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Aristotle's biology

Aristotle's biology is the theory of biology, grounded in systematic observation and collection of data, mainly zoological, embodied in Aristotle's books on the science. Many of his observations were made during his stay on the island of Lesbos, including especially his descriptions of the marine biology of the Pyrrha lagoon, now the Gulf of Kalloni. His theory is based on his concept of form, which derives from but is markedly unlike Plato's theory of Forms.

Among Aristotle's many observations of marine biology was that the octopus can change colour when disturbed.

The theory describes five major biological processes, namely metabolism, temperature regulation, information processing, embryogenesis, and inheritance. Each was defined in some detail, in some cases sufficient to enable modern biologists to create mathematical models of the mechanisms described. Aristotle's method, too, resembled the style of science used by modern biologists when exploring a new area, with systematic data collection, discovery of patterns, and inference of possible causal explanations from these. He did not perform experiments in the modern sense, but made observations of living animals and carried out dissections. He names some 500 species of bird, mammal, and fish; and he distinguishes dozens of insects and other invertebrates. He describes the internal anatomy of over a hundred animals, and dissected around 35 of these.

Aristotle's writings on biology, the first in the history of science, are scattered across several books, forming about a quarter of his writings that have survived. The main biology texts were the History of Animals, Generation of Animals, Movement of Animals, Progression of Animals, Parts of Animals, and On the Soul, as well as the lost drawings of The Anatomies which accompanied the History.

Apart from his pupil, Theophrastus, who wrote a matching Enquiry into Plants, no research of comparable scope was carried out in ancient Greece, though Hellenistic medicine in Egypt continued Aristotle's inquiry into the mechanisms of the human body. Aristotle's biology was influential in the medieval Islamic world. Translation of Arabic versions and commentaries into Latin brought knowledge of Aristotle back into Western Europe, but the only biological work widely taught in medieval universities was On the Soul. The association of his work with medieval scholasticism, as well as errors in his theories, caused Early Modern scientists such as Galileo and William Harvey to reject Aristotle. Criticism of his errors and secondhand reports continued for centuries. He has found better acceptance among zoologists, and some of his long-derided observations in marine biology have been found in modern times to be true.

Context edit

 
Aristotle spent some 20 years at Plato's academy in Athens.

Aristotle's background edit

Aristotle (384–322 BC) studied at Plato's Academy in Athens, remaining there for about 20 years. Like Plato, he sought universals in his philosophy, but unlike Plato he backed up his views with detailed and systematic observation, notably of the natural history of the island of Lesbos, where he spent about two years, and the marine life in the seas around it, especially of the Pyrrha lagoon in the island's centre.[1] This study made him the earliest scientist whose written work survives. No similarly detailed work on zoology was attempted until the sixteenth century; accordingly Aristotle remained highly influential for some two thousand years. He returned to Athens and founded his own school, the Lycaeum, where he taught for the last dozen years of his life. His writings on zoology form about a quarter of his surviving work.[2] Aristotle's pupil Theophrastus later wrote a similar book on botany, Enquiry into Plants.[3]

Aristotelian forms edit

 
Aristotle argued by analogy with a woodcarving that a thing takes its form both from its design and from the material used.

Aristotle's biology is constructed on the basis of his theory of form, which is derived from Plato's theory of Forms, but significantly different from it. Plato's Forms were eternal and fixed, being "blueprints in the mind of God".[4] Real things in the world could, in Plato's view, at best be approximations to these perfect Forms. Aristotle heard Plato's view and developed it into a set of three biological concepts. He uses the same Greek word, εἶδος (eidos), to mean first of all the set of visible features that uniquely characterised a kind of animal. Aristotle used the word γένος (génos) to mean a kind.[a] For example, the kind of animal called a bird has feathers, a beak, wings, a hard-shelled egg, and warm blood.[4]

Aristotle further noted that there are many bird forms within the bird kind – cranes, eagles, crows, bustards, sparrows, and so on, just as there are many forms of fishes within the fish kind. He sometimes called these atoma eidē, indivisible forms.[b] Human is one of these indivisible forms: Socrates and the rest of us are all different individually, but we all have human form.[4] More recent studies have shown that Aristotle used the terms γένος (génos) and εἶδος (eidos) in a relative way. A taxon that is considered an eidos in one context can be considered a génos (which includes various eide) in another.[5]

Finally, Aristotle observed that the child does not take just any form, but is given it by the parents' seeds, which combine. These seeds thus contain form, or in modern terms information.[c] Aristotle makes clear that he sometimes intends this third sense by giving the analogy of a woodcarving. It takes its form from wood (its material cause); the tools and carving technique used to make it (its efficient cause); and the design laid out for it (its eidos or embedded information). Aristotle further emphasises the informational nature of form by arguing that a body is compounded of elements like earth and fire, just as a word is compounded of letters in a specific order.[d][4]

System edit

Soul as system edit

 
The structure of the souls of plants, animals, and humans, according to Aristotle, where humans are unique in having all three types of soul.

As analysed by the evolutionary biologist Armand Leroi, Aristotle's biology included five major interlocking processes:[6]

  1. a metabolic process, whereby animals take in matter, change its qualities, and distribute these to use to grow, live, and reproduce
  2. a cycle of temperature regulation, whereby animals maintain a steady state, but which progressively fails in old age
  3. an information processing model whereby animals receive sensory information, alter it in the seat of sensation,[e] and use it to drive movements of the limbs. He thus separated sensation from thought, unlike all previous philosophers except Alcmaeon.[8]
  4. the process of inheritance.
  5. the processes of embryonic development and of spontaneous generation

The five processes formed what Aristotle called the soul: it was not something extra, but the system consisting exactly of these mechanisms. The Aristotelian soul died with the animal and was thus purely biological. Different types of organism possessed different types of soul. Plants had a vegetative soul, responsible for reproduction and growth. Animals had both a vegetative and a sensitive soul, responsible for mobility and sensation. Humans, uniquely, had a vegetative, a sensitive, and a rational soul, capable of thought and reflection.[6][9][10]

Processes edit

Metabolism edit

 
Metabolism: Leroi's open system model. Food is converted to the body's uniform parts and excreted residues.[11]

Aristotle's account of metabolism sought to explain how food was processed by the body to provide both heat and the materials for the body's construction and maintenance. The metabolic system for live-bearing tetrapods[f] described in the Parts of Animals can be modelled as an open system, a branching tree of flows of material through the body.[11]

The system worked as follows. The incoming material, food, enters the body and is concocted into blood; waste is excreted as urine, bile, and faeces, and the element fire is released as heat. Blood is made into flesh, the rest forming other earthy tissues such as bones, teeth, cartilages and sinews. Leftover blood is made into fat, whether soft suet or hard lard. Some fat from all around the body is made into semen.[11][12]

All the tissues are in Aristotle's view completely uniform parts with no internal structure of any kind; a cartilage for example was the same all the way through, not subdivided into atoms as Democritus (c. 460–c. 370 BC) had argued.[13] The uniform parts can be arranged on a scale of Aristotelian qualities, from the coldest and driest, such as hair, to the hottest and wettest, such as milk.[11][12]

At each stage of metabolism, residual materials are excreted as faeces, urine, and bile.[11][12]

Temperature regulation edit

 
Temperature regulation: Leroi's model based on Youth and Old Age, Life and Death 26.[11][12]

Aristotle's account of temperature regulation sought to explain how an animal maintained a steady temperature and the continued oscillation of the thorax needed for breathing. The system of regulation of temperature and breathing described in Youth and Old Age, Life and Death 26 is sufficiently detailed to permit modelling as a negative feedback control system (one that maintains a desired property by opposing disturbances to it), with a few assumptions such as a desired temperature to compare the actual temperature against.[14]

The system worked as follows. Heat is constantly lost from the body. Food products reach the heart and are processed into new blood, releasing fire during metabolism, which raises the blood temperature too high. That raises the heart temperature, causing lung volume to increase, in turn raising the airflow at the mouth. The cool air brought in through the mouth reduces the heart temperature, so the lung volume accordingly decreases, restoring the temperature to normal.[g][14]

The mechanism only works if the air is cooler than the reference temperature. If the air is hotter than that, the system becomes a positive feedback cycle, the body's fire is put out, and death follows. The system as described damps out fluctuations in temperature. Aristotle however predicted that his system would cause lung oscillation (breathing), which is possible given extra assumptions such as of delays or non-linear responses.[14][16]

Information processing edit

 
Information processing: Leroi's "centralized incoming and outgoing motions model" of an animal's "sensitive soul"; the heart is the seat of perception.[17]

Aristotle's information processing model has been named the "centralized incoming and outgoing motions model". It sought to explain how changes in the world led to appropriate behaviour in the animal.[17]

The system worked as follows. The animal's sense organ is altered when it detects an object. This causes a perceptual change in the animal's seat of sensation, which Aristotle believed was the heart (cardiocentrism) rather than the brain. This in turn causes a change in the heart's heat, which causes a quantitative change sufficient to make the heart transmit a mechanical impulse to a limb, which moves, moving the animal's body. The alteration in the heat of the heart also causes a change in the consistency of the joints, which helps the limb to move.[17]

There is thus a causal chain which transmits information from a sense organ to an organ capable of making decisions, and onwards to a motor organ. In this respect, the model is analogous to a modern understanding of information processing such as in sensory-motor coupling.[18][17]

Inheritance edit

 
Inheritance: model of transmission of movements from parents to child, and of form from the father. Male aspects are shown in red; female aspects in blue. The model is not fully symmetric.[19]

Aristotle's inheritance model sought to explain how the parents' characteristics are transmitted to the child, subject to influence from the environment.[19][h]

The system worked as follows. The father's semen and the mother's menses have movements that encode their parental characteristics.[19][20] The model is partly asymmetric, as only the father's movements define the form or eidos of the species, while the movements of both the father's and the mother's uniform parts define features other than the form, such as the father's eye colour or the mother's nose shape.[19]

Aristotle's theory has some symmetry, as semen movements carry maleness while the menses carry femaleness. If the semen is hot enough to overpower the cold menses, the child will be a boy; but if it is too cold to do this, the child will be a girl. Inheritance is thus particulate (definitely one trait or another), as in Mendelian genetics, unlike the Hippocratic model which was continuous and blending.[19]

The child's sex can be influenced by factors that affect temperature, including the weather, the wind direction, diet, and the father's age. Features other than sex also depend on whether the semen overpowers the menses, so if a man has strong semen, he will have sons who resemble him, while if the semen is weak, he will have daughters who resemble their mother.[i][19]

Embryogenesis edit

 
Embryogenesis: Aristotle saw the chick embryo's heart beating. 19th century drawing by Peter Panum

Aristotle's model of embryogenesis sought to explain how the inherited parental characteristics cause the formation and development of an embryo.[21]

The system worked as follows. First, the father's semen curdles the mother's menses, which Aristotle compares with how rennet (an enzyme from a cow's stomach) curdles milk in cheesemaking. This forms the embryo; it is then developed by the action of the pneuma (literally, breath or spirit) in the semen. The pneuma first makes the heart appear; this is vital, as the heart nourishes all other organs. Aristotle observed that the heart is the first organ seen to be active (beating) in a hen's egg. The pneuma then makes the other organs develop.[21]

Aristotle asserts in his Physics that according to Empedocles, order "spontaneously" appears in the developing embryo. In The Parts of Animals, he argues that what he describes as a theory of Empedocles, that the vertebral column is divided into vertebrae because, as it happens, the embryo twists about and snaps the column into pieces, is wrong. Aristotle argues instead that the process has a predefined goal: that the "seed" that develops into the embryo began with an inbuilt "potential" to become specific body parts, such as vertebrae. Further, each sort of animal gives rise to animals of its own kind: humans only have human babies.[22]

Method edit

Aristotle has been called unscientific[23] by philosophers from Francis Bacon onwards[23] for at least two reasons: his scientific style,[24] and his use of explanation. His explanations are in turn made cryptic by his complicated system of causes.[23] However, these charges need to be considered in the light of what was known in his own time.[23] His systematic gathering of data, too, is obscured by the lack of modern methods of presentation, such as tables of data: for example, the whole of History of Animals Book VI is taken up with a list of observations of the life histories of birds that "would now be summarized in a single table in Nature – and in the Online Supplementary Information at that".[25]

Scientific style edit

 
Aristotle inferred growth laws from his observations on animals, including that brood size decreases with body mass, whereas gestation period increases. He was correct in these predictions, at least for mammals: data are shown for mouse and elephant.

Aristotle did not do experiments in the modern sense.[26] He used the ancient Greek term pepeiramenoi to mean observations, or at most investigative procedures,[27] such as (in Generation of Animals) finding a fertilised hen's egg of a suitable stage and opening it so as to be able to see the embryo's heart inside.[28]

Instead, he practised a different style of science: systematically gathering data, discovering patterns common to whole groups of animals, and inferring possible causal explanations from these.[24][29] This style is common in modern biology when large amounts of data become available in a new field, such as genomics. It does not result in the same certainty as experimental science, but it sets out testable hypotheses and constructs a narrative explanation of what is observed. In this sense, Aristotle's biology is scientific.[24]

From the data he collected and documented, Aristotle inferred quite a number of rules relating the life-history features of the live-bearing tetrapods (terrestrial placental mammals[j]) that he studied. Among these correct predictions are the following. Brood size decreases with (adult) body mass, so that an elephant has fewer young (usually just one) per brood than a mouse. Lifespan increases with gestation period, and also with body mass, so that elephants live longer than mice, have a longer period of gestation, and are heavier. As a final example, fecundity decreases with lifespan, so long-lived kinds like elephants have fewer young in total than short-lived kinds like mice.[30]

Mechanism and analogy edit

 
Aristotle used the analogy of the movement of water through a porous pot (an oenochoe shown) to help explain biological processes as mechanisms.

Aristotle's use of explanation has been considered "fundamentally unscientific".[23] The French playwright Molière's 1673 play The Imaginary Invalid portrays the quack Aristotelian doctor Argan blandly explaining that opium causes sleep by virtue of its dormitive [sleep-making] principle, its virtus dormitiva.[k][31] Argan's explanation is at best empty (devoid of mechanism),[23] at worst vitalist. But the real Aristotle did provide biological mechanisms, in the form of the five processes of metabolism, temperature regulation, information processing, embryonic development, and inheritance that he developed. Further, he provided mechanical, non-vitalist analogies for these theories, mentioning bellows, toy carts, the movement of water through porous pots, and even automatic puppets.[23]

Complex causality edit

Readers of Aristotle have found the four causes that he uses in his biological explanations opaque,[32] something not helped by many centuries of confused exegesis. For a biological system, these are however straightforward enough. The material cause is simply what a system is constructed from. The goal (final cause) and formal cause are what something is for, its function: to a modern biologist, such teleology describes adaptation under the pressure of natural selection. The efficient cause is how a system develops and moves: to a modern biologist, those are explained by developmental biology and physiology. Biologists continue to offer explanations of these same kinds.[32][23]

Empirical research edit

 
Map of Lesbos by Giacomo Franco [es] (1597). The lagoon near Kalloni (labelled "Calona") where Aristotle studied marine zoology is in the centre of the island.

Aristotle was the first person to study biology systematically. He spent two years observing and describing the zoology of Lesbos and the surrounding seas, including in particular the Pyrrha lagoon in the centre of Lesbos.[1][33] His data are assembled from his own observations, statements given by people with specialised knowledge such as beekeepers and fishermen, and less accurate accounts provided by travellers from overseas.[34]

His observations on catfish, electric fish (Torpedo) and angler fish are detailed, as is his writing on cephalopods including the octopus, cuttlefish and paper nautilus.[35] He reported that fishermen had asserted that the octopus’s hectocotyl arm was used in sexual reproduction.[36][37] He admitted its use in mating 'only for the sake of attachment', but rejected the idea that it was useful for generation, since "it is outside the passage and indeed outside the body".[38] In the 19th century, biologists found that the reported function was correct. He separated the aquatic mammals from fish, and knew that sharks and rays were part of the group he called Selachē (roughly, the modern zoologist's selachians[l]).[35]

 
 
Aristotle recorded that the embryo of a dogfish (left) was attached by a cord to something like a mammalian placenta (right), in fact a yolk sac.[40]

Among many other things, he gave accurate descriptions of the four-chambered stomachs of ruminants, and of the ovoviviparous embryological development of the dogfish.[40][41] His accounts of about 35 animals are sufficiently detailed to convince biologists that he dissected those species,[42] indeed vivisecting some;[43] he mentions the internal anatomy of roughly 110 animals in total.[42]

Classification edit

 
The khalkeus (John Dory) was one of the many fish named by Aristotle.

Aristotle distinguished about 500 species of birds, mammals, actinopterygians and selachians in History of Animals and Parts of Animals.[44][45][46] Aristotle distinguished animals with blood, Enhaima (the modern zoologist's vertebrates) and animals without blood, Anhaima (invertebrates).[m][47][48]

Aristotle's Scala naturae (highest to lowest)
Group Examples
(given by Aristotle)
Blood Legs Soul
(Rational,
Sensitive,
Vegetative)
Qualities
(HotCold,
WetDry)
Man Man with blood 2 legs R, S, V Hot, Wet
Live-bearing tetrapods Cat, hare with blood 4 legs S, V Hot, Wet
Cetaceans Dolphin, whale with blood none S, V Hot, Wet
Birds Bee-eater, nightjar with blood 2 legs S, V Hot, Wet, except Dry eggs
Egg-laying tetrapods Chameleon, crocodile with blood 4 legs S, V Cold, Wet except scales, eggs
Snakes Water snake, Ottoman viper with blood none S, V Cold, Wet except scales, eggs
Egg-laying fishes Sea bass, parrotfish with blood none S, V Cold, Wet, including eggs
(Among egg-laying fishes):
placental selachians
Shark, skate with blood none S, V Cold, Wet, but placenta like tetrapods
Crustaceans Shrimp, crab without Several legs S, V Cold, Wet except shell
Cephalopods Squid, octopus without tentacles S, V Cold, Wet
Hard-shelled animals Cockle, trumpet snail without none S, V Cold, Dry (mineral shell)
Larva-bearing Insects Ant, cicada without 6 legs S, V Cold, Dry
Spontaneously generating Sponges, worms without none S, V Cold, Wet or Dry, from earth
Plants Fig without none V Cold, Dry
Minerals Iron without none none Cold, Dry

Animals with blood included live-bearing tetrapods, Zōiotoka tetrapoda (roughly, the mammals), being warm, having four legs, and giving birth to their young. The cetaceans, Kētōdē, also had blood and gave birth to live young, but did not have legs, and therefore formed a separate group[n] (megista genē, defined by a set of functioning "parts"[49]).[50] The birds, Ornithes had blood and laid eggs, but had only 2 legs and were a distinct form (eidos) with feathers and beaks instead of teeth, so they too formed a distinct group, of over 50 kinds. The egg-bearing tetrapods, Ōiotoka tetrapoda (reptiles and amphibians) had blood and four legs, but were cold and laid eggs, so were a distinct group. The snakes, Opheis, similarly had blood, but no legs, and laid dry eggs, so were a separate group. The fishes, Ikhthyes, had blood but no legs, and laid wet eggs, forming a definite group. Among them, the selachians Selakhē (sharks and rays), had cartilages instead of bones[47] and were viviparous (Aristotle did not know that some selachians are oviparous).[51]

Animals without blood were divided into soft-shelled Malakostraka (crabs, lobsters, and shrimps); hard-shelled Ostrakoderma (gastropods and bivalves); soft-bodied Malakia (cephalopods); and divisible animals Entoma (insects, spiders, scorpions, ticks). Other animals without blood included fish lice, hermit crabs, red coral, sea anemones, sponges, starfish and various worms: Aristotle did not classify these into groups, although Aristotle mentioned that the sea anemone was in its "own group".[51]

Scale of being edit

 
Aristotle reported correctly that electric rays were able to stun their prey.

Aristotle stated in the History of Animals that all beings were arranged in a fixed scale of perfection, reflected in their form (eidos).[o] They stretched from minerals to plants and animals, and on up to man, forming the scala naturae or great chain of being.[52][53] His system had eleven grades, arranged according to the potentiality of each being, expressed in their form at birth. The highest animals gave birth to warm and wet creatures alive, the lowest bore theirs cold, dry, and in thick eggs.[35] The system was based on Aristotle's interpretation of the four elements in his On Generation and Corruption: Fire (hot and dry); Air (hot and wet); Water (cold and wet); and Earth (cold and dry). These are arranged from the most energetic to the least, so the warm, wet young raised in a womb with a placenta were higher on the scale than the cold, dry, nearly mineral eggs of birds.[54][10] However, Aristotle is careful never to insist that a group fits perfectly in the scale; he knows animals have many combinations of attributes, and that placements are approximate.[55]

Influence edit

On Theophrastus edit

Aristotle's pupil and successor at the Lyceum, Theophrastus, wrote the History of Plants, the first classical book of botany. It has an Aristotelian structure, but rather than focus on formal causes, as Aristotle did, Theophrastus described how plants functioned.[56][57] Where Aristotle expanded on grand theories, Theophrastus was quietly empirical.[58] Where Aristotle insisted that species have a fixed place on the scala naturae, Theophrastus suggests that one kind of plant can transform into another, as when a field sown to wheat turns to the weed darnel.[59]

On Hellenistic medicine edit

After Theophrastus, though interest in Aristotle's ideas survived, they were generally taken unquestioningly.[60] It is not until the age of Alexandria under the Ptolemies that advances in biology resumed. The first medical teacher at Alexandria, Herophilus of Chalcedon, corrected Aristotle, placing intelligence in the brain, and connected the nervous system to motion and sensation. Herophilus also distinguished between veins and arteries, noting that the latter pulse while the former do not.[61]

On Islamic zoology edit

Many classical works including those of Aristotle were transmitted from Greek to Syriac, then to Arabic, then to Latin in the Middle Ages. Aristotle remained the principal authority in biology for the next two thousand years.[62] The Kitāb al-Hayawān (كتاب الحيوان, Book of Animals) is a 9th-century Arabic translation of History of Animals: 1–10, On the Parts of Animals: 11–14,[63] and Generation of Animals: 15–19.[64][65]

 
Albertus Magnus commented extensively on Aristotle's zoology, adding more of his own.[66]

The book was mentioned by Al-Kindī (d. 850), and commented on by Avicenna (Ibn Sīnā) in his Kitāb al-Šifā (کتاب الشفاء, The Book of Healing). Avempace (Ibn Bājja) and Averroes (Ibn Rushd) commented on On the Parts of Animals and Generation of Animals, Averroes criticising Avempace's interpretations.[66]

On medieval science edit

When the Christian Alfonso VI of Castile retook the Kingdom of Toledo from the Moors in 1085, an Arabic translation of Aristotle's works, with commentaries by Avicenna and Averroes emerged into European medieval scholarship. Michael Scot translated much of Aristotle's biology into Latin, c. 1225, along with many of Averroes's commentaries.[p] Albertus Magnus commented extensively on Aristotle, but added his own zoological observations and an encyclopedia of animals based on Thomas of Cantimpré. Later in the 13th century, Thomas Aquinas merged Aristotle's metaphysics with Christian theology. Whereas Albert had treated Aristotle's biology as science, writing that experiment was the only safe guide and joining in with the types of observation that Aristotle had made, Aquinas saw Aristotle purely as theory, and Aristotelian thought became associated with scholasticism.[66] The scholastic natural philosophy curriculum omitted most of Aristotle's biology, but included On the Soul.[68]

On Renaissance science edit

 
Dürer's Rhinoceros in Konrad Gessner's Historia Animalium, 1551

Renaissance zoologists made use of Aristotle's zoology in two ways. Especially in Italy, scholars such as Pietro Pomponazzi and Agostino Nifo lectured and wrote commentaries on Aristotle. Elsewhere, authors used Aristotle as one of their sources, alongside their own and their colleagues' observations, to create new encyclopedias such as Konrad Gessner's 1551 Historia Animalium.[q] The title and the philosophical approach were Aristotelian, but the work was largely new. Edward Wotton similarly helped to found modern zoology by arranging the animals according to Aristotle's theories, separating out folklore from his 1552 De differentiis animalium.[68][69] Aristotle's system of classification had thus remained influential for many centuries.[70][51][71][72]

Early Modern rejection edit

 
Galileo's champion-figure Salviati convinces Sagredo and defeats the Aristotelian Simplicio, in his 1632 Dialogue

In the Early Modern period, Aristotle came to represent all that was obsolete, scholastic, and wrong, not helped by his association with medieval theology. In 1632, Galileo represented Aristotelianism in his Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo (Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems) by the strawman Simplicio ("Simpleton"[73]). That same year, William Harvey proved Aristotle wrong by demonstrating that blood circulates.[74][75]

Aristotle still represented the enemy of true science into the 20th century. Leroi noted that in 1985, Peter Medawar stated in "pure seventeenth century"[76] tones that Aristotle had assembled "a strange and generally speaking rather tiresome farrago of hearsay, imperfect observation, wishful thinking and credulity amounting to downright gullibility".[76][77]

19th century revival edit

Zoologists working in the 19th century, including Georges Cuvier, Johannes Peter Müller,[78] and Louis Agassiz admired Aristotle's biology and investigated some of his observations. D'Arcy Thompson translated History of Animals in 1910, making a classically educated zoologist's informed attempt to identify the animals that Aristotle names, and to interpret and diagram his anatomical descriptions.[79][80][81][82]

Charles Darwin quoted a passage from Aristotle's Physics II 8 in The Origin of Species, which entertains the possibility of a selection process following the random combination of body parts. Darwin comments that "We here see the principle of natural selection shadowed forth".[83] However, two things mitigate against this interpretation. Firstly, Aristotle immediately rejected the possibility of such a process of assembling body parts. Secondly, according to Leroi, Aristotle was in any case discussing ontogeny, the Empedoclean coming into being of an individual from component parts, not phylogeny and natural selection.[84] Darwin considered Aristotle the most important early contributor to biological thought; in an 1882 letter he wrote that "Linnaeus and Cuvier have been my two gods, though in very different ways, but they were mere schoolboys to old Aristotle."[85][86]

20th and 21st century interest edit

 
Elephant swimming, using its trunk as a snorkel, as Aristotle stated

Zoologists have frequently mocked Aristotle for errors and unverified secondhand reports. However, modern observation has confirmed one after another of his more surprising claims,[68] including the active camouflage of the octopus[87] and the ability of elephants to snorkel with their trunks while swimming.[88]

Aristotle remains largely unknown to modern scientists, though zoologists are perhaps most likely to mention him as "the father of biology";[89] the MarineBio Conservation Society notes that he identified "crustaceans, echinoderms, mollusks, and fish", that cetaceans are mammals, and that marine vertebrates could be either oviparous or viviparous, so he "is often referred to as the father of marine biology".[r][90] Few practicing zoologists explicitly adhere to Aristotle's great chain of being, but its influence is still perceptible in the use of the terms "lower" and "upper" to designate taxa such as groups of plants.[91] The evolutionary zoologist Armand Leroi has taken an interest in Aristotle's biology.[s][93] The concept of homology began with Aristotle,[94] and the evolutionary developmental biologist Lewis I. Held commented that[95]

The deep thinker who would be most amused by .. deep homologies is Aristotle, who was fascinated by the natural world but bewildered by its inner workings.[95]

Works edit

Aristotle did not write anything that resembles a modern, unified textbook of biology. Instead, he wrote a large number of "books" which, taken together, give an idea of his approach to the science. Some of these interlock, referring to each other, while others, such as the drawings of The Anatomies are lost, but referred to in the History of Animals, where the reader is instructed to look at the diagrams to understand how the animal parts described are arranged,[96] and it has even been possible to reconstruct (admittedly with much associated uncertainty) what some of these illustrations may have looked like, from Aristotle's descriptions.[97]

Aristotle's main biological works are the five books sometimes grouped as On Animals (De Animalibus), namely, with the conventional abbreviations shown in parentheses:

together with On the Soul (De Anima) (DA).[68]

In addition, a group of seven short works, conventionally forming the Parva Naturalia ("Short treatises on Nature"), is also mainly biological:

Notes edit

  1. ^ The English and taxonomic Latin genus derive from this, and have related meanings.
  2. ^ In modern terms, it has been argued that these roughly correspond to species, and some texts use that translation. Aristotle did not formulate a definition resembling that of a modern species, however, and some of his forms are other taxa such as genera or families.
  3. ^ From Latin informo, I form, give shape to.
  4. ^ In modern terms, this implies a symbolic system. Armand Leroi notes that biologists will at once think in this context of the nucleotide "letters" of DNA which give form to organisms.[4]
  5. ^ Like the ancient Egyptians, Aristotle believed that the seat of the rational and sensitive souls was the heart, not the brain[7]
  6. ^ Corresponding to mammals.
  7. ^ In modern terms, this is homeostasis.[15]
  8. ^ The relative importance of parental characteristics and environment became the subject of the modern nature-nurture debate.
  9. ^ Thus features are, in modern terms, sex-linked.[19]
  10. ^ Excluding the Cetacea (whales and dolphins) and Chiroptera (bats).
  11. ^ First Doctor: Most learned bachelor / Whom I esteem and honor, I would like to ask you the cause and reason why / Opium makes one sleep.
    Argan [the Aristotelian]: ... The reason is that in opium resides / A dormitive virtue, Of which it is the nature / To stupefy the senses.[31]
  12. ^ It is not safe to assume that species or groups with Linnean names that resemble Aristotle's are the animals he was referring to, as zoologists including Linnaeus guessed rightly or wrongly what Aristotle meant in his short descriptions. Sometimes an ancient Greek name must mean exactly one species – hippos is definitely horse, when it's a land animal; but sometimes a name referred to several similar species, as English names often do today: for instance, kephalos means any of 4 species of grey mullet.[39]
  13. ^ Aristotle did not know that complex invertebrates do make use of haemoglobin, but of a different kind from vertebrates.
  14. ^ Aristotle did not nest his groups into a hierarchical tree.
  15. ^ To a modern biologist, such a scale suggests evolution, but Aristotle saw it as a permanent, eternal arrangement.
  16. ^ Scot translated HA, GA, and PA, and all of the Parva Naturalia.[67]
  17. ^ Gessner borrowed the title from one of Aristotle's books.
  18. ^ As a father to the science, he stands alone. The next figures significant enough to be named in MarineBio's history, for example, are Captain James Cook and Charles Darwin, some two millennia later.[90]
  19. ^ Leroi has written several papers on the subject, cited in his book, and made a BBC film[92] about it.

References edit

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Sources edit

aristotle, biology, theory, biology, grounded, systematic, observation, collection, data, mainly, zoological, embodied, aristotle, books, science, many, observations, were, made, during, stay, island, lesbos, including, especially, descriptions, marine, biolog. Aristotle s biology is the theory of biology grounded in systematic observation and collection of data mainly zoological embodied in Aristotle s books on the science Many of his observations were made during his stay on the island of Lesbos including especially his descriptions of the marine biology of the Pyrrha lagoon now the Gulf of Kalloni His theory is based on his concept of form which derives from but is markedly unlike Plato s theory of Forms Among Aristotle s many observations of marine biology was that the octopus can change colour when disturbed The theory describes five major biological processes namely metabolism temperature regulation information processing embryogenesis and inheritance Each was defined in some detail in some cases sufficient to enable modern biologists to create mathematical models of the mechanisms described Aristotle s method too resembled the style of science used by modern biologists when exploring a new area with systematic data collection discovery of patterns and inference of possible causal explanations from these He did not perform experiments in the modern sense but made observations of living animals and carried out dissections He names some 500 species of bird mammal and fish and he distinguishes dozens of insects and other invertebrates He describes the internal anatomy of over a hundred animals and dissected around 35 of these Aristotle s writings on biology the first in the history of science are scattered across several books forming about a quarter of his writings that have survived The main biology texts were the History of Animals Generation of Animals Movement of Animals Progression of Animals Parts of Animals and On the Soul as well as the lost drawings of The Anatomies which accompanied the History Apart from his pupil Theophrastus who wrote a matching Enquiry into Plants no research of comparable scope was carried out in ancient Greece though Hellenistic medicine in Egypt continued Aristotle s inquiry into the mechanisms of the human body Aristotle s biology was influential in the medieval Islamic world Translation of Arabic versions and commentaries into Latin brought knowledge of Aristotle back into Western Europe but the only biological work widely taught in medieval universities was On the Soul The association of his work with medieval scholasticism as well as errors in his theories caused Early Modern scientists such as Galileo and William Harvey to reject Aristotle Criticism of his errors and secondhand reports continued for centuries He has found better acceptance among zoologists and some of his long derided observations in marine biology have been found in modern times to be true Contents 1 Context 1 1 Aristotle s background 1 2 Aristotelian forms 2 System 2 1 Soul as system 2 2 Processes 2 2 1 Metabolism 2 2 2 Temperature regulation 2 2 3 Information processing 2 2 4 Inheritance 2 2 5 Embryogenesis 3 Method 3 1 Scientific style 3 2 Mechanism and analogy 3 3 Complex causality 3 4 Empirical research 3 5 Classification 3 6 Scale of being 4 Influence 4 1 On Theophrastus 4 2 On Hellenistic medicine 4 3 On Islamic zoology 4 4 On medieval science 4 5 On Renaissance science 4 6 Early Modern rejection 4 7 19th century revival 4 8 20th and 21st century interest 5 Works 6 Notes 7 References 8 SourcesContext edit nbsp Aristotle spent some 20 years at Plato s academy in Athens Aristotle s background edit Aristotle 384 322 BC studied at Plato s Academy in Athens remaining there for about 20 years Like Plato he sought universals in his philosophy but unlike Plato he backed up his views with detailed and systematic observation notably of the natural history of the island of Lesbos where he spent about two years and the marine life in the seas around it especially of the Pyrrha lagoon in the island s centre 1 This study made him the earliest scientist whose written work survives No similarly detailed work on zoology was attempted until the sixteenth century accordingly Aristotle remained highly influential for some two thousand years He returned to Athens and founded his own school the Lycaeum where he taught for the last dozen years of his life His writings on zoology form about a quarter of his surviving work 2 Aristotle s pupil Theophrastus later wrote a similar book on botany Enquiry into Plants 3 Aristotelian forms edit nbsp Aristotle argued by analogy with a woodcarving that a thing takes its form both from its design and from the material used Main article Hylomorphism Aristotle s biology is constructed on the basis of his theory of form which is derived from Plato s theory of Forms but significantly different from it Plato s Forms were eternal and fixed being blueprints in the mind of God 4 Real things in the world could in Plato s view at best be approximations to these perfect Forms Aristotle heard Plato s view and developed it into a set of three biological concepts He uses the same Greek word eἶdos eidos to mean first of all the set of visible features that uniquely characterised a kind of animal Aristotle used the word genos genos to mean a kind a For example the kind of animal called a bird has feathers a beak wings a hard shelled egg and warm blood 4 Aristotle further noted that there are many bird forms within the bird kind cranes eagles crows bustards sparrows and so on just as there are many forms of fishes within the fish kind He sometimes called these atoma eide indivisible forms b Human is one of these indivisible forms Socrates and the rest of us are all different individually but we all have human form 4 More recent studies have shown that Aristotle used the terms genos genos and eἶdos eidos in a relative way A taxon that is considered an eidos in one context can be considered a genos which includes various eide in another 5 Finally Aristotle observed that the child does not take just any form but is given it by the parents seeds which combine These seeds thus contain form or in modern terms information c Aristotle makes clear that he sometimes intends this third sense by giving the analogy of a woodcarving It takes its form from wood its material cause the tools and carving technique used to make it its efficient cause and the design laid out for it its eidos or embedded information Aristotle further emphasises the informational nature of form by arguing that a body is compounded of elements like earth and fire just as a word is compounded of letters in a specific order d 4 System editSoul as system edit nbsp The structure of the souls of plants animals and humans according to Aristotle where humans are unique in having all three types of soul Main articles Soul Aristotle and On the Soul As analysed by the evolutionary biologist Armand Leroi Aristotle s biology included five major interlocking processes 6 a metabolic process whereby animals take in matter change its qualities and distribute these to use to grow live and reproduce a cycle of temperature regulation whereby animals maintain a steady state but which progressively fails in old age an information processing model whereby animals receive sensory information alter it in the seat of sensation e and use it to drive movements of the limbs He thus separated sensation from thought unlike all previous philosophers except Alcmaeon 8 the process of inheritance the processes of embryonic development and of spontaneous generationThe five processes formed what Aristotle called the soul it was not something extra but the system consisting exactly of these mechanisms The Aristotelian soul died with the animal and was thus purely biological Different types of organism possessed different types of soul Plants had a vegetative soul responsible for reproduction and growth Animals had both a vegetative and a sensitive soul responsible for mobility and sensation Humans uniquely had a vegetative a sensitive and a rational soul capable of thought and reflection 6 9 10 Processes edit Metabolism edit nbsp Metabolism Leroi s open system model Food is converted to the body s uniform parts and excreted residues 11 Aristotle s account of metabolism sought to explain how food was processed by the body to provide both heat and the materials for the body s construction and maintenance The metabolic system for live bearing tetrapods f described in the Parts of Animals can be modelled as an open system a branching tree of flows of material through the body 11 The system worked as follows The incoming material food enters the body and is concocted into blood waste is excreted as urine bile and faeces and the element fire is released as heat Blood is made into flesh the rest forming other earthy tissues such as bones teeth cartilages and sinews Leftover blood is made into fat whether soft suet or hard lard Some fat from all around the body is made into semen 11 12 All the tissues are in Aristotle s view completely uniform parts with no internal structure of any kind a cartilage for example was the same all the way through not subdivided into atoms as Democritus c 460 c 370 BC had argued 13 The uniform parts can be arranged on a scale of Aristotelian qualities from the coldest and driest such as hair to the hottest and wettest such as milk 11 12 At each stage of metabolism residual materials are excreted as faeces urine and bile 11 12 Temperature regulation edit nbsp Temperature regulation Leroi s model based on Youth and Old Age Life and Death 26 11 12 Aristotle s account of temperature regulation sought to explain how an animal maintained a steady temperature and the continued oscillation of the thorax needed for breathing The system of regulation of temperature and breathing described in Youth and Old Age Life and Death 26 is sufficiently detailed to permit modelling as a negative feedback control system one that maintains a desired property by opposing disturbances to it with a few assumptions such as a desired temperature to compare the actual temperature against 14 The system worked as follows Heat is constantly lost from the body Food products reach the heart and are processed into new blood releasing fire during metabolism which raises the blood temperature too high That raises the heart temperature causing lung volume to increase in turn raising the airflow at the mouth The cool air brought in through the mouth reduces the heart temperature so the lung volume accordingly decreases restoring the temperature to normal g 14 The mechanism only works if the air is cooler than the reference temperature If the air is hotter than that the system becomes a positive feedback cycle the body s fire is put out and death follows The system as described damps out fluctuations in temperature Aristotle however predicted that his system would cause lung oscillation breathing which is possible given extra assumptions such as of delays or non linear responses 14 16 Information processing edit nbsp Information processing Leroi s centralized incoming and outgoing motions model of an animal s sensitive soul the heart is the seat of perception 17 Aristotle s information processing model has been named the centralized incoming and outgoing motions model It sought to explain how changes in the world led to appropriate behaviour in the animal 17 The system worked as follows The animal s sense organ is altered when it detects an object This causes a perceptual change in the animal s seat of sensation which Aristotle believed was the heart cardiocentrism rather than the brain This in turn causes a change in the heart s heat which causes a quantitative change sufficient to make the heart transmit a mechanical impulse to a limb which moves moving the animal s body The alteration in the heat of the heart also causes a change in the consistency of the joints which helps the limb to move 17 There is thus a causal chain which transmits information from a sense organ to an organ capable of making decisions and onwards to a motor organ In this respect the model is analogous to a modern understanding of information processing such as in sensory motor coupling 18 17 Inheritance edit nbsp Inheritance model of transmission of movements from parents to child and of form from the father Male aspects are shown in red female aspects in blue The model is not fully symmetric 19 See also Telegony pregnancy Aristotle s inheritance model sought to explain how the parents characteristics are transmitted to the child subject to influence from the environment 19 h The system worked as follows The father s semen and the mother s menses have movements that encode their parental characteristics 19 20 The model is partly asymmetric as only the father s movements define the form or eidos of the species while the movements of both the father s and the mother s uniform parts define features other than the form such as the father s eye colour or the mother s nose shape 19 Aristotle s theory has some symmetry as semen movements carry maleness while the menses carry femaleness If the semen is hot enough to overpower the cold menses the child will be a boy but if it is too cold to do this the child will be a girl Inheritance is thus particulate definitely one trait or another as in Mendelian genetics unlike the Hippocratic model which was continuous and blending 19 The child s sex can be influenced by factors that affect temperature including the weather the wind direction diet and the father s age Features other than sex also depend on whether the semen overpowers the menses so if a man has strong semen he will have sons who resemble him while if the semen is weak he will have daughters who resemble their mother i 19 Embryogenesis edit nbsp Embryogenesis Aristotle saw the chick embryo s heart beating 19th century drawing by Peter PanumAristotle s model of embryogenesis sought to explain how the inherited parental characteristics cause the formation and development of an embryo 21 The system worked as follows First the father s semen curdles the mother s menses which Aristotle compares with how rennet an enzyme from a cow s stomach curdles milk in cheesemaking This forms the embryo it is then developed by the action of the pneuma literally breath or spirit in the semen The pneuma first makes the heart appear this is vital as the heart nourishes all other organs Aristotle observed that the heart is the first organ seen to be active beating in a hen s egg The pneuma then makes the other organs develop 21 Aristotle asserts in his Physics that according to Empedocles order spontaneously appears in the developing embryo In The Parts of Animals he argues that what he describes as a theory of Empedocles that the vertebral column is divided into vertebrae because as it happens the embryo twists about and snaps the column into pieces is wrong Aristotle argues instead that the process has a predefined goal that the seed that develops into the embryo began with an inbuilt potential to become specific body parts such as vertebrae Further each sort of animal gives rise to animals of its own kind humans only have human babies 22 Method editFurther information History of scientific method Aristotle has been called unscientific 23 by philosophers from Francis Bacon onwards 23 for at least two reasons his scientific style 24 and his use of explanation His explanations are in turn made cryptic by his complicated system of causes 23 However these charges need to be considered in the light of what was known in his own time 23 His systematic gathering of data too is obscured by the lack of modern methods of presentation such as tables of data for example the whole of History of Animals Book VI is taken up with a list of observations of the life histories of birds that would now be summarized in a single table in Nature and in the Online Supplementary Information at that 25 Scientific style edit nbsp Aristotle inferred growth laws from his observations on animals including that brood size decreases with body mass whereas gestation period increases He was correct in these predictions at least for mammals data are shown for mouse and elephant Aristotle did not do experiments in the modern sense 26 He used the ancient Greek term pepeiramenoi to mean observations or at most investigative procedures 27 such as in Generation of Animals finding a fertilised hen s egg of a suitable stage and opening it so as to be able to see the embryo s heart inside 28 Instead he practised a different style of science systematically gathering data discovering patterns common to whole groups of animals and inferring possible causal explanations from these 24 29 This style is common in modern biology when large amounts of data become available in a new field such as genomics It does not result in the same certainty as experimental science but it sets out testable hypotheses and constructs a narrative explanation of what is observed In this sense Aristotle s biology is scientific 24 From the data he collected and documented Aristotle inferred quite a number of rules relating the life history features of the live bearing tetrapods terrestrial placental mammals j that he studied Among these correct predictions are the following Brood size decreases with adult body mass so that an elephant has fewer young usually just one per brood than a mouse Lifespan increases with gestation period and also with body mass so that elephants live longer than mice have a longer period of gestation and are heavier As a final example fecundity decreases with lifespan so long lived kinds like elephants have fewer young in total than short lived kinds like mice 30 Mechanism and analogy edit nbsp Aristotle used the analogy of the movement of water through a porous pot an oenochoe shown to help explain biological processes as mechanisms Aristotle s use of explanation has been considered fundamentally unscientific 23 The French playwright Moliere s 1673 play The Imaginary Invalid portrays the quack Aristotelian doctor Argan blandly explaining that opium causes sleep by virtue of its dormitive sleep making principle its virtus dormitiva k 31 Argan s explanation is at best empty devoid of mechanism 23 at worst vitalist But the real Aristotle did provide biological mechanisms in the form of the five processes of metabolism temperature regulation information processing embryonic development and inheritance that he developed Further he provided mechanical non vitalist analogies for these theories mentioning bellows toy carts the movement of water through porous pots and even automatic puppets 23 Complex causality edit Main articles Four causes and Tinbergen s four questions Readers of Aristotle have found the four causes that he uses in his biological explanations opaque 32 something not helped by many centuries of confused exegesis For a biological system these are however straightforward enough The material cause is simply what a system is constructed from The goal final cause and formal cause are what something is for its function to a modern biologist such teleology describes adaptation under the pressure of natural selection The efficient cause is how a system develops and moves to a modern biologist those are explained by developmental biology and physiology Biologists continue to offer explanations of these same kinds 32 23 Empirical research edit nbsp Map of Lesbos by Giacomo Franco es 1597 The lagoon near Kalloni labelled Calona where Aristotle studied marine zoology is in the centre of the island Aristotle was the first person to study biology systematically He spent two years observing and describing the zoology of Lesbos and the surrounding seas including in particular the Pyrrha lagoon in the centre of Lesbos 1 33 His data are assembled from his own observations statements given by people with specialised knowledge such as beekeepers and fishermen and less accurate accounts provided by travellers from overseas 34 His observations on catfish electric fish Torpedo and angler fish are detailed as is his writing on cephalopods including the octopus cuttlefish and paper nautilus 35 He reported that fishermen had asserted that the octopus s hectocotyl arm was used in sexual reproduction 36 37 He admitted its use in mating only for the sake of attachment but rejected the idea that it was useful for generation since it is outside the passage and indeed outside the body 38 In the 19th century biologists found that the reported function was correct He separated the aquatic mammals from fish and knew that sharks and rays were part of the group he called Selache roughly the modern zoologist s selachians l 35 nbsp nbsp Aristotle recorded that the embryo of a dogfish left was attached by a cord to something like a mammalian placenta right in fact a yolk sac 40 Among many other things he gave accurate descriptions of the four chambered stomachs of ruminants and of the ovoviviparous embryological development of the dogfish 40 41 His accounts of about 35 animals are sufficiently detailed to convince biologists that he dissected those species 42 indeed vivisecting some 43 he mentions the internal anatomy of roughly 110 animals in total 42 Classification edit nbsp The khalkeus John Dory was one of the many fish named by Aristotle Aristotle distinguished about 500 species of birds mammals actinopterygians and selachians in History of Animals and Parts of Animals 44 45 46 Aristotle distinguished animals with blood Enhaima the modern zoologist s vertebrates and animals without blood Anhaima invertebrates m 47 48 Aristotle s Scala naturae highest to lowest Group Examples given by Aristotle Blood Legs Soul Rational Sensitive Vegetative Qualities Hot Cold Wet Dry Man Man with blood 2 legs R S V Hot WetLive bearing tetrapods Cat hare with blood 4 legs S V Hot WetCetaceans Dolphin whale with blood none S V Hot WetBirds Bee eater nightjar with blood 2 legs S V Hot Wet except Dry eggsEgg laying tetrapods Chameleon crocodile with blood 4 legs S V Cold Wet except scales eggsSnakes Water snake Ottoman viper with blood none S V Cold Wet except scales eggsEgg laying fishes Sea bass parrotfish with blood none S V Cold Wet including eggs Among egg laying fishes placental selachians Shark skate with blood none S V Cold Wet but placenta like tetrapodsCrustaceans Shrimp crab without Several legs S V Cold Wet except shellCephalopods Squid octopus without tentacles S V Cold WetHard shelled animals Cockle trumpet snail without none S V Cold Dry mineral shell Larva bearing Insects Ant cicada without 6 legs S V Cold DrySpontaneously generating Sponges worms without none S V Cold Wet or Dry from earthPlants Fig without none V Cold DryMinerals Iron without none none Cold DryAnimals with blood included live bearing tetrapods Zōiotoka tetrapoda roughly the mammals being warm having four legs and giving birth to their young The cetaceans Ketōde also had blood and gave birth to live young but did not have legs and therefore formed a separate group n megista gene defined by a set of functioning parts 49 50 The birds Ornithes had blood and laid eggs but had only 2 legs and were a distinct form eidos with feathers and beaks instead of teeth so they too formed a distinct group of over 50 kinds The egg bearing tetrapods Ōiotoka tetrapoda reptiles and amphibians had blood and four legs but were cold and laid eggs so were a distinct group The snakes Opheis similarly had blood but no legs and laid dry eggs so were a separate group The fishes Ikhthyes had blood but no legs and laid wet eggs forming a definite group Among them the selachians Selakhe sharks and rays had cartilages instead of bones 47 and were viviparous Aristotle did not know that some selachians are oviparous 51 Animals without blood were divided into soft shelled Malakostraka crabs lobsters and shrimps hard shelled Ostrakoderma gastropods and bivalves soft bodied Malakia cephalopods and divisible animals Entoma insects spiders scorpions ticks Other animals without blood included fish lice hermit crabs red coral sea anemones sponges starfish and various worms Aristotle did not classify these into groups although Aristotle mentioned that the sea anemone was in its own group 51 Scale of being edit Further information Great chain of being nbsp Aristotle reported correctly that electric rays were able to stun their prey Aristotle stated in the History of Animals that all beings were arranged in a fixed scale of perfection reflected in their form eidos o They stretched from minerals to plants and animals and on up to man forming the scala naturae or great chain of being 52 53 His system had eleven grades arranged according to the potentiality of each being expressed in their form at birth The highest animals gave birth to warm and wet creatures alive the lowest bore theirs cold dry and in thick eggs 35 The system was based on Aristotle s interpretation of the four elements in his On Generation and Corruption Fire hot and dry Air hot and wet Water cold and wet and Earth cold and dry These are arranged from the most energetic to the least so the warm wet young raised in a womb with a placenta were higher on the scale than the cold dry nearly mineral eggs of birds 54 10 However Aristotle is careful never to insist that a group fits perfectly in the scale he knows animals have many combinations of attributes and that placements are approximate 55 Influence editOn Theophrastus edit Main article Historia Plantarum Theophrastus book Aristotle s pupil and successor at the Lyceum Theophrastus wrote the History of Plants the first classical book of botany It has an Aristotelian structure but rather than focus on formal causes as Aristotle did Theophrastus described how plants functioned 56 57 Where Aristotle expanded on grand theories Theophrastus was quietly empirical 58 Where Aristotle insisted that species have a fixed place on the scala naturae Theophrastus suggests that one kind of plant can transform into another as when a field sown to wheat turns to the weed darnel 59 On Hellenistic medicine edit Further information Medicine in ancient Greece After Theophrastus though interest in Aristotle s ideas survived they were generally taken unquestioningly 60 It is not until the age of Alexandria under the Ptolemies that advances in biology resumed The first medical teacher at Alexandria Herophilus of Chalcedon corrected Aristotle placing intelligence in the brain and connected the nervous system to motion and sensation Herophilus also distinguished between veins and arteries noting that the latter pulse while the former do not 61 On Islamic zoology edit Further information Kitab al Hayawan and Science in the medieval Islamic world Many classical works including those of Aristotle were transmitted from Greek to Syriac then to Arabic then to Latin in the Middle Ages Aristotle remained the principal authority in biology for the next two thousand years 62 The Kitab al Hayawan كتاب الحيوان Book of Animals is a 9th century Arabic translation of History of Animals 1 10 On the Parts of Animals 11 14 63 and Generation of Animals 15 19 64 65 nbsp Albertus Magnus commented extensively on Aristotle s zoology adding more of his own 66 The book was mentioned by Al Kindi d 850 and commented on by Avicenna Ibn Sina in his Kitab al Sifa کتاب الشفاء The Book of Healing Avempace Ibn Bajja and Averroes Ibn Rushd commented on On the Parts of Animals and Generation of Animals Averroes criticising Avempace s interpretations 66 On medieval science edit Further information Medieval science When the Christian Alfonso VI of Castile retook the Kingdom of Toledo from the Moors in 1085 an Arabic translation of Aristotle s works with commentaries by Avicenna and Averroes emerged into European medieval scholarship Michael Scot translated much of Aristotle s biology into Latin c 1225 along with many of Averroes s commentaries p Albertus Magnus commented extensively on Aristotle but added his own zoological observations and an encyclopedia of animals based on Thomas of Cantimpre Later in the 13th century Thomas Aquinas merged Aristotle s metaphysics with Christian theology Whereas Albert had treated Aristotle s biology as science writing that experiment was the only safe guide and joining in with the types of observation that Aristotle had made Aquinas saw Aristotle purely as theory and Aristotelian thought became associated with scholasticism 66 The scholastic natural philosophy curriculum omitted most of Aristotle s biology but included On the Soul 68 On Renaissance science edit nbsp Durer s Rhinoceros in Konrad Gessner s Historia Animalium 1551Renaissance zoologists made use of Aristotle s zoology in two ways Especially in Italy scholars such as Pietro Pomponazzi and Agostino Nifo lectured and wrote commentaries on Aristotle Elsewhere authors used Aristotle as one of their sources alongside their own and their colleagues observations to create new encyclopedias such as Konrad Gessner s 1551 Historia Animalium q The title and the philosophical approach were Aristotelian but the work was largely new Edward Wotton similarly helped to found modern zoology by arranging the animals according to Aristotle s theories separating out folklore from his 1552 De differentiis animalium 68 69 Aristotle s system of classification had thus remained influential for many centuries 70 51 71 72 Early Modern rejection edit nbsp Galileo s champion figure Salviati convinces Sagredo and defeats the Aristotelian Simplicio in his 1632 DialogueIn the Early Modern period Aristotle came to represent all that was obsolete scholastic and wrong not helped by his association with medieval theology In 1632 Galileo represented Aristotelianism in his Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems by the strawman Simplicio Simpleton 73 That same year William Harvey proved Aristotle wrong by demonstrating that blood circulates 74 75 Aristotle still represented the enemy of true science into the 20th century Leroi noted that in 1985 Peter Medawar stated in pure seventeenth century 76 tones that Aristotle had assembled a strange and generally speaking rather tiresome farrago of hearsay imperfect observation wishful thinking and credulity amounting to downright gullibility 76 77 19th century revival edit Zoologists working in the 19th century including Georges Cuvier Johannes Peter Muller 78 and Louis Agassiz admired Aristotle s biology and investigated some of his observations D Arcy Thompson translated History of Animals in 1910 making a classically educated zoologist s informed attempt to identify the animals that Aristotle names and to interpret and diagram his anatomical descriptions 79 80 81 82 Charles Darwin quoted a passage from Aristotle s Physics II 8 in The Origin of Species which entertains the possibility of a selection process following the random combination of body parts Darwin comments that We here see the principle of natural selection shadowed forth 83 However two things mitigate against this interpretation Firstly Aristotle immediately rejected the possibility of such a process of assembling body parts Secondly according to Leroi Aristotle was in any case discussing ontogeny the Empedoclean coming into being of an individual from component parts not phylogeny and natural selection 84 Darwin considered Aristotle the most important early contributor to biological thought in an 1882 letter he wrote that Linnaeus and Cuvier have been my two gods though in very different ways but they were mere schoolboys to old Aristotle 85 86 20th and 21st century interest edit nbsp Elephant swimming using its trunk as a snorkel as Aristotle statedZoologists have frequently mocked Aristotle for errors and unverified secondhand reports However modern observation has confirmed one after another of his more surprising claims 68 including the active camouflage of the octopus 87 and the ability of elephants to snorkel with their trunks while swimming 88 Aristotle remains largely unknown to modern scientists though zoologists are perhaps most likely to mention him as the father of biology 89 the MarineBio Conservation Society notes that he identified crustaceans echinoderms mollusks and fish that cetaceans are mammals and that marine vertebrates could be either oviparous or viviparous so he is often referred to as the father of marine biology r 90 Few practicing zoologists explicitly adhere to Aristotle s great chain of being but its influence is still perceptible in the use of the terms lower and upper to designate taxa such as groups of plants 91 The evolutionary zoologist Armand Leroi has taken an interest in Aristotle s biology s 93 The concept of homology began with Aristotle 94 and the evolutionary developmental biologist Lewis I Held commented that 95 The deep thinker who would be most amused by deep homologies is Aristotle who was fascinated by the natural world but bewildered by its inner workings 95 Works editAristotle did not write anything that resembles a modern unified textbook of biology Instead he wrote a large number of books which taken together give an idea of his approach to the science Some of these interlock referring to each other while others such as the drawings of The Anatomies are lost but referred to in the History of Animals where the reader is instructed to look at the diagrams to understand how the animal parts described are arranged 96 and it has even been possible to reconstruct admittedly with much associated uncertainty what some of these illustrations may have looked like from Aristotle s descriptions 97 Aristotle s main biological works are the five books sometimes grouped as On Animals De Animalibus namely with the conventional abbreviations shown in parentheses History of Animals or Inquiries into Animals Historia Animalium HA Generation of Animals De Generatione Animalium GA Movement of Animals De Motu Animalium DM Parts of Animals De Partibus Animalium PA Progression of Animals or On the Gait of Animals De Incessu Animalium IA together with On the Soul De Anima DA 68 In addition a group of seven short works conventionally forming the Parva Naturalia Short treatises on Nature is also mainly biological Sense and Sensibilia 98 Sense On Memory 99 On Sleep 100 On Dreams 101 On Divination in Sleep 102 On Length and Shortness of Life 103 On Youth Old Age Life and Death and Respiration 104 Notes edit The English and taxonomic Latin genus derive from this and have related meanings In modern terms it has been argued that these roughly correspond to species and some texts use that translation Aristotle did not formulate a definition resembling that of a modern species however and some of his forms are other taxa such as genera or families From Latin informo I form give shape to In modern terms this implies a symbolic system Armand Leroi notes that biologists will at once think in this context of the nucleotide letters of DNA which give form to organisms 4 Like the ancient Egyptians Aristotle believed that the seat of the rational and sensitive souls was the heart not the brain 7 Corresponding to mammals In modern terms this is homeostasis 15 The relative importance of parental characteristics and environment became the subject of the modern nature nurture debate Thus features are in modern terms sex linked 19 Excluding the Cetacea whales and dolphins and Chiroptera bats First Doctor Most learned bachelor Whom I esteem and honor I would like to ask you the cause and reason why Opium makes one sleep Argan the Aristotelian The reason is that in opium resides A dormitive virtue Of which it is the nature To stupefy the senses 31 It is not safe to assume that species or groups with Linnean names that resemble Aristotle s are the animals he was referring to as zoologists including Linnaeus guessed rightly or wrongly what Aristotle meant in his short descriptions Sometimes an ancient Greek name must mean exactly one species hippos is definitely horse when it s a land animal but sometimes a name referred to several similar species as English names often do today for instance kephalos means any of 4 species of grey mullet 39 Aristotle did not know that complex invertebrates do make use of haemoglobin but of a different kind from vertebrates Aristotle did not nest his groups into a hierarchical tree To a modern biologist such a scale suggests evolution but Aristotle saw it as a permanent eternal arrangement Scot translated HA GA and PA and all of the Parva Naturalia 67 Gessner borrowed the title from one of Aristotle s books As a father to the science he stands alone The next figures significant enough to be named in MarineBio s history for example are Captain James Cook and Charles Darwin some two millennia later 90 Leroi has written several papers on the subject cited in his book and made a BBC film 92 about it References edit a b Leroi 2014 p 14 Lennox James 27 July 2011 Aristotle s Biology Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford University Retrieved 28 November 2014 French Roger 1994 Ancient Natural History Histories of Nature Routledge pp 92 99 ISBN 0 415 11545 0 a b c d e Leroi 2014 pp 88 90 Pellegrin Pierre 1986 Aristotle s classification of animals biology and the conceptual unity of the Aristotelian corpus Rev ed Berkeley Calif Univ of California Pr pp xiv 235 ISBN 0520055020 a b Leroi 2014 pp 370 373 Mason 1962 p 45 Guthrie 1981 p 348 Aristotle De Anima II 3 a b Taylor 1922 p 46 a b c d e f Leroi 2014 pp 400 401 a b c d Leroi 2010 pp 261 284 Leroi 2014 pp 79 80 143 145 a b c Leroi 2014 pp 403 404 Leroi 2014 pp 176 177 King R A H 2001 Aristotle on Life and Death Duckworth pp 126 129 ISBN 978 0 7156 2982 6 a b c d Leroi 2014 p 402 Corcilius Klaus Gregoric Pavel 2013 Aristotle s Model of Animal Motion Phronesis 58 1 52 97 doi 10 1163 15685284 12341242 a b c d e f g Leroi 2014 pp 215 221 Taylor 1922 p 50 a b Leroi 2014 pp 197 200 Leroi 2014 pp 181 182 a b c d e f g h Leroi 2014 pp 369 373 a b c Leroi 2014 pp 365 368 Leroi 2014 p 397 Taylor 1922 p 42 Leroi 2014 pp 361 365 Leroi Armand Marie Presenter 3 May 2011 Aristotle s Lagoon Embryo Inside a Chicken s Egg BBC Retrieved 17 November 2016 Taylor 1922 p 49 Leroi 2014 p 408 a b Becker Barbara J Seventeenth Century Medical Practice according to Moliere University of California Irvine Retrieved 20 November 2016 a b Leroi 2014 pp 91 92 Thompson 1910 p Prefatory Note Leroi 2014 pp 196 248 a b c Singer 1931 Leroi 2014 pp 71 72 History of Animals Book V 541b9 541b12 544a6 14 Generation of Animals Book I 720b16 721a2 Leroi 2014 pp 384 385 a b Leroi 2014 pp 72 74 Emily Kearns Animals knowledge about in Oxford Classical Dictionary 3rd ed 1996 p 92 a b Leroi 2014 p 59 Leroi 2014 pp 46 47 Carl T Bergstrom Lee Alan Dugatkin 2012 Evolution Norton p 35 ISBN 978 0 393 92592 0 Rhodes Frank Harold Trevor 1 January 1974 Evolution Golden Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 307 64360 5 Voultsiadou E Gerovasileiou V Vandepitte L Ganias K Arvanitidis C 2018 2017 Aristotle s scientific contributions to the classification nomenclature and distribution of marine organisms Mediterranean Marine Science 18 3 468 478 doi 10 12681 mms 13874 Supplementary data a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Taylor 1922 p 54 Leroi 2014 pp 111 119 Leroi 2014 p 279 Leroi 2014 p 116 a b c Laurin Michel Humar Marcel 10 January 2022 Phylogenetic signal in characters from Aristotle s History of Animals Comptes Rendus Palevol 21 1 1 16 doi 10 5852 cr palevol2022v21a1 Mayr 1985 pp 201 202 Lovejoy A O 2005 1936 The Great Chain of Being A Study of the History of an Idea Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 36153 9 Lloyd G E R 1968 Aristotle The Growth and Structure of His thought Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 166 169 ISBN 0 521 09456 9 Leroi 2014 p 276 278 Mayr 1985 pp 90 91 Mason 1962 p 46 Leroi 2014 pp 32 33 Leroi 2014 pp 296 297 Annas Classical Greek Philosophy 2001 p 252 In Boardman John Griffin Jasper Murray Oswyn ed The Oxford History of the Classical World Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 872112 9 Mason 1962 p 56 Hoffman Eva R 2013 Translating Image and Text in the Medieval Mediterranean World between the Tenth and Thirteenth Centuries Brill pp 288 ISBN 978 90 04 25034 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Kruk R 1979 The Arabic Version of Aristotle s Parts of Animals book XI XIV of the Kitab al Hayawan Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Amsterdam Oxford 1979 Contadini Anna 2012 A World of Beasts A Thirteenth Century Illustrated Arabic Book on Animals the Kitab Na t al Hayawan in the Ibn Bakhtishu Tradition Brill ISBN 9789004222656 Kruk R 2003 La zoologie aristotelicienne Tradition arabe DPhA Supplement 329 334 a b c Leroi 2014 pp 354 355 Lagerlund Henrik 2010 Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy Philosophy Between 500 and 1500 Springer pp 502 ISBN 978 1 4020 9728 7 a b c d Ogilvie 2010 Pollard A F Wallis Patrick 2004 Wotton Edward 1492 1555 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 29999 Subscription or UK public library membership required Furst von Lieven Alexander Humar Marcel 2008 A Cladistic Analysis of Aristotle s Animal Groups in the Historia animalium History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 30 2 227 262 ISSN 0391 9714 Ganias Kostas Mezarli Charikleia Voultsiadou Eleni November 2017 Aristotle as an ichthyologist Exploring Aegean fish diversity 2 400 years ago Fish and Fisheries 18 6 1038 1055 doi 10 1111 faf 12223 Laurin Michel 3 August 2023 The Advent of PhyloCode The Continuing Evolution of Biological Nomenclature Boca Raton Fl CRC Press pp xv 209 ISBN 978 1 003 09282 7 Zeilik Michael 2002 Astronomy The Evolving Universe Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 521 80090 7 Harvey William 1628 De Motu Cordis Frankfurt Wilhelm Fitzer Leroi 2014 pp 355 361 a b Leroi 2014 p 353 Medawar P B Medawar J S 1984 Aristotle to Zoos a philosophical dictionary of biology Oxford University Press p 28 ISBN 978 0192830432 Muller J 1840 Ueber den glatten Hai des Aristoteles Physikalische Abhandlungen der Koniglichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 187 257 Leroi 2014 p 361 Bodson Liliane 1983 Aristotle s Statement on the Reproduction of Sharks PDF Journal of the History of Biology 16 3 391 407 doi 10 1007 bf00582408 PMID 11611403 S2CID 20605226 Thompson 1910 Thompson 1913 Darwin Charles 1872 The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life 6th ed John Murray p xiii OCLC 1185571 Leroi 2014 pp 272 275 Wilkins John 2009 Species a history of the idea Berkeley University of California Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 520 27139 5 OCLC 314379168 Pasipoularides Ares 2010 The Heart s Vortex Intracardiac Blood Flow Phenomena Shelton Connecticut People s Medical Publishing House p 118 ISBN 978 1 60795 033 2 OCLC 680621287 Forbes Peter 2009 Dazzled and Deceived Mimicry and Camouflage Yale University Press pp 236 239 ISBN 978 0 300 12539 9 Leroi 2014 pp 137 138 Leroi 2014 p 352 a b A History of the Study of Marine Biology MarineBio Conservation Society Retrieved 19 November 2016 Rigato Emanuele Minelli Alessandro 28 June 2013 The great chain of being is still here Evolution Education and Outreach 6 18 1 6 doi 10 1186 1936 6434 6 18 ISSN 1936 6434 Professor Armand Leroi Knight Ayton Management Archived from the original on 24 October 2013 Retrieved 30 July 2014 Leroi 2014 pp 3 and passim Panchen A L 1999 Homology history of a concept Novartis Foundation Symposium Novartis Foundation Symposia 222 5 18 discussion 18 23 doi 10 1002 9780470515655 ch2 ISBN 9780470515655 PMID 10332750 a b Held Lewis I February 2017 Deep Homology Uncanny Similarities of Humans and Flies Uncovered by Evo Devo Cambridge University Press p viii ISBN 978 1316601211 Leroi 2014 p 60 Furst von Lieven Alexander Humar Marcel Scholtz Gerhard 1 February 2021 Aristotle s lobster the image in the text Theory in Biosciences 140 1 1 15 doi 10 1007 s12064 020 00322 6 ISSN 1611 7530 De Sensu et Sensibilibus De Memoria et Reminiscentia De Somno et Vigilia De Insomniis De Divinatione per Somnum De Longitudine et Brevitate Vitae De Juventute et Senectute De Vita et Morte De RespirationeSources editGuthrie W K C 1981 A History of Greek Philosophy Vol 1 Cambridge University Press Leroi Armand Marie 2010 Function and Constraint in Aristotle and Evolutionary Theory In Follinger S ed Was ist Leben Aristoteles Anschauungen zur Entstehung und Funktionsweise von Leben Franz Steiner Verlag pp 261 284 Leroi Armand Marie 2014 The Lagoon How Aristotle Invented Science Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4088 3622 4 Mason Stephen F 1962 1953 A History of the Sciences P F Collier ISBN 0 02 093400 9 Mayr Ernst 1985 The Growth of Biological Thought Diversity Evolution and Inheritance Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 36446 2 Ogilvie Brian W 2010 Zoology In Grafton Anthony Most Glenn W Settis Salvatore eds The Classical Tradition Harvard University Press pp 1000 1001 ISBN 978 0 674 07227 5 Singer Charles 1931 A Short History of Biology Oxford University Press Taylor Henry Osborn 1922 Chapter 3 Aristotle s Biology Greek Biology and Medicine Archived from the original on 27 March 2006 Thompson D Arcy Wentworth 1910 Historia animalium In Ross W D Smith J A eds The works of Aristotle translated into English Clarendon Press Thompson D Arcy Wentworth 1913 On Aristotle as a biologist Clarendon Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aristotle 27s biology amp oldid 1199920589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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