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Alphabetical [« »] male 3 males 10 mam 1 man 77 man-that 1 man-would 1 mane 2 | Frequency [« »] 82 again 80 fluid 77 heat 77 man 76 at 76 like 74 however | Aristotle On the Parts of Animals IntraText - Concordances man |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | with it. For an educated man should be able to form a 2 I, 1 | to do this; and even the man of universal education we 3 I, 1 | For it is possible for a man to have this competence 4 I, 1 | again; for horse and dog and man present, each and all, every 5 I, 1 | necessary that health or a man is in, or shall come into, 6 I, 1 | but actually in time. For man is generated from man; and 7 I, 1 | For man is generated from man; and thus it is the possession 8 I, 1 | of treatment is to say, a man has such and such parts, 9 I, 1 | because the conception of a man includes their presence, 10 I, 1 | Thus we should say, because man is an animal with such and 11 I, 1 | form it is that makes the man, seeing that he is recognizable 12 I, 1 | but for all that is not a man. So also no hand of bronze 13 I, 1 | for other animals than man have the power of locomotion, 14 I, 3 | differentiated. (Bird and Man for instance are both Two-footed, 15 I, 3 | species. Suppose, for example, Man to be the animal to be defined; 16 I, 3 | Footed and Two-footed. Now if man was nothing more than a 17 I, 4 | as we examine the species Man separately; to examine, 18 I, 4 | species, when such species, man, for instance, and any other 19 I, 4 | exists between the bone of man and the spine of fish-but 20 I, 5 | like disesteem the study of man. For no one can look at 21 I, 5 | gradation, or to groups like Man not differentiated into 22 II, 1 | form or similar end; for man generates man, and plant 23 II, 1 | similar end; for man generates man, and plant generates plant, 24 II, 2 | as if, finding that some man in a fever was a musician, 25 II, 3 | the definition of a white man, and so far therefore blood 26 II, 7 | behind.~Of all animals, man has the largest brain in 27 II, 7 | hotter and richer in blood in man than in any other animal; 28 II, 7 | This again explains why man, alone of animals, stands 29 II, 7 | his excessive heat that in man’s brain there is this superabundant 30 II, 7 | under the influence of heat. Man is the only sanguineous 31 II, 7 | which this takes place. Man, again, has more sutures 32 II, 9 | four-footed vivipara than in man. For there is always more 33 II, 10| degree. Now such an animal is man. For of all living beings 34 II, 10| which we are acquainted man alone partakes of the divine, 35 II, 10| animals, we must speak of man first; and this the more 36 II, 10| universe. For, of all animals, man alone stands erect.~In man, 37 II, 10| man alone stands erect.~In man, then, the head is destitute 38 II, 10| motion. In other animals than man the arrangement of these 39 II, 13| these animals blink, and man most of all; this action ( 40 II, 13| and being more frequent in man than in the rest of these 41 II, 14| hereafter. Of hairy animals, man alone has lashes on both 42 II, 14| of the body; whereas in man the contrary is the case, 43 II, 14| of the two sides. But in man, owing to his upright attitude, 44 II, 14| axillae, nor on the pubes, as man has. Their hair, then, instead 45 II, 14| much hair on the head as man. This, in the first place, 46 II, 14| cold. And as the brain of man is larger and more fluid 47 II, 16| that one were to cut off a man’s lips, unite his upper 48 II, 16| lips in all animals except man is to preserve and guard 49 II, 16| teeth are fashioned. In man the lips are soft and flesh-like 50 II, 16| common with other parts to man’s faculty of speech. For 51 II, 16| just as nature has made man’s tongue unlike that of 52 II, 16| and flesh is softer in man than in any other animal, 53 II, 16| being that of all animals man has the most delicate sense 54 II, 17| with each other. It is in man that the tongue attains 55 II, 17| which is more delicate in man than in any other animal, 56 II, 17| pierce through the skin of man, and some of them even through 57 III, 1 | serve only for defence. In man the teeth are admirably 58 III, 1 | all of the sharp kind. In man, however, the number and 59 III, 1 | For the front teeth of man contribute in many ways 60 III, 1 | all, been considered. In man, however, the part which 61 III, 1 | function of the part. For as man is the only animal that 62 III, 4 | most evident in the case of man, but even in other animals 63 III, 4 | protection. In all animals but man the heart is placed in the 64 III, 4 | pectoral region; but in man it inclines a little towards 65 III, 4 | the left side is colder in man, as compared with the right, 66 III, 6 | constitutes for them the man condition of life.~The organ 67 III, 6 | out of the question. For man is practically the only 68 III, 6 | erect; and thus it is that man is the most erect of animals, 69 III, 9 | should the kidneys of a man be once attacked by disease, 70 III, 10| independent of the will. That man alone is affected by tickling 71 III, 10| they had heard the murdered man’s head, which had been severed 72 III, 10| the words, "Cercidas slew man on mam."" Search was thereupon 73 III, 10| was thereupon made and a man of those parts who bore 74 III, 10| case of other animals than man? For that none of them should 75 III, 10| expect; for no animal but man ever laughs. So, too, there 76 III, 12| the case in the pig, in man, and in the dog. While in 77 III, 14| polydactylous kinds, such as man, dog, lion, and the rest;