Species
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3 1 The Classical Era: Science by Division The history of the species concept can be divided into a pre-biological and a post- b ...
4 Species and modal logics. The biological taxonomy project that developed out of it resulted in a program to understand the uni ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 5 TERMS AND TRADITIONS The modern and medieval word “species” is a Latin translation of t ...
6 Species referents in the shift from one theory to another; Sankey (1998) has called this particular problem “taxonomic incomme ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 7 fairly arbitrary distinction about acquisitive art, resulting in the following “nal” d ...
8 Species Soc. The second principle is that of division into species according to the natural formation, where the joint is, not ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 9 ARISTOTLE: DIVISION, AND THE GENUS AND THE SPECIES If, as Whitehead said, western thoug ...
10 Species He was quick to point out a problem with the simple Platonic method of dichoto- mous classication, although he did n ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 11 and above the specic forms constitutive of it,” and answers that it does not matter, ...
12 Species dichotomously.^40 Aristotle was saying, as we would now describe it, that classica- tion must always be cast in term ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 13 Pellegrin argues that Aristotle’s disagreement with Plato is not that classication by ...
14 Species cause of those faculties,^54 that for which things are generated. This forms the founda- tion for the later Great Cha ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 15 Of things said without any combination, each signies either substance or quantity or ...
16 Species It is important, therefore, to realize that Aristotle is concerned with the applica- tion of logical categories to wo ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 17 wealth of new specimens being returned to the Greek Empire of Alexander from the new c ...
18 Species Hort notes in a footnote that Theophrastus uses eidos and genos almost indiscriminately. Here tōn holōn genōn means t ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 19 call these changes of species. In modern terms, these would either be genetic expres- ...
20 Species It is commonly understood that Lucretius gives a more or less faithful exposi- tion in Latin of Epicurus’ ideas expre ...
The Classical Era: Science by Division 21 Intriguingly, and [in]famously, Lucretius^97 and the Epicureans have an “evo- lutionar ...
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