Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | if "man" is a substance, "animal" and "biped" must also be
2 I, 3 | suppose that "biped" and "animal" are attributes not of man
3 I, 3 | which both "biped" and "animal" and each separately are
4 I, 3 | also of the complex "biped animal".~Are we then to say that
5 I, 4 | it is impossible for an animal or plant to be indefinitely
6 I, 8 | however, it does, just as animal might come to be from animal,
7 I, 8 | animal might come to be from animal, and an animal of a certain
8 I, 8 | to be from animal, and an animal of a certain kind from an
9 I, 8 | of a certain kind from an animal of a certain kind. Thus,
10 I, 8 | is true, come to be from animal (as well as from an animal
11 I, 8 | animal (as well as from an animal of a certain kind) but not
12 I, 8 | certain kind) but not as animal, for that is already there.
13 I, 8 | anything is to become an animal, not in a qualified sense,
14 I, 8 | sense, it will not be from animal: and if being, not from
15 II, 6 | inanimate thing or a lower animal or a child cannot do anything
16 IV, 3 | parts.~(3) As man is "in" animal and generally species "in"
17 VIII, 2| something else from without: the animal, on the other hand, we say,
18 VIII, 2| itself: therefore, if an animal is ever in a state of absolute
19 VIII, 2| if this can occur in an animal, why should not the same
20 VIII, 2| animate things: thus an animal is first at rest and afterwards
21 VIII, 2| always some part of the animal’s organism in motion, and
22 VIII, 2| of this part is not the animal itself, but, it may be,
23 VIII, 2| Moreover, we say that the animal itself originates not all
24 VIII, 2| again then sets the whole animal in motion: this is what
25 VIII, 4| is natural (for when an animal is in motion its motion
26 VIII, 4| is natural. Therefore the animal as a whole moves itself
27 VIII, 4| naturally: but the body of the animal may be in motion unnaturally
28 VIII, 4| only in this sense that the animal as a whole causes its own
29 VIII, 6| moving themselves, e.g. the animal kingdom and the whole class
30 VIII, 6| is not derived from the animal itself: it is connected
31 VIII, 6| are experienced by every animal while it is at rest and
32 VIII, 6| things that enter into the animal: thus in some cases the
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