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Show Old Eusebius, sixteen hundred years ago, referring re-ferring to Aristotle, said: "Aristotle, Nature's private secretary, dipping his pen in intellect." That was rather of a striking sentence seeing that there were no printing presses or daily newspapers newspa-pers in that day. That, 'too, was seven hundred years after Aristotle died, but the record had been kept, for Aristotle was the greatest of the ancients In intuitive knowledge and the impres sion he made upon his age has never been effaced Indeed, since the printing press was invented and the gathered treasures of the ancient world have been placed where all can view them, the fame of Aristotle has steadily grown. His 'is a more enduring fame than is that of his pupil, the great Alexander, for Caesar and Napoleon are rivals in history of Alexander, but Aristotle has no rival All the students in the Utah University ought to study Aristotle as they do mathematics, for the world's greatest have bowed in reverence to him for the past seventy generations. "He was the father of Logic, Physics and Metaphysics," "Na ture's private secretary." |