Peripatetics
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Peripatetic (περιπατητικός) is the name given to followers of Aristotle, the Greek philosopher. The term means "the ones walking about". According the common account, the sect was called this from the fact that Aristotle walked about as he discoursed with his students. An alternative account is that the name derives from the public walk in the Lyceum which Aristotle and his disciples frequently took.
Peripatetics also were those philosophers not having any fixed academy, or building (the academics - Plato and Aristotle) and got the name peripatetic. The three branches of the peripatetics were the Stoics, the Cynics and the Epicureans.
According to yet other accounts, the Peripatetics were not, in fact, the direct followers of Plato and/or Aristotle, but rather a set of "groupies," perpetually following the philosophers and their students in their daily walk. In particular, the Peripatetics were known for their strong prediliction for drink and unruly behavior.