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Alphabetical [« »] mother 72 mother-bird 1 mothers 2 motion 35 motionless 2 motions 2 motive 4 | Frequency [« »] 35 concocted 35 impossible 35 mean 35 motion 35 over 35 takes 34 coming | Aristotle On the Generation of Animals IntraText - Concordances motion |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 21| as that which imparts the motion and as the form; so the 2 I, 22| material by means of the motion he sets up. It is his hands 3 I, 22| other part of him with a motion of some definite kind, a 4 I, 22| of some definite kind, a motion varying with the varying 5 I, 22| a tool and as possessing motion in actuality, just as tools 6 I, 22| lies in a certain sense the motion of the art. Such, then, 7 II, 1 | one thing cannot set up a motion in another without touching 8 II, 1 | if it does not set up a motion in it. Something then of 9 II, 1 | sort of potentiality of motion in them, and when any external 10 II, 1 | puts the first of them in motion, immediately the next is 11 II, 1 | In a way it is the innate motion that does this, as the act 12 II, 1 | in it such a principle of motion, that when the motion is 13 II, 1 | of motion, that when the motion is ceasing each of the parts 14 II, 4 | the male the principle of motion. And as the products of 15 II, 6 | heat in due measure for the motion required; in the former 16 II, 6 | late that the principle of motion gets control over the upper 17 II, 6 | of all over those whose motion is not connected directly 18 II, 6 | all the parts because the motion must be very strong before 19 II, 6 | from the first principle of motion and so cold. And it is plain 20 III, 11| which it came, by imparting motion to which the principle derived 21 III, 11| makes an embryo and puts motion into it. Now in plants which 22 IV, 3 | does itself receive some motion in return; e.g. what pushes 23 IV, 4 | carried along with a certain motion, if it dash against anything 24 IV, 4 | each retaining the same motion; the same thing happens 25 V, 1 | men cannot see, for the motion already existing in the 26 V, 2 | while setting the breath in motion it is moved itself. The 27 V, 3 | being carried with a double motion, the earthy part tending 28 V, 7 | amount of the air put in motion), but not altogether, for 29 V, 7 | amount of the air put in motion? If then height and depth 30 V, 7 | females set but little air in motion because of their want of 31 V, 7 | which they set the air in motion is not strong; at the same 32 V, 7 | set a great quantity in motion and so are deep-voiced; 33 V, 7 | necessarily sets much air in motion, whereas in the rest the 34 V, 7 | which they set the air in motion is in a tense state, like 35 V, 7 | which sets the voice in motion. Hence as the seminal passages