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Aristotle’s successor as head of his school at Athens was Theophrastus of Eresus (c. 371–c. 286 bce). All Theophrastus’s logical writings are now lost, and much of what was said about his logical views by late ancient authors was attributed to both Theophrastus and his colleague Eudemus, so it is difficult to isolate their respective contributions. Theophrastus is reported to have added to the first figure of the syllogism the five moods that others later classified under a fourth figure. These moods were then called indirect moods of the first figure. In order to accommodate them, he had in effect ...(100 of 27062 words)