στοιχείωσις θεολογική of Proclus, was held even in later times to be a genuine work of Aristotle’s. [↑]

[[Contents]]

II. PHILOSOPHY AND ARAB KNOWLEDGE.

[[Contents]]

1. Grammatical Science.