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Aristotle's Categories : ウィキペディア英語版
Categories (Aristotle)

The ''Categories'' (Greek Κατηγορίαι ''Katēgoriai''; Latin ''Categoriae'') is a text from Aristotle's ''Organon'' that enumerates all the possible kinds of things that can be the subject or the predicate of a proposition. They are "perhaps the single most heavily discussed of all Aristotelian notions".〔Smith, Robin 1995 "Logic". In J. Barnes (ed) ''The Cambridge companion to Aristotle'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 55.〕 The work is brief enough to be divided, not into books as is usual with Aristotle's works, but into fifteen chapters.
The ''Categories'' places every object of human apprehension under one of ten categories (known to medieval writers as the Latin term ''praedicamenta''). Aristotle intended them to enumerate everything that can be expressed without composition or structure, thus anything that can be either the subject or the predicate of a proposition.
==The text==


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