Progression of Animals

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Progression of Animals is an Aristotelian biological treatise that examines how and why different animals move, focusing on the mechanics and principles of animal locomotion.

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Label Occurrences
Progression of Animals canonical 2

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Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Aristotelian treatise
biological treatise
philosophical work
author Aristotle NERFINISHED
concerns adaptation of limbs to environment
causal explanation of motion in animals
functional explanation of anatomical structures
discusses balance and stability in movement
bipedal movement
center of gravity in animals
differences between human and animal gait
locomotion in air
locomotion in water
locomotion on land
quadrupedal movement
role of joints in motion
role of muscles and tendons in motion
use of limbs in movement
examines how different animals move
principles underlying animal motion
relationship between body structure and movement
why different animals move in different ways
field biology
natural philosophy
zoology
hasEnglishTitle Progression of Animals NERFINISHED
hasGenre philosophical treatise
scientific treatise
hasInfluenceOn history of biomechanics
hasLatinTitle De incessu animalium NERFINISHED
hasTitle Περὶ πορείας ζῴων
influenced Renaissance biology
later zoological thought
medieval natural philosophy
languageOfOriginalWork Ancient Greek
mainSubject animal locomotion
comparative anatomy of movement
mechanics of movement in animals
partOf Aristotle's biological works NERFINISHED
Corpus Aristotelicum NERFINISHED
period Classical Greek philosophy
philosophicalTradition Peripatetic school NERFINISHED
relatedWork Generation of Animals NERFINISHED
Movement of Animals NERFINISHED
Parts of Animals NERFINISHED
timeOfComposition 4th century BCE (approximate)
usesMethod comparative analysis
empirical observation of animals
teleological explanation

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Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Generation of Animals relatedWork Progression of Animals
Aristotle's writings containsWork Progression of Animals