| Aristotle - 1908 - 348 páginas
...end is not clear to such a man, while to him who has first discussed the difficulties it is clear. Further, he who has heard all the contending arguments,...a case, must be in a better position for judging. 5 The first problem concerns the subject 2 which we discussed in our prefatory remarks. It is this... | |
| Aristotle - 1908 - 340 páginas
...difficulties beforehand, both for the reasons we have stated and because people who inquire 35 without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go ; besides, a man does not otherwise know even whether he has found what he is looking for or not; 995... | |
| Aristotle - 1908 - 348 páginas
...difficulties beforehand, both for the reasons we have stated and because people who inquire 35 without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go ; besides, a man does not otherwise know even whether he has found what he is looking for or not ;... | |
| Giovanni Reale - 1980 - 552 páginas
...difficulties beforehand, both for the purposes we have stated and because people who inquire without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go; besides, a man does not otherwise know even whether he has at any given time found what he is looking... | |
| Jonathan Lear - 1988 - 356 páginas
...should have surveyed all the difficulties beforehand . . . because people who inquire without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go.'1 : Aristotle uses the metaphor of a knot. When we are confronted with difficulties we do not know... | |
| Moses ben Isaac da Rieti - 1989 - 614 páginas
...surveyed all thè dif ficulties beforehand [ . . . ] because people who enquire without first stating thè difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go". II 5-6 Cfr. Arist., De anima I 1, 402a 1-5. Cfr. inoltre ad es. The Sphere of Sacrobosco and Its Commentato™,... | |
| Martha C. Nussbaum, Amélie Oksenberg Rorty - 1992 - 466 páginas
...difficulties beforehand, both for the reasons we have stated and because people who inquire without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go; besides, a person does not otherwise know even whether he has found what he is looking for or not;... | |
| Plato - 1984 - 372 páginas
...difficulties beforehand, both for the purposes we have stated and because people who inquire without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not know where they have to go; besides, a man does not otherwise know even whether he has at any given time found what he is looking... | |
| James Hillman - 1992 - 340 páginas
...should have surveyed all the difficulties beforehand, . . . because people who inquire without first stating the difficulties are like those who do not...heard all the contending arguments, as if they were parties to a case, must be in a better position for judging.'—Aristotle, Metaphys. 995a-b. '. . .... | |
| May Sim - 1999 - 292 páginas
...both for reasons we have stated and because people who inquire without first stating the perplexities are like those who do not know where they have to go; besides, one does not otherwise know even whether one has found what one is looking for, for the goal... | |
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