Aristotle
Aristotle (384–322 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher, polymath, and scientist born in Stagira, Chalcidice, Greece, whose father Nicomachus served as physician to the Macedonian king.[1][2] He studied at Plato's Academy in Athens for about 20 years, tutored Alexander the Great, and founded the Peripatetic school at the Lyceum, producing influential works in philosophy, natural sciences, ethics, politics, and more.[1][2][3]
Stagira, Chalcidice, Greece
Wikipedia
Philosophy
Science
Ethics
Politics
Nicomachean Ethics, Book Six
The Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle
Poetics (Dover Thrift Editions: Philosophy)
On the Art of Poetry: With a Supplement Aristotle On Music
Aristotle's Ethics: Comprising His Practical Philosophy
On Poetry and Style (Hackett Classics)
La Poetique D'Aristote
De Anima
Parva Naturalia (Australian Bibliographies)
Lectures in the Lyceum or Aristotle's ethics for English readers
Aristotle's Art of Poetry
Politics: Library Edition
The Works of Aristotle, Vol. 3: The Great Ethics, The Eudemian Ethics, The Politics and The Economics of Aristotle (The Thomas Taylor Series, No. 21)