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| Alphabetical [« »] animal 104 animal-itself 10 animality 2 animals 35 animals-himself 1 animals-themselves 1 animate 3 | Frequency [« »] 36 instance 36 separable 36 used 35 animals 35 position 34 contrariety 34 definitions | Aristotle Metaphysics IntraText - Concordances animals |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | between things.~By nature animals are born with the faculty 2 I, 1 | bee, and any other race of animals that may be like it; and 3 I, 1 | hearing can be taught.~The animals other than man live by appearances 4 III, 2 | evidently there will also be animals intermediate between animals-themselves 5 III, 2 | animals-themselves and the perishable animals.-We might also raise the 6 IV, 5 | say that many of the other animals receive impressions contrary 7 V, 1 | foundation of a house, while in animals some suppose the heart, 8 V, 4 | exists by nature, e.g. the animals and their parts; and not 9 V, 6 | a unity, because all are animals), and indeed in a way similar 10 V, 8 | things composed of them, both animals and divine beings, and the 11 VII, 2 | so we say that not only animals and plants and their parts 12 VII, 9 | produced except from the parent animals themselves.~But not only 13 VII, 10| them. And since the soul of animals (for this is the substance 14 VII, 12| differentiae, and the kinds of animals endowed with feet will be 15 VII, 14| present in each species of animals will be animal-itself. Further, 16 VII, 16| potencies,-both the parts of animals (for none of them exists 17 VII, 16| joints; for which reason some animals live when divided. Yet all 18 VIII, 1| plants and their parts, and animals and the parts of animals; 19 VIII, 1| animals and the parts of animals; and finally the physical 20 IX, 8 | potency is acquired. For animals do not see in order that 21 X, 8 | other in species, both are animals. The things, then, which 22 X, 8 | e.g. not only must both be animals, but this very animality 23 XI, 2 | more than either the other animals or even all lifeless things? 24 XII, 1 | includes e.g. plants and animals), of which we must grasp 25 XII, 7 | beginnings both of plants and of animals are causes, but beauty and 26 XII, 8 | or like some of the other animals, and they say other things 27 XII, 10| while the slaves and the animals do little for the common 28 XIII, 2| is so, there will also be animals existing apart, since there 29 XIII, 3| nor "male" separate from animals); so that there are also 30 XIII, 7| e.g. one might say that animals are composed of animals, 31 XIII, 7| animals are composed of animals, if there are Ideas of them.~ 32 XIV, 4 | Ideas of substances, all animals and plants and all individuals 33 XIV, 5 | the universe to that of animals and plants, on the ground 34 XIV, 5 | for even in this world of animals and plants the principles 35 XIV, 6 | Pleiades are seven, at seven animals lose their teeth (at least