Hobbes frequently mentions the “Schooles,” by which he means certain philosophers, mostly those of ancient Greece and Rome, and those who prescribe to their theories. Hobbes spends most of his book discounting the theories of the “Schooles,” as he does earlier with Descartes, who was greatly influenced by Aristotle and Plato. Hobbes implies such philosophy is damaging to a civil society, and in Hobbes’s ideal society, he sets right those philosophies he sees as wrong. Hobbes is often critical of the “Schooles,” calling them “incomprehensible” and illogical.