So I've finished reading Aristotle's Organon (with incomplete translations of Analytica Priora, Topica, and De Sophistics Elenchis), and now am on to Physica. He's not nearly as fun as Plato, whose works were every bit as mythological and literary as they were philosophical, whereas Aristotle is quite professor-like and even extraordinarily scientific. I mean extraordinary in the sense of looking at the generations that preceded and followed him (at least for a thousand years). While his writing style is monotonous and dry at times (in a way that reminds me of Kant), it's really pleasing to see just how much---of logical and scientific principles---was founded on Aristotle, and why everyone who later sought a better scientific method has had to overthrow some Aristotlelian concept.
He who loves God cannot endeavour that God should love him in return - Baruch Spinoza