ARISTOTLE 



much of his inspiration came from that source. 

 William Harvey was the first to make any substantial 

 advance in embryology since Aristotle himself. But 

 this is more appropriate to the De generatione than 

 to the De partihus. In other departments of study, 

 however, during the seventeenth century, the 

 authority of Aristotle and the scholastic doctrine 

 with Mhich he was identified were being combated 

 in the name of freedom, and thus it came about that 

 the zoological works also, which had been brought 

 to light by the dark ages, were allowed to pass back 

 into oblivion by the age of enlightenment. They were 

 not rediscovered until the end of the eighteenth 

 century by Cuvier (1769-1832) and Saint-Hilaire 

 (1805-1895) in the nineteenth. 



Modern Editions 



1. The Berlin edition of Aristotle, by Immanuel Bekker. 



Vol. i. (pp. 639-697) includes P.A. Berlin, 1831. 

 1a. The Oxford edition (a reprint of the preceding). Vol. v. 

 includes P.A. Oxford, 1837. 



2. One-volume edition of Aristotle's works, by C. H. Weise 



(pre-Bekker text). Leipzig, 1843. 

 8. The Leipzig edition. Vol. v. contains P. A., edited and 

 translated into German by A. von Frantzius. Leip- 

 zig, 1853. 



4. The Didot edition. Vol. iii. includes P.A. Edited by 



Bussemaker. Paris, 1854. 



5. The Teubner edition. Edited by Bernhardt Langkavel. 



Leipzig, 1868. 



6. The Bude edition. Edited by Pierre Louis. With a 



French translation and notes. Paris, 1956. 



Translations without Text 



7. Thomas Taylor. English translation of Aristotle in ten 

 44 



