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Aristotle: Complete Works

Aristotle: Complete Works is a monumental achievement, the first new English-language translations of the Aristotelian corpus since 1954. Edited by C. D. C. Reeve and Pavlos Kontos, this beautifully produced two-volume cloth-bound set with smyth-sewn bindings aims for consistent translation of key terms across the works and includes a general Introduction by Christof Rapp, Catalogs of Aristotle’s Writings, an Annotated Index of People and Places, and an extensive Annotated Glossary of Terms. 

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Aristotle: Complete Works-1

Edited by C.D.C. Reeve and Pavlos Kontos

October 2025
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Grouped product items
Format ISBN Price Qty
Hardcover (Two-Volume Boxed Set) 978-1-64792-254-2
$145.00
Hardcover (Two-Volume Set, unboxed) 978-1-64792-216-0
$130.00

Aristotle: Complete Works is a monumental achievement, the first new English-language translations of the Aristotelian corpus since 1954. Edited by C. D. C. Reeve and Pavlos Kontos, this beautifully produced two-volume cloth-bound set with smyth-sewn bindings aims for consistent translation of key terms across the works and includes a general Introduction by Christof Rapp, Catalogs of Aristotle’s Writings, an Annotated Index of People and Places, and an extensive Annotated Glossary of Terms.

  • Unboxed set: First printing of 3,000 copies worldwide.
  • Box Set: First printing of 600 copies worldwide.

Both editions feature eggplant-colored cloth-bound hardcover books with sewn bindings. The cover material is Arrestox B, providing a durable, environmentally friendly linen finish. The interiors of each book feature acid-free, bright white paper (matte coated for durability), Grosgrain black ribbon markers, and saffron yellow endsheets. The stamping on the exterior of the covers features a matching saffron yellow pigment foil. The box set version packages the volumes in a rigid, matte slipcase made of durable 88-point boards and covered in thick 80 pound, full-color paper.

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Table of Contents:

Excerpt from the Introduction:

Reviews:

"[Aristotle: Complete Works] is a successor of sorts to the so-called Oxford Aristotle, edited by Jonathan Barnes and published in 1984. As Barnes notes in the introduction to that work, most of the translations in that volume were completed between 1908 and 1930. . . . So, it seems entirely fitting that the massive project of translating all the extant works of Aristotle be revisited after, for the most part, more than a hundred years. 
      "There are many ways, large and small, that the Hackett Aristotle differs from and surpasses the Oxford Aristotle. The Hackett Aristotle does not contain the dubious and spurious works attributed to Aristotle in the Berlin Academy edition of the Greek texts by Immanuel Bekker (1831) whereas the Oxford Aristotle does. The editors, however, promise to include these in a future companion volume. Apart from this, the [Hackett Aristotle] volumes contain a detailed table of contents, including the major subject divisions of each of the works; a substantial (79 pages) introduction to Aristotle and the Aristotelian corpus by Christof Rapp; a catalog of the lists of works attributed to Aristotle in antiquity cross-referenced to what is now taken as the standard list of Diogenes Laertius; an expansive and welcome annotated glossary of terms (134 pages); a convenient table of weights and measures; and an annotated index of all the names and places mentioned in the corpus.
     "Most of the major works of Aristotle are translated by Reeve himself, based on previous single volume translations he has published with Hackett. The division of labor between the two editors is given in the Preface as follows: ‘C.D.C., Reeve established the norms of translation and edited the translations not credited to him, ensuring—among other things—that they follow these norms. Pavlos Kontos was responsible for the final editing of all the translations and for ensuring their accuracy and correctness. Everything else was a joint responsibility.'
     "Reeve et al. have committed themselves to making Aristotle more accessible to the contemporary English-speaking audience than does Barnes and the other authors of the Oxford Aristotle. I think readers will appreciate the ample paragraphing in the former compared to sometimes page-long paragraphs in the latter. In addition, Reeve presents what seems to me a more vivid and direct colloquial English than does his predecessors.
     "As one would expect, these translations, almost all of which were produced by senior Aristotle scholars, and having benefited by their authors’ own revisions and support from many critical and experienced eyes, are highly reliable.
     "[T]hese two volumes constitute a notable achievement. The forthcoming translation of the dubia and spuria is eagerly awaited."
—Lloyd P. Gerson, University of Toronto, in Ancient Philosophy


About the Editors:

C. D. C. Reeve is ΔΚΕ Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Pavlos Kontos is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Patras.