Aristotle . DE PARTIBUS ANIMALIUM
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THE
WORKS OF ARISTOTLE
TRANSLATED INTO ENGLISH
UNDER THE EDITORSHIP
OF
J.A. SMITH M.A.
WAYNFLETE PROFESSOR OF MORAL AND METAPHYSICAL PHILOSOPHY
FELLOW OF MAGDALEN COLLEGE
W.D. ROSS, M.A.
FELLOW OF ORIEL COLLEGE
VOLUME V
DE PARTIBUS ANIMALIUM
BY WILLIAM OGLE
DE MOTU AND DE INCESSU ANIMALIUM
BY A.S.L. FARQUHARSON
DE GENERATIONE ANIMALIUM
BY ARTHUR PLATT



OXFORD
AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
1912



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HENRY FORWDE, M.A.
PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
LONDON EDINBURGH NEW YORK TORONTO
MELBOURNE AND BOMBAY



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   DE MOTU ANIMALIUM
DE INCESSU ANIMALIUM
BY
A.S.L. FARQUHARSON
FELLOW OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

OXFORD
AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
1912



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HENRY FROWDE, M.A.
PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
LONDON, EDINBURGH, NEW YORK, TORONTO
MELBOURNE AND BOMBAY




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   DE PARTIBUS ANIMALIUM




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   DE PARTIBUS
ANIMALIUM
TRANSLATED BY
WILLIAM OGLE M.A., M.D., F.R.C.P.
SOMETIME FELLOW OF CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE, OXFORD

OXFORD
AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
1911



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HENRY FROWDE, M.A.
PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
LONDON, EDINBURGH, NEW YORK
TORONTO AND MELBOURNE




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SYNOPSIS


INTRODUCTORY MATTER, i.1-i.5.


i. Concerning the method of Natural Science i.1.

ii. Concerning Necessity and the Final Cause and their relative importance i.1.

iii. Concerning the Soul and how far it falls into the province of Natural Science i.1.

iv. Concerning Classification, dichotomous or other, and the insufficiency of the former i.2-i.4

v. A defence of the study of animal structure, as not ignoble i.5.

vi. The plan of this treatise to take the parts in succession, and inquire what share Necessity and the Final Cause respectively have in their formation.


THE THREE DEGREES OF COMPOSITION. ii.1-end of treatise.


i. The mutual relations of the three ii.1.

ii. The first degree. Physical substances ii.2-ii.3.


2. Hot and cold.
3. Solid and fluid.


iii. The second degree. Homogeneous parts or tissues ii.4-ii.9.


4. Blood.
5. Fat.
6. Marrow.
7. Brain.
8. Flesh.
9. Bone.


iv. The third degree. Heterogeneous parts or organs ii.10-end of treatise.


A. In Sanguineous Animals ii.10-iv.4, and iv.10-end of treatise.


a. Organs of the Head ii.10-iii.2.


10. Brain and organs of sense.
11,12. Ears.

13,14,15. Eyelids and Eyelashes.
16. Nostrils,
Lips.
17. Tongue.
iii.1. Teeth.
2. Horns.


b. Organs of the Neck iii.3.


3. Oesophagus; Windpipe; Epiglottis.


c. Visceral Organs iii.4-iii.15, iv.1-iv.4.


4. Heart.
5. Blood vessels.
6. Lung.
7. Liver,
Spleen.
8. Bladder.
9. Kidneys.
10. Diaphragm.

11. Fibrous membranes.
12. Viscera
of different groups compared.
13. Viscera



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compared with flesh.
14. Stomach and
Intestine.
15. Rennet.
iv.1. Peculiarities
of viscera in ovipara.
2. Gall bladder.

3. Omentum.
4. Mesentery.


d. External parts iv.10-iv.14


10. In vivipara.
11. In reptiles.
12. In birds.

13. In fishes and intermediate groups,
cetacea, seals, bats.
14. In the ostrich.



B. In Bloodless Animals iv.5-iv.9.


a. Internal parts iv.5.

b. External parts iv.6-iv.9.


6. In insects.
7. In testacea.
8. In crustacea.

9. In cephalopoda.