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Alphabetical    [«  »]
hearing 9
heart 44
hearts 1
heat 123
heated 5
heating 7
heats 3
Frequency    [«  »]
129 come
125 egg
124 now
123 heat
122 any
119 kind
118 comes
Aristotle
On the Generation of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

heat

    Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 8 | and the shell is made by heat squeezing out the moisture 2 I, 11| that they have but little heat and so their nature does 3 I, 18| the body by reason of the heat of the movement of the body 4 I, 19| with a smaller portion of heat is weaker, and (4) since 5 I, 21| of these insects by the heat and power in the male animal 6 I, 21| can produce this effect by heat and concoction, as the egg 7 II, 1 | cannot exist without vital heat; for the greater body requires 8 II, 1 | more force to move it, and heat is a motive force. Therefore, 9 II, 1 | semen on account of their heat and size.~So much for the 10 II, 1 | And the measure of natural heat is the lung when it has 11 II, 1 | reptiles because of their heat produce a perfect egg, but 12 II, 1 | cartilaginous fishes have less heat than these but more moisture, 13 II, 1 | foot or hand were made by heat alone. The same applies 14 II, 1 | soul, may be caused by mere heat and cold, yet, when we come 15 II, 1 | in the products of art; heat and cold may make the iron 16 II, 2 | water is not thickened by heat; yet semen is thick when 17 II, 2 | that it is thickened by heat. For it is only substances 18 II, 2 | does not thicken through heat, whereas the semen is thick 19 II, 2 | being separated off by the heat and turning to air. And 20 II, 2 | not freeze because of its heat (for the air is hot and 21 II, 2 | because of the internal heat; afterwards, when the heat 22 II, 2 | heat; afterwards, when the heat has evaporated and the air 23 II, 3 | mean what is called vital heat. This is not fire nor any 24 II, 3 | the influence of fire, the heat of the sun and that of animals 25 II, 3 | only is this true of the heat that works through the semen, 26 II, 3 | considerations it is clear that the heat in animals neither is fire 27 II, 4 | later, having less vital heat through want of concoction, 28 II, 4 | the part chance to be in heat and the uterus to have descended. 29 II, 4 | region, on account of the heat which is in it, attracts 30 II, 4 | the catamenia also excite heat in this part. Hence it acts 31 II, 4 | of milk containing vital heat, which brings into one mass 32 II, 4 | from the nutriment, using heat and cold as its tools (for 33 II, 6 | must be present, because heat and moisture are present, 34 II, 6 | homogeneous parts are formed by heat and cold, for some are put 35 II, 6 | but little moisture and heat, cool as the moisture evaporates 36 II, 6 | evaporates along with the heat; so they become hard and 37 II, 6 | are formed by the internal heat as the moisture dries, and 38 II, 6 | baked in an oven by the heat in the process of development. 39 II, 6 | into flesh or bone by the heat, but only something naturally 40 II, 6 | without the carpenter. The heat exists in the seminal secretion, 41 II, 6 | case it is we who apply the heat in due measure for the motion 42 II, 6 | generated it is the movement and heat imparted by the right season 43 II, 6 | is mere deprivation of heat. Nature makes use of both; 44 II, 6 | animal, and because of the heat of this organ the cold forms 45 II, 6 | above, corresponding to the heat of the heart. Hence the 46 II, 6 | This again is because the heat in man’s heart is purest. 47 II, 7 | material of it is watery (the heat being acquired later). And 48 II, 8 | elements are preserved by the heat of the one of them, that 49 III, 1 | acquired, along with its heat is favourable to generative 50 III, 1 | contains in itself the vital heat; therefore it is separated 51 III, 1 | make the movement of the heat quicker than the separation 52 III, 2 | they are concocted by the heat in the earth. Such oviparous 53 III, 2 | hatched out by the mere heat of the weather owing to 54 III, 2 | concoction is a kind of heat. For the earth aids in the 55 III, 2 | in the concoction by its heat, and the brooding hen does 56 III, 2 | same, for she applies the heat that is within her. And 57 III, 2 | give the fitting amount of heat to all, but (while some 58 III, 2 | developing chick. If exposed to heat and roasted it does not 59 III, 2 | before), but on exposure to heat becomes solid. Therefore 60 III, 4 | the nature of the vital heat, in yeasts by the heat of 61 III, 4 | vital heat, in yeasts by the heat of the juice commingled 62 III, 11| and in all air is vital heat so that in a sense all things 63 III, 11| whenever this air and vital heat are enclosed in anything. 64 III, 11| incoming nourishment that the heat in the animal makes the 65 III, 11| these, so that what the heat in animals produces from 66 III, 11| nutriment, this does the heat of the warm season in the 67 IV, 1 | female, the cause of the heat or cold being the flow of 68 IV, 1 | however it is not because of heat and cold that one embryo 69 IV, 1 | is due only to cold and heat, when he saw that there 70 IV, 1 | another question.~Again, if heat and cold were the cause 71 IV, 1 | cold but not under that of heat. The same applies also to 72 IV, 1 | he should still think the heat or cold of the uterus to 73 IV, 1 | than to assign nothing but heat as the cause without any 74 IV, 1 | between male and female by the heat and cold of the uterus. 75 IV, 1 | suppose, then, either that heat and cold are the causes 76 IV, 1 | concoction works by means of heat. Therefore the males of 77 IV, 1 | through excess of blood and of heat, as if it could be taken 78 IV, 1 | nourishment through lack of heat nor bring it into its proper 79 IV, 1 | the principle of natural heat—therefore a heart must be 80 IV, 2 | in the former the vital heat is not yet perfect, in the 81 IV, 2 | of deficiency in natural heat.~Again, more males are born 82 IV, 2 | scale and cause cold or heat, and these again influence 83 IV, 4 | is a fixed limit to the heat of which water is capable; 84 IV, 4 | for what is formed by the heat of the semen is not only 85 IV, 4 | alike to the power of the heat which acts on the material 86 IV, 4 | Because of the moisture and heat of his body he may produce 87 IV, 6 | to the female in natural heat, and so the male foetus 88 IV, 6 | is concoction, and it is heat that concocts, and what 89 IV, 7 | roasting, and it is not due to heat, as some say, but rather 90 IV, 7 | weakness of the maternal heat. (For their nature seems 91 IV, 10| generation and development. For heat and cold varying within 92 V, 3 | of moisture caused by the heat of the environment. A sign 93 V, 3 | drying them, for as the heat is pressed out the moisture 94 V, 3 | them, since having little heat in them they do not concoct 95 V, 3 | Hardening, then, comes of both heat and cold, for both cause 96 V, 3 | the moisture to evaporate, heat per se and cold per accidens ( 97 V, 3 | of things along with the heat, there being no moisture 98 V, 3 | being no moisture without heat), but whereas cold not only 99 V, 3 | hardens but also condenses, heat makes a substance rarer.~ 100 V, 3 | denotes, is earthy because the heat fails and the moisture along 101 V, 3 | being a loss of pure natural heat. Thus we should expect the 102 V, 3 | brain itself has but little heat, and further that the skin 103 V, 4 | weakness and deficiency of heat. For as the body declines 104 V, 4 | body is concocted by the heat appropriate to the part; 105 V, 4 | appropriate to the part; if the heat is inadequate the part loses 106 V, 4 | man has naturally little heat and too much moisture enters 107 V, 4 | enters it, its own proper heat is unable to concoct the 108 V, 4 | so it is decayed by the heat in the environing air. All 109 V, 4 | All decay is caused by heat, not the innate heat but 110 V, 4 | by heat, not the innate heat but external heat, as has 111 V, 4 | innate heat but external heat, as has been stated elsewhere. 112 V, 4 | is deficient in natural heat and so the parts besides, 113 V, 5 | than in man, so that the heat required for concoction 114 V, 5 | of the bone, whilst the heat fails on account of age, 115 V, 5 | tip, for there is least heat in the extremities and thinnest 116 V, 6 | whitened by the natural heat, the former by the external 117 V, 6 | the former by the external heat. Whiteness is caused in 118 V, 6 | them well-flavoured, and heat causes the concoction. The 119 V, 6 | but either dark or white; heat and cold are the causes 120 V, 6 | parts having its own special heat.~The tongue also varies 121 V, 7 | for it to depend upon.~The heat or cold also of their habitat 122 V, 8 | formation of the teeth, but the heat of the milk makes them appear 123 V, 8 | grow their teeth quicker, heat being conducive to growth.~


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