GENERATION OF ANIMALS 



relevant to his subject : e.g., the entn' " causation, 

 mechanical " gives a reference to the passage, speci- 

 ally interesting to modern readers, which compares 

 the development of the embryo to the action of 

 automatic puppets. 



A number of books which the student of Aristotle's Additional 

 zoological works will find useful are mentioned in the gj.^''^' 

 footnotes throughout the volume ; to them may be 

 added the following : 



F. J. Cole. Early Theories of Sexual Generation, 



Oxford. 1930. 

 C. H. Haskins, Studies in the History of Medieval 



Science, ed. 2. Cambridge, Mass., 1927. 

 T. E. Lones, Aristotle's Researches in Natural Sderwe, 



London, 1912. 

 A. W. Mever, The Rise of Embryology, Stanford, 



Calif., 1939. 

 C. Singer, Studies in the History and Method of Science, 



Oxford, 1921. 

 C. Singer, Greek Biology and Greek Medicine, Oxford, 



1922. 

 H. B. Torrey and F. Felin, Wa^ Aristotle an Evolu- 

 tionist ? in Qu. Rev. of Biology (Baltimore), XII 



(1937), 1-18. 

 D'Arcy W. Thompson, Essay on " Natural Science " 



in The Legacy of Greece, Oxford, 1924.. 

 S. D. Wingate, The Medieval Latin Versions of the 



Aristotelian Scientific Corpus, London, 1931." 



In addition to Ross's Aristotle and Jaeger's Aristotle 

 (English translation by R. Robinson) and Diokles von 

 Karystos, which are of special importance, the fol- 



* For other works on the early translations, see my edition 

 of P. A. (Loeb Library). 



