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ARISTOTLE AND THE EARLIER PERIPATETICS vol.I by Eduard Zeller, B.F.C.Costelloe 1897

MACEDONIA is GREECE and will always be GREECE- (if they are desperate to steal a name, Monkeydonkeys suits them just fine) ΚΑΤΩ ΤΟ ΠΡΟΔΟΤΙΚΟ "ΣΥΝΤΑΓΜΑΤΙΚΟ ΤΟΞΟ"!!! Strabo – “Geography” “There remain of Europe, first, Macedonia and the parts of Thrace that are contiguous to it and extend as far as Byzantium; secondly, Greece; and thirdly, the islands that are close by. Macedonia, of course, is a part of Greece, yet now, since I am following the nature and shape of the places geographically, I have decided to classify it apart from the rest of Greece and to join it with that part of Thrace which borders on it and extends as far as the mouth of the Euxine and the Propontis. Then, a little further on, Strabo mentions Cypsela and the Hebrus River, and also describes a sort of parallelogram in which the whole of Macedonia lies.” (Strab. 7.fragments.9) ΚΚΕ, ΚΝΕ, ΟΝΝΕΔ, ΑΓΟΡΑ,ΕΚΚΛΗΣΙΑ,ΝΕΑ,ΦΩΝΗ,ΦΕΚ,ΝΟΜΟΣ,LIFO,MACEDONIA, ALEXANDER, GREECE,IKEA

MACEDONIA is GREECE and will always be GREECE- (if they are desperate to steal a name, Monkeydonkeys suits them just fine)

ΚΑΤΩ ΤΟ ΠΡΟΔΟΤΙΚΟ "ΣΥΝΤΑΓΜΑΤΙΚΟ ΤΟΞΟ"!!!

Strabo – “Geography”
“There remain of Europe, first, Macedonia and the parts of Thrace that are contiguous to it and extend as far as Byzantium; secondly, Greece; and thirdly, the islands that are close by. Macedonia, of course, is a part of Greece, yet now, since I am following the nature and shape of the places geographically, I have decided to classify it apart from the rest of Greece and to join it with that part of Thrace which borders on it and extends as far as the mouth of the Euxine and the Propontis. Then, a little further on, Strabo mentions Cypsela and the Hebrus River, and also describes a sort of parallelogram in which the whole of Macedonia lies.”
(Strab. 7.fragments.9)

ΚΚΕ, ΚΝΕ, ΟΝΝΕΔ, ΑΓΟΡΑ,ΕΚΚΛΗΣΙΑ,ΝΕΑ,ΦΩΝΗ,ΦΕΚ,ΝΟΜΟΣ,LIFO,MACEDONIA, ALEXANDER, GREECE,IKEA

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;<br />

also<br />

.<br />

PHYSICS 461<br />

and deducing its movement from the incorporeal<br />

which govern all<br />

forms<br />

material change and shape, Aristotle<br />

is driven, as was Plato on similar grounds, 1 to adopt of<br />

necessity a teleological theory of nature. 2 God and<br />

nature, he says, do nothing without' a purpose ;<br />

nature<br />

always strives, as far as circumstances permit, to realise<br />

perfection ; nothing is superfluous, profitless, or incomplete<br />

in her ;<br />

of her productions we may say with truth,<br />

and far more truly than of those of art, that there is<br />

nothing accidental in them, but that everything has its<br />

3<br />

own purpose it is, indeed, this very prominence of<br />

design in nature which constitutes the beauty of her<br />

creations and the charm with which even the least of<br />

them repay investigation. 4 The essence of Nature, as<br />

sqq.<br />

1<br />

See Zell. Ph. d. Gr. i. 642<br />

- With what follows, of. Eittee's<br />

exhaustive treatment of<br />

the whole subject, iii. 213 sqq.<br />

265 sqq.<br />

a<br />

De Casio, i. 4 fin.<br />

: 6 Bebs Kal<br />

t) tpvtrts ouSev fidrrii/ trotovtrit/. ii.<br />

8, 289, b, 26, 290, a, 31 : ouk<br />

cctip eV rots tputrei rb &>s %rv\*v<br />

.... oifdep &s cru^e iroiei rj

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