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Alphabetical    [«  »]
anger 4
angles 2
angry 3
animal 45
animal-and 1
animal-itself 1
animal-sight 1
Frequency    [«  »]
46 then
46 thinking
46 us
45 animal
45 does
45 even
45 he
Aristotle
On the Soul

IntraText - Concordances

animal

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | some sense the principle of animal life. Our aim is to grasp 2 I, 1 | considered to attach to the animal owing to the presence within 3 I, 1 | formula, as is the case with animal, or whether we must not 4 I, 1 | the material substratum of animal life, to which we have seen 5 I, 3 | by something else; for an animal can be pushed out of its 6 I, 4 | or the other parts of the animal body? Further, if the soul 7 I, 4 | in the units. If in the animal what originates movement 8 I, 5 | that follows is that the animal must be moved by its number 9 I, 5 | another, the movements of the animal must be due to their movements. 10 I, 5 | for all the parts of the animal body which consist wholly 11 I, 5 | case of certain classes of animal, for not all classes of 12 I, 5 | for not all classes of animal breathe. This fact has escaped 13 I, 5 | air or fire not form an animal, while it does so when it 14 I, 5 | say that fire or air is an animal, and it is absurd to refuse 15 I, 5 | absurd to refuse the name of animal to what has soul in it. 16 II, 1 | the body constitutes the animal.~From this it indubitably 17 II, 3 | What is the soul of plant, animal, man? Why the terms are 18 II, 4 | another like itself, an animal producing an animal, a plant 19 II, 4 | an animal producing an animal, a plant a plant, in order 20 II, 8 | movement, in order that the animal may accurately apprehend 21 II, 8 | is the sound made by an animal, and that with a special 22 II, 8 | tasting is necessary for the animal’s existence (hence it is 23 II, 8 | as we said, made by an animal is voice (even with the 24 III, 3 | intimately connected with animal existence and the soul continues 25 III, 3 | former is universal in the animal world, the latter is found 26 III, 9 | originates local movement of the animal.~The movement of growth 27 III, 9 | forward movement in the animal.~That it is not the nutritive 28 III, 9 | imagination or by appetite; for no animal moves except by compulsion 29 III, 10| which is in motion is the animal. The instrument which appetite 30 III, 10| have said, inasmuch as an animal is capable of appetite it 31 III, 12| clear from what follows. An animal is a body with soul in it: 32 III, 12| hence necessarily, if an animal is to survive, its body 33 III, 12| is immediate contact the animal, if it has no sensation, 34 III, 12| are indispensable to the animal, and it is clear that without 35 III, 12| it is impossible for an animal to be. All the other senses 36 III, 12| to any and every kind of animal, but only to some, e.g. 37 III, 12| perceptible object, and the animal by the medium. just as that 38 III, 13| clear that the body of an animal cannot be simple, i.e. consist 39 III, 13| contact. Consequently no animal body can consist of these 40 III, 13| bring about the death of an animal. For as on the one hand 41 III, 13| nothing which is not an animal can have this sense, so 42 III, 13| necessary to what is an animal. This explains, further, 43 III, 13| or hardness, destroys the animal itself. As in the case of 44 III, 13| it is impossible for an animal to be. That is why excess 45 III, 13| merely the organ, but the animal itself, because this is


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