Narrative Elements in Aristotle’s Generation of Animals
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Sabine Föllinger
Abstract
In his biological writing Generation of Animals (De generatione animalium, GA) Aristotle develops a broad theory of generation including issues of processes which modern biology calls “heredity”. In this context of a scientifically complex theory, he uses “didactic tools” to facilitate understanding. These also include narrative elements. This contribution will study the functions of narrative elements, focusing on examples which we can find in GA and which seem to be surprising. The questions are: Which types of narration and which examples do we find? How does Aristotle use them to illustrate complicated arguments? Can they also have a heuristic function? What is the relation between the scientific explanations and the narrative elements?
Abstract
In his biological writing Generation of Animals (De generatione animalium, GA) Aristotle develops a broad theory of generation including issues of processes which modern biology calls “heredity”. In this context of a scientifically complex theory, he uses “didactic tools” to facilitate understanding. These also include narrative elements. This contribution will study the functions of narrative elements, focusing on examples which we can find in GA and which seem to be surprising. The questions are: Which types of narration and which examples do we find? How does Aristotle use them to illustrate complicated arguments? Can they also have a heuristic function? What is the relation between the scientific explanations and the narrative elements?
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Acknowledgements
- Contents VII
- List of Figures and Tables IX
- Prologue: of Friendship and Fishponds 1
- Introduction 5
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Part I: Historiography, Disciplinary Categories, and Anachronism
- Greco-Roman Histories of Astronomy, Their Genres, and Their Afterlives 15
- When was Cosmology? The Curious History of a Disciplinary Category 33
- Surmise or Certainty: Women in Science in Antiquity 51
- Deep Reading of Kepler’s New Astronomy: An Exercise in Computational History of Science 65
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Part II: Scientific Writing: Genres, Authority, Authorship, and Audiences
- Narrative Elements in Aristotle’s Generation of Animals 83
- Style and Intended Readership of Theophrastus’ On Fire (De igne) 95
- Strategies of Moralising in the Pseudo-Vergilian Aetna 115
- Leonides of Alexandria’s Isopsephic Epigrams: An Astronomical Art? 131
- Faithful Marriages and Wild Unions: Palladius’ On Grafting 153
- Ancient Authority in Arabic-Islamic Scientific Writing and Practice 169
- “A Cabinet of Many Rare Secrets”: The Uses and Abuses of Aristotle’s Masterpiece 191
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Part III: Counting and Measuring: Tools, Diagrams, and Replicas
- The Various Uses of Numbers and Mathematics in Ancient Egypt 219
- Greek Sexagesimals and Zeros 231
- The Diagrams and Replicas of Richard of Wallingford’s Clock 253
- Measuring Magnetism: Retrospective on Theories and Instruments from Lucretius to Blackett and Bullard 279
- Ancients and Moderns in Tycho Brahe’s Astronomy 295
- List of Contributors 317
- Bibliography
- Index
- Index Locorum
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Acknowledgements
- Contents VII
- List of Figures and Tables IX
- Prologue: of Friendship and Fishponds 1
- Introduction 5
-
Part I: Historiography, Disciplinary Categories, and Anachronism
- Greco-Roman Histories of Astronomy, Their Genres, and Their Afterlives 15
- When was Cosmology? The Curious History of a Disciplinary Category 33
- Surmise or Certainty: Women in Science in Antiquity 51
- Deep Reading of Kepler’s New Astronomy: An Exercise in Computational History of Science 65
-
Part II: Scientific Writing: Genres, Authority, Authorship, and Audiences
- Narrative Elements in Aristotle’s Generation of Animals 83
- Style and Intended Readership of Theophrastus’ On Fire (De igne) 95
- Strategies of Moralising in the Pseudo-Vergilian Aetna 115
- Leonides of Alexandria’s Isopsephic Epigrams: An Astronomical Art? 131
- Faithful Marriages and Wild Unions: Palladius’ On Grafting 153
- Ancient Authority in Arabic-Islamic Scientific Writing and Practice 169
- “A Cabinet of Many Rare Secrets”: The Uses and Abuses of Aristotle’s Masterpiece 191
-
Part III: Counting and Measuring: Tools, Diagrams, and Replicas
- The Various Uses of Numbers and Mathematics in Ancient Egypt 219
- Greek Sexagesimals and Zeros 231
- The Diagrams and Replicas of Richard of Wallingford’s Clock 253
- Measuring Magnetism: Retrospective on Theories and Instruments from Lucretius to Blackett and Bullard 279
- Ancients and Moderns in Tycho Brahe’s Astronomy 295
- List of Contributors 317
- Bibliography
- Index
- Index Locorum