Perhaps the most critical chapters of ancient Greek philosophy and the most useful interpretative insights into intractable modern issues are summarized in the enlightenment about truth and falsehood. The most complete and precise philosophical formulation of the question can be found in Aristotle's short treatise On the Soul, in which the truth is sought and exists in the meanings acting in synthesis or in division.
As the predation of the true as a human function carries with it elements of overlapping levels, some of which in their apparent or final impression are not distinctly impressed, the question of truth is related to the multidimensional entanglement of sensation, of imagination and mind.
The purpose of the above work is to distinguish at each stage of the explanatory polyinterpretations the superimposed philosophical stratifications that the Memonatists have attacked (Alexander Afrodisieus, Themistius, John Philoponos, Simplikios, Sofonia) in the Aristotelian doctrine of truth.
