App Logo

No.1 PSC Learning App

1M+ Downloads
Aristotle was influenced by:

AAeschylus and Sophocles

BEuripides and Aristophanes

CBoth of the above

DNone of the above

Answer:

C. Both of the above

Read Explanation:

Aeschylus:

Greek poet who lived from approximately 525 BCE to 455 BCE, and who many consider the first great playwright of the Western tradition. Aeschylus is also called the father of tragedy. This is because—as Aristotle relates in Chapter 4 of Poetics—Aeschylus was the first to add a second actor to plays, which previously had rigidly adhered to a format that included only a chorus and a narrator. This innovation made dialogue the central focus of these works.

Sophocles:

Ancient Greek tragedian who lived and wrote about a century before Aristotle. Sophocles’ works—especially Oedipus Rex and Antigone—are referenced by Aristotle throughout Poetics. As with Homer, this is likely because Aristotle’s audience would have been very familiar with these works and because Aristotle found much in the works worthy of citing as good examples. Sophocles is credited with building upon the earlier innovations to plays by Aeschylus by adding a third character as well as background scenery. 

Euripides:

The author of Medea and other tragedies, Euripides was a Greek contemporary of Sophocles, living and writing in the century before Aristotle. His work is cited numerous times in Poetics. In Chapter 12, Aristotle says that Euripides “is felt to be the most tragic of poets,” although he somewhat tempers this comment by adding, “faulty though he may be in the general management of his subject.”


Related Questions:

An example of an onomatopoeic word is:
According to Arnold, which poet demonstrates “high seriousness” and moral grandeur?
In Indian Aesthetics, what is the term for the emotional dispositions of characters in a literary work?
Wordsworth emphasized that poetry must be written in a "language really used by ___."
According to Bhatta Tauta, how should an actor be perceived while performing a role?