I'm giving this three stars even though honestly I was thoroughly disappointed. The supposed "hero" of Roochnik's Retrieving the Ancients, Aristotle, I feel was done an injustice. The first 3 quarters of this book, which focus on the presocratics on up through Plato are interesting, at times even comical, but Roochnik himself even seems to lose interest in the philosophy of Aristotle. Aristotle was known for his heavy emphasis on science and the natural world, but Roochnik spends only a few short sections on this aspect of Aristotelean logic. On page 205, in the midst of his discussion of Aristotle, Roochnik claims that most people do not understand why dishes need to be washed rather than left out on a table after becoming dirty. The focus of Aristotelean philosophy in this book it seems is only on answers to the questions and problems posed by earlier philosophers, with little regard for the breadth of Aristotle's work on metaphysics, physics, zoology, biology, and what would become the foundation for the human understanding of the natural world.