The Classical Greek Reader Quotes

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The Classical Greek Reader The Classical Greek Reader by Kenneth Atchity
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“Falsehood and error arise, not from our perceptions, but from the conclusions to which we jump about things which have not yet been established as true; in such cases further investigation may not confirm our first opinions, and may even disprove them. . . .”
Kenneth J. Atchity, The Classical Greek Reader
“The word logos itself is a prime example, beginning its history as a word charged with religious power, and referring to the word of wisdom and truth. By the time of Aristotle, logos had lost its philosophical connotations and had come to mean the "study of" something: biology, the study of life; zoology, the study of animal forms; and theology, the study of God.”
Kenneth J. Atchity, The Classical Greek Reader