| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] refer 1 reference 1 refinement 1 refrigeration 32 refuse 1 regard 1 region 10 | Frequency [« »] 33 lung 33 some 32 life 32 refrigeration 32 through 31 blood 30 animal | Aristotle On youth and old age, on life and death, on breathing IntraText - Concordances refrigeration |
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1 5 | lack of respiration and of refrigeration. For in this case what happens 2 6 | the source and means of refrigeration, water in the one case, 3 6 | and manner in which this refrigeration occurs.~ 4 15| small and bloodless the refrigeration due to the surrounding water 5 15| animals and hence require more refrigeration, and such are bees (some 6 15| motion is not sufficient for refrigeration, but in insects it is. It 7 15| time produce sufficient refrigeration. But at last it ceases to 8 15| destruction due to lack of refrigeration is called suffocation, and 9 15| adequate for the purposes of refrigeration in such animals as the crustacea 10 15| bloodless one require less refrigeration.~ 11 16| But all with gills produce refrigeration by taking in water; the 12 16| designed for the purpose of refrigeration by means of the air (it 13 16| while gills are relevant to refrigeration by water. Now for one purpose 14 16| and one single means of refrigeration is sufficient in every case. 15 17| prevent itself from dying, refrigeration; and so Nature employs the 16 17| those of them that require refrigeration it is the gills that are 17 17| the faculty of producing refrigeration. But to prevent their food 18 17| the air enters to effect refrigeration. In animals with gills the 19 18| which we have now stated [refrigeration]; the admission of water 20 18| is not for the purpose of refrigeration. That is effected by respiration, 21 18| Carcini. For none of these is refrigeration a necessity, for in every 22 18| admission of the water is refrigeration, and the fact that animals 23 19| account must next be given of refrigeration and the manner in which 24 19| This then is the purpose of refrigeration. As for the constraining 25 21| full-blooded lung require rapid refrigeration because there is little 26 21| greater is the need for refrigeration, and at the same time breath 27 22| which the animal has for refrigeration, is the union of the soul 28 22| is the means of effecting refrigeration, of which those animals 29 22| the blood counteracts the refrigeration and, when respiring animals 30 24| of the primary organ of refrigeration, old age of its decay, while 31 24| owing to old age, to produce refrigeration. This then is our account 32 25| by air in the former that refrigeration is effected, and either