Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Educational institution - There is a sign at the entrance of Aristotle College.
There is a sign at the entrance of Aristotle College.
There is a sign at the entrance of Aristotle College. It says "people who don't understand logic are not allowed in".

Aristotle (384~ 322 BC), an ancient philosopher and ancient Greek, is one of the great philosophers, scientists and educators in the ancient history of the world, and can be called a master of Greek philosophy. He is Plato's student and Alexander's teacher.

In 335 BC, he established a school in Athens called Lv Keang, called Minstrel. Marx once called Aristotle the most learned figure among ancient Greek philosophers, and Engels called him "the ancient Hegel".

Aristotle is the founder of realism. Unlike Plato, his teacher, who measured reality by his ideal country, he advocated starting from the realistic country, preventing the country from dying and promoting its development.

He is skeptical about human nature and rationality and advocates the rule of law. The source of law is not human rationality or scholars' thinking, but what people follow and recognize in history and tradition, that is, historical rationality. He is very cautious about political reform and reform, and should not reform unless absolutely necessary.

Aristotle's thoughts on physics profoundly shaped the academic thoughts in the Middle Ages, and its influence extended to the Renaissance, although it was eventually replaced by Newtonian physics. In animal science, some of his views were proved to be accurate in the19th century. His academic field also includes the study of early formal logic theory, which was finally incorporated into modern formal logic theory in the19th century.