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Sense and Sensibilia (Aristotle)
Short Treatises by Aristotle From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Sense and Sensibilia (or On Sense and the Sensible, On Sense and What is Sensed, On Sense Perception; Greek: Περὶ αἰσθήσεως καὶ αἰσθητῶν; Latin: De sensu et sensibilibus, De sensu et sensili, De sensu et sensato) is one of the short treatises by Aristotle that make up the Parva Naturalia.
The English title Sense and Sensibilia adopted by the Revised Oxford Translation repeats the title J. L. Austin chose for his 1962 book Sense and Sensibilia, which in turn incorporated an allusive echo of Jane Austen's title Sense and Sensibility.[1]
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Commentaries
- Alexander of Aphrodisias (Greek text)
- Averroes (Latin translation, Venice, 1562, beginning on p. 455 of the PDF file)
- Thomas Aquinas (Latin text (Parma 1866), Latin text (HTML), English translation)
- James of Douai
- G.R.T. Ross, 1906 (Greek text, English translation, and commentary)
Notes
External links
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