In reading Aristotle, Heidegger increasingly contested the traditional Latin translation and scholastic interpretation of his thought.
He learned Latin and enough Greek to read Aristotle in the original.
I have since read Aristotle again, looking for the massive evil that appears in the fragments from Phædrus, but have not found it there.
I realize Stanford students are so superior to all other students that they're practically weird, but does that mean they are actually going to read Aristotle?
The next thing we know, Brother Edgar will be reading Aristotle.
Everyone was reading Aristotle, Plato, Augustine, Dewey, Freud.
Don't read Homer and Aristotle.
This part of the first section gives a most interesting insight into Saadia's knowledge of the Greek philosophers, which he probably derived from reading Aristotle.
A philosophy major would of course be expected to read Aristotle, and an engineering major to know physics and calculus.
Though, there, I see a logical reason; I have somehow never been invited to join the Academy, despite having once read Plato and Aristotle.