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Aristotle Lives


Article # : 17506 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 7 / 1990  2,256 Words
Author : James Deese
James Deese is the Hugh Scott Hamilton Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the University of Virginia. He is the author or coauthor of a dozen books and more than one hundred papers, mainly on psychological topics. His last published books are American Freedom and the Social Sciences and the fourth edition, with E.K. Deese, of How to Study. He is currently completing a book titled Covenants and Contracts: An Essay in Social Psychology.

       ARISTOTLE'S PSYCHOLOGY
       Daniel N. Robinson
       New York: Columbia University Press. 1989
       144 pp., $ 29.95
       
        History is an agreed-upon fable. Perhaps. That particular events happened in the way in which historians describe can always be doubted by reasonable men. That is one of the things that makes the writing of history an ongoing process. As magisterial as he was, Gibbon did not put an end to writing about the Roman Empire. There is always a new interpretation and, occasionally, there is even new information. The other thing that keeps historians occupied at their trade is the context of their own times. History needs to be reinterpreted in each epoch in the way in which that epoch views things. So history is not fixed. It is Sicilian always fluid - the eternal retelling of a familiar story.
       
        However, intellectual history is in very subtle ways different. First of all, intellectual history is not about events, or even about persons. It is about ideas, and for the most part ideas are imperishably written. To be sure, from time to time, a manuscript or tablet is unturned that provides a radically different reading of some accepted text, but such things do not happen often. There is, of course, the matter of translation, and as we learn to interpret the historical context of some important document in a new way, we must give ourselves some new interpretation of that document. Once again, such things are rare.
       
        What then is there to justify a book on Aristotle's Psychology? The answer is, ... (1997 of 13151 Characters)
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