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Alphabetical [« »] males 53 mammae 3 mammalian 1 man 84 manage 1 manhood 1 manifest 3 | Frequency [« »] 88 produced 88 therefore 85 out 84 man 84 up 83 either 83 may | Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances man |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | outside, either pendent as in man or towards the fundament 2 I, 4 | horses and the like, and in man. (For details see the Enquiries 3 I, 6 | reflected part of the duct in man and similar animals.~ 4 I, 18| fashion of limbs, some in man's..." For why does not the 5 I, 18| comes from the woman and the man, or in something of this 6 I, 18| night comes from day or a man becomes man from boy, meaning 7 I, 18| from day or a man becomes man from boy, meaning that A 8 I, 18| shape. In a third sense a man becomes unmusical from being 9 I, 18| compared with each other, e.g. man with man or vine with vine. 10 I, 18| each other, e.g. man with man or vine with vine. Some 11 I, 19| her body compared with a man’s is obvious.~Now since 12 I, 20| producing eggs first (such are man and all quadrupeds which 13 I, 20| in such a case. Further, man has no such parts in his 14 I, 22| parallel to a case in which a man should carry the material 15 I, 23| same in species, as with man and horse. But in plants 16 II, 1 | they all oviparous (for man is viviparous), nor are 17 II, 1 | some which have feet, as man, and some which have not, 18 II, 1 | agency of the heart, as a man becomes a man after being 19 II, 1 | heart, as a man becomes a man after being a boy, not by 20 II, 1 | sense (as the eye of a dead man is still called an "eye"), 21 II, 1 | of the same name, as e.g. man is produced by man, but 22 II, 1 | e.g. man is produced by man, but it is increased by 23 II, 3 | same time an animal and a man or a horse or any other 24 II, 4 | and of these the first is man. Now the secretion of the 25 II, 4 | because it is colder than man’s; so the blood is excreted 26 II, 4 | of these most of all in man, but in the others also 27 II, 4 | that have blood and most in man has been already given, 28 II, 4 | emits semen as well as the man, for if she emits it outside 29 II, 6 | brain, but especially to man. For this reason the "bregma" 30 II, 6 | again is because the heat in man’s heart is purest. His intellect 31 II, 6 | well he is tempered, for man is the wisest of animals. 32 II, 6 | they are more perfect than man; but man (also unless in 33 II, 6 | more perfect than man; but man (also unless in cases contrary 34 II, 6 | formed from a residue that man is the most naked in body 35 III, 1 | externally viviparous, such as man and horse and the rest; 36 IV, 1 | been sundered, part in the man's..."; nor yet that a whole 37 IV, 1 | philosophers, say that if a man copulates with the right 38 IV, 3 | only Coriscus but also a man. In this way some of the 39 IV, 3 | characteristics. Coriscus is both a man and an animal, but his manhood 40 IV, 3 | and the general type, as man and animal; potentially 41 IV, 3 | Socrates is an individual man with certain characters. 42 IV, 3 | period of gestation between man, sheep, dog, and ox, it 43 IV, 4 | they are less common in man, for he produces for the 44 IV, 4 | and that perfect; even in man monstrosities occur more 45 IV, 4 | within these limits that one man (or any other animal) is 46 IV, 4 | general and customary rule.~Man belongs to all three classes, 47 IV, 4 | this it results that in man alone among animals the 48 IV, 4 | there are several periods in man, for children are born at 49 IV, 5 | these all that are large, as man, bring to birth the later 50 IV, 5 | one. In like manner, since man naturally would produce 51 IV, 6 | such infants survive.~In man males are more often born 52 IV, 6 | case. The reason is that in man the male is much superior 53 IV, 6 | equally with the male in man (but they are so in the 54 IV, 6 | less likely to survive in man if one be male and one female, 55 IV, 6 | the other animals; for in man it is contrary to Nature 56 IV, 6 | difference is also found between man and the other animals in 57 IV, 8 | suit this moment, but in man, since there are several 58 IV, 8 | but is most remarkable in man. The reason is that in man 59 IV, 8 | man. The reason is that in man the production of secretion 60 IV, 10| are not all longer-lived. Man lives a longer time than 61 IV, 10| living a shorter time than man, yet carry their young longer; 62 V, 1 | is especially the case in man. Further, in connexion with 63 V, 1 | visibly in old age, while man is subject to this more 64 V, 1 | of the other animals, but man is sometimes heteroglaucous.~ 65 V, 1 | the same as the reason why man alone grows grey and the 66 V, 2 | the same stamp, so that a man can say what he has heard. 67 V, 2 | sense-perception at a distance, man is, one may say, the worst 68 V, 2 | that the sense-organ in man is pure and least earthy 69 V, 3 | This is especially plain in man; the hair gets coarser as 70 V, 3 | the hairs of the head in man are thickest, for this part 71 V, 3 | the head are longest in man, for the brain, being fluid 72 V, 3 | climates is opposite to that of man; the hair of the Scythians 73 V, 3 | less hot and moist than man); in the latter it is the 74 V, 3 | head alone goes bald in man and that he is the only 75 V, 3 | the brain is there, and man is the only animal to go 76 V, 3 | summer, spring and autumn of man are defined by his age, 77 V, 3 | condition is similar in man to what it is in the animals 78 V, 4 | or vari-coloured); but in man it is not the cause, except 79 V, 4 | Whenever, then, the hair in man has naturally little heat 80 V, 4 | The cause of greyness in man has now been stated.~ 81 V, 5 | small and less fluid than in man, so that the heat required 82 V, 5 | dark in the other. But in man the skin is in no way the 83 V, 5 | hair. The reason is that man has the thinnest skin of 84 V, 7 | being especially plain in man, for Nature has given this