Aristo 1
Aristo 1
Aristo 1
Earth
We have little reliable information about Aristotle's private life. We know that he was a man of means and that he cared for his wife and two children. He promised freedom to several of his slaves, on his death. According to a few sources he was not very handsome, but refined, particularly in his dress. The range of his interests was very wide, covering metaphysics; logic; ethics; biology; psychology; physics; cosmology; zoology; literary theory and politics. According to his theory of nature, the individual substances interact in various ways to produce objects different in such properties as substance; quantity; quality; time; position and condition of action. Aristotle developed a hierarchy of existences that begin with the four primary elements: earth, water, fire and air, which then make up more complex substances. Aristotle paid particular attention to the question of elemental changes, whereby one element can become another. Aristotle's original written works were lost, but his unpublished manuscripts were collected and preserved. His texts were written in dialogue or other literary forms.
Water
Air