- With the rise of
Neoplatonism (and Christianity) in the 3rd century,
Peripateticism as an
independent philosophy came to an end, but the
Neoplatonists sought...
- Look up
Peripatetic or
peripatetic in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Peripatetic may
refer to:
Peripatetic school, a
school of
philosophy in Ancient...
- residents—external consultants, for example.
These groups are
known as "
peripatetic nomads". The
English word
nomad comes from the
Middle French nomade,...
-
Itinerant teachers (also
called "visiting" or "
peripatetic" teachers) are
traveling schoolteachers. They are
sometimes specialized to work in the trades...
-
Satyrus (Ancient Gr****: Σάτυρος) of
Callatis was a
distinguished Peripatetic philosopher and historian,
whose biographies of
famous people are frequently...
-
Sosigenes the
Peripatetic (Ancient Gr****: Σωσιγένης) was a
philosopher living at the end of the 2nd
century AD. He was the
tutor of
Alexander of Aphrodisias...
-
fundamental text
finished in 1186.
Written with
influence from Avicennism,
Peripateticism, and Neoplatonism, the
philosophy is
nevertheless distinct as a novel...
- The
Peripatetic axiom is: "Nothing is in the
intellect that was not
first in the senses" (Latin:
Nihil est in
intellectu quod non sit
prius in sensu)...
- are
several ethnic groups in
Afghanistan which traditionally lead a
peripatetic life. This
means they are
nomadic and
their main
occupations centre around...
- groups: hunter-gatherers, pastoralists, and the
peripatetic or non-food-producing groups.
Among these,
peripatetic nomads are
neglected and
discriminated against...