Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | the like are the parts of animals, and the fruits are the
2 I, 7 | comes to be; for instance, animals and plants from seed.~Generally
3 II, 1 | causes.~"By nature" the animals and their parts exist, and
4 II, 4 | that most of the parts of animals came to be by chance.~There
5 II, 4 | existence or generation of animals and plants, nature or mind
6 II, 4 | cause as is assigned to animals and plants. Yet if this
7 II, 6 | found both in the lower animals and in many inanimate objects.
8 II, 8 | This is most obvious in the animals other than man: they make
9 II, 8 | and not straightway the animals: the words "whole-natured
10 II, 8 | there were such things among animals.~Moreover, among the seeds
11 VII, 4 | inseparable as e.g. two animals). Similarly one is quicker
12 VIII, 2| this is what happens when animals are asleep: though there
13 VIII, 4| from themselves, e.g. all animals, the motion is natural (
14 VIII, 4| unnatural. Moreover the parts of animals are often in motion in an
15 VIII, 4| moved. It would seem that in animals, just as in ships and things
16 VIII, 6| this actually occurring in animals: they are unmoved at one
17 VIII, 6| the fact, therefore, that animals move themselves only with
18 VIII, 6| other natural motions in animals, which they do not experience
19 VIII, 6| when it is being digested animals sleep, and when it is being
20 VIII, 6| from outside. Therefore animals are not always in continuous
21 VIII, 7| plants and many kinds of animals, owing to lack of the requisite
22 VIII, 9| moves itself": and when animals and all living things move
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