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and 1302
anger 1
angles 6
animal 105
animals 345
annoyance 1
another 37
Frequency    [«  »]
108 when
106 must
106 nature
105 animal
101 any
94 while
92 into
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

animal

    Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | but yet are all forms of animal progression.) We must, then, 2 I, 1 | process of formation of each animal; or whether it is not rather, 3 I, 1 | namely, that the parent animal pre-exists, not only in 4 I, 1 | should say, because man is an animal with such and such characters, 5 I, 1 | substances out of which an animal is formed, to state, for 6 I, 1 | and colour constitute the animal is an inadequate statement, 7 I, 1 | development and causes of the animal form, speak very much like 8 I, 1 | are that distinguish the animal as a whole; to explain what 9 I, 1 | left is no longer a living animal, and that none of the parts 10 I, 1 | essential character of an animal; and it will be his duty 11 I, 1 | constitutes the nature of an animal; and inasmuch as it is the 12 I, 1 | matter to constitute the animal nature, much more than it 13 I, 1 | soul that constitutes the animal nature, but only some part 14 I, 1 | while they allow that every animal exists and was generated 15 I, 1 | is necessary; because an animal cannot possibly do without 16 I, 1 | constitutes the nature of an animal much more than does its 17 I, 2 | of the ultimate forms of animal life by bipartite division. 18 I, 3 | classification, as that each animal shall be comprehended in 19 I, 3 | ultimate specific forms of the animal, or any other, kingdom by 20 I, 3 | equal the number of ultimate animal forms. For assume an order 21 I, 3 | matter. For no part of an animal is purely material or purely 22 I, 3 | condition, constitute an animal or any of its parts, as 23 I, 3 | for example, Man to be the animal to be defined; the single 24 I, 3 | more than a Cleft-footed animal, this single differentia 25 I, 3 | belonging to one and the same animal.~It is impossible then to 26 I, 3 | reach any of the ultimate animal forms by dichotomous division.~ 27 I, 5 | the study of every kind of animal without distaste; for each 28 I, 5 | examination of the rest of the animal kingdom an unworthy task, 29 I, 5 | common, that is, to the whole animal kingdom, or to certain large 30 II, 1 | there cannot possibly be an animal without sensation, it follows 31 II, 1 | necessary consequence that every animal must have some homogeneous 32 II, 4 | more easily affected is an animal’s sensibility. Thus it is 33 II, 4 | rapidly than that of any other animal. If these fibres, that is 34 II, 4 | body, it is kept fluid by animal heat.~The character of the 35 II, 5 | it would perish. For an animal is an animal in virtue of 36 II, 5 | perish. For an animal is an animal in virtue of its sensory 37 II, 6 | nourished. But, as the young animal grows up and ripens into 38 II, 6 | with the lion. For in this animal the marrow is so utterly 39 II, 7 | that every sanguineous animal has a brain; whereas no 40 II, 7 | in man than in any other animal; and in men than in women. 41 II, 7 | is the only sanguineous animal in which this takes place. 42 II, 7 | his skull than any other animal, and the male more than 43 II, 7 | which are present in the animal body at the time of birth 44 II, 8 | demonstrated logically. For an animal is by our definition something 45 II, 8 | together, but also, as the animal is bloodless and so has 46 II, 9 | together the whole length of an animal and preserves its straightness. 47 II, 9 | necessary that the body of an animal shall bend during locomotion, 48 II, 9 | when he is moulding an animal out of clay or other soft 49 II, 9 | acted in fashioning the animal body out of flesh. Thus 50 II, 9 | the greater the bulk of an animal, the stronger, the bigger, 51 II, 9 | stronger, in order that the animal itself may be strong, the 52 II, 10| high degree. Now such an animal is man. For of all living 53 II, 10| most peculiar of all the animal organs; and out of these 54 II, 11| seem to be so, because the animal does not stand erect, but 55 II, 11| the usual attitude of the animal when in motion, it is of 56 II, 13| surface of the eye, and the animal saw through it. Inasmuch, 57 II, 14| the general surface of an animal’s body with an excess of 58 II, 14| the case with bears.~No animal has so much hair on the 59 II, 14| fluid than that of any other animal, it requires a proportionately 60 II, 16| nostrils and jaws. But in no animal is this part so peculiar 61 II, 16| double character of a land animal, and of one that lives in 62 II, 16| inasmuch as it is a land animal and has blood; seeing, also, 63 II, 16| then have prevented the animal from supplying itself with 64 II, 16| respiration, as to every other animal that has a lung, and is 65 II, 16| power of coiling because the animal has to remain for considerable 66 II, 16| in man than in any other animal, the reason for this being 67 II, 17| in man than in any other animal, softness being most impressionable 68 II, 17| tongue, however, on this animal is not attached to the upper 69 II, 17| crocodile’s lot, though a land animal, to live the life of a fish, 70 III, 1 | opposite jaw, in which case the animal is said to be saw-toothed. 71 III, 1 | The strength of such an animal is in its teeth, and these 72 III, 1 | in proper condition. No animal that has sharp interfitting 73 III, 1 | broad snout of the pig, an animal which, like the birds in 74 III, 1 | For as man is the only animal that stands erect, he is 75 III, 2 | So also no polydactylous animal is furnished with horns. 76 III, 2 | in itself to protect an animal from being destroyed by 77 III, 2 | protection to one and the same animal.~Most of the animals that 78 III, 2 | nature, when she gave an animal an excess of material for 79 III, 2 | upper parts and so made the animal to have but one horn. Rightly 80 III, 2 | contain. Thus no very small animal is known to have horns, 81 III, 2 | horns, the smallest horned animal that we are acquainted with 82 III, 2 | earthy matter is used in the animal body to form bone. But in 83 III, 2 | horns. Thus it is that no animal that has horns has also 84 III, 3 | by the windpipe that an animal imbibes fluid. For the consequences 85 III, 4 | the addition of them to an animal is not destructive of it.~ 86 III, 4 | fact that no sanguineous animal is without a heart. For 87 III, 4 | definitive characteristic of an animal is the possession of sensation; 88 III, 4 | right, than in any other animal. It has been stated in an 89 III, 4 | heart is of large size the animal is timorous, while it is 90 III, 4 | of all proportion to the animal’s heat, which being small 91 III, 4 | action. Thus it is that no animal that has large cavities 92 III, 5 | body of every sanguineous animal that is capable of locomotion 93 III, 5 | long as the flesh of an animal is in its integrity, blood 94 III, 6 | is practically the only animal whose heart presents this 95 III, 6 | quadrupeds. For no viviparous animal, be it apodous or be it 96 III, 7 | to the compactness of the animal body. The liver and spleen 97 III, 7 | essential constituents of every animal; the liver that it may effect 98 III, 8 | 8~It is not every animal that has a bladder; those 99 III, 9 | mentioned exists in this animal. All other animals, however, 100 III, 9 | seal. The kidneys of this animal are more solid than those 101 III, 9 | of suet, according as the animal’s fat is of the former or 102 III, 10| secondly to his being the only animal that laughs. For to be tickled 103 III, 10| one would expect; for no animal but man ever laughs. So, 104 III, 14| matter of necessity that an animal shall receive the incoming 105 III, 14| jaws. When, however, an animal is of large size, and feeds


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