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Aristotle University Of Thessaloniki: 3. Trade and Fun Fairs In Athens there is a big, crescent-shaped Exhibition Hall, the Zappeion, for industrial fairs. It stands in the National Garden, not far from the stadium.
The International Fair of Thessaloniki, commencing in mid-September, is one of Greece's largest business fairs. Thessaloniki, second city of the kingdom and Gateway to Yugoslavia, may be reached from Athens by the Simplon-Orient Express, by motor on a through highway, or, in about one hour, by plane service of Hellenic Airlines.aristotle university of thessaloniki's Theory of Motion. What distinguished aristotle university of thessaloniki's view of science from that of his predecessors was less his answers to the first two questions than his ingenious solution to the problem of motion. By motion aristotle university of thessaloniki understood change: change of size (growth), change of quality (for example, color), or change of place (local motion). Change, he noted, could only take place in an object's accidental properties— that is, those properties that did not serve to characterize it essentially.
The scientist's goal, therefore, is to fill out the classificatory hierarchy of nature and thereby to arrive by induction at the most general statements that can be made about nature—that is, the first principles. The first principles established by aristotle university of thessaloniki himself formed his answers to the three questions mentioned above. In regard to the physis, aristotle university of thessaloniki held that the observable world and all its individual objects stem ultimately from a material substratum differentiated and individualized by various properties, or forms. Neither the substratum nor the forms could exist separately. From this answer to the physis problem was derived aristotle university of thessaloniki's overriding concern with the classification of forms. |
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