| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] and 834 angle 11 angles 57 animal 50 animal-and 1 animal-biped-terrestrial 1 animal-but 1 | Frequency [« »] 52 prior 51 primary 51 subjects 50 animal 50 sense 49 e 49 form | Aristotle Posterior Analytics IntraText - Concordances animal |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | that time only; e.g. if animal is truly predicable of every 2 I, 4 | this is a man", "this is an animal" is also true, and if the 3 I, 4 | white is a "coincident" of animal.~Further (a) that is essential 4 I, 11| grant simply that man is animal and not not-animal, and 5 I, 11| say that not-Callias—is animal and not not-animal. The 6 I, 13| answered, "Because it is not an animal"; but that answer would 7 I, 13| because if not being an animal causes the absence of respiration, 8 I, 13| respiration, then being an animal should be the cause of respiration, 9 I, 13| not result; for not every animal breathes. A syllogism with 10 I, 13| second figure. Thus: let A be animal, B respiration, C wall. 11 I, 13| for all that breathes is animal), but of no C; and consequently 12 I, 14| e.g. man is not two-footed animal in any qualified sense, 13 I, 17| is D, e.g. no science is animal, all music is science. Equally 14 I, 22| of white, but rather with animal, since man is identical 15 I, 22| identical with a species of animal. These predicates which 16 I, 22| man is biped, biped is animal, &c., nor the series predicating 17 I, 22| nor the series predicating animal of man, man of Callias, 18 I, 33| of, e.g. the attribute "animal" as incapable of being otherwise, 19 I, 33| opinion the apprehension of "animal" as capable of being otherwise-e. 20 I, 33| g. the apprehension that animal is an element in the essential 21 I, 33| knowledge; the apprehension of animal as predicable of man but 22 I, 33| that man is not essentially animal, that is, we may assume, 23 I, 33| assume, may be other than animal.~Further consideration of 24 II, 3 | we do not, e.g. predicate animal of biped nor biped of animal, 25 II, 3 | animal of biped nor biped of animal, nor yet figure of plane-plane 26 II, 4 | essential nature—two-footed animal, or aught else it may be. 27 II, 4 | will not follow: being an animal is predicated of being a 28 II, 4 | instances to be human is to be animal, just as it is also true 29 II, 5 | The definer asks "Is man animal or inanimate?" and then 30 II, 5 | not inferred-that man is animal. Next, when presented with 31 II, 5 | an exhaustive division of animal into terrestrial and aquatic, 32 II, 5 | man?" the divider replies "Animal, mortal, footed, biped, 33 II, 5 | proves by division, that all animal is mortal or immortal: but 34 II, 6 | animal-biped-terrestrial and not merely animal and terrestrial, since what 35 II, 8 | of man as some species of animal, or of the soul as a self-moving 36 II, 13| division: e.g. it is not all animal which is either whole-winged 37 II, 13| split-winged but all winged animal, for it is winged animal 38 II, 13| animal, for it is winged animal to which this differentiation 39 II, 13| primary differentiation of animal is that within which all 40 II, 13| is that within which all animal falls. The like is true 41 II, 13| other genus, whether outside animal or a subaltern genus of 42 II, 13| or a subaltern genus of animal; e.g. the primary differentiation 43 II, 13| division, pointing out that animal, e.g. is divisible exhaustively 44 II, 14| are which inhere in every animal. These established, we next 45 II, 14| their properties. Let A be animal, B the properties of every 46 II, 14| the properties of every animal, C D E various species of 47 II, 14| C D E various species of animal. Then it is clear in virtue 48 II, 14| a fish’s spine, and an animal’s bone, although these too 49 II, 19| such and such a species of animal is a step towards the genus 50 II, 19| a step towards the genus animal, which by the same process