"As a foreigner, a philosopher, and a friend of Macedon, he was trebly odious to the political leaders; and a pretext for accusation was raised on a ground where such pretexts are always easily raised and are always dangerous—irreligion. He was accused of blasphemy, and of paying divine honours to mortals. And who were these mortals he had honoured? His friend and his wife. ...The blameless life and lofty soul of Socrates had been no defence against the charges of Melitus; and Aristotle quitted Athens, "not to give the Athenians a second opportunity of committing a sacrilege against philosophy." ...An idle sentence of death was passed; but nature had already written that sentence in terms that were not idle. He died in the sixty-third year of his age B.C. 322."
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Aristotle: a Chapter from the History of Science
Aristotle: a Chapter from the History of Science, including Analyses of Aristotle's Scientific Writings was written by George Henry Lewes and published in 1864.
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