- animal culture
- animal ecology
- animal economy
- animal ethics
- animal geography
- animal humanity
- animal medicine
- animal mind
- animal physiology
- animal psychology
- animal rationabile
- animal rationale
- animal symbolicum
- animal-human transitory field
- animalcules
- animality
- animated body
- anisogamy
- annidation
- anoxybiosis
- anthropocene
Result of Your Query
animal rationabileanimal rationabile (lat.)
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Man as an animal possessing the faculty of reason.
- c. 400
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Daemon est animal rationabile
Chalcidius, Commentarius in Timaeum (Plato Latinus, vol. IV, ed. J.H. Waszink, London 1962): 175 (nr. 135).
- c. 400
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omnem hominem esse animal rationabileThemistios (4th century). Paraphrasis in Aristotelis Posteriora (Venice 1542): 25 (Liber I, Caput XL).
- c. 600
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animale rationabileCassiodor, F.M.A. (6. Jh.). Opera omnia, vol. 2 (Rouen 1679): 579.
- 1527
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Cum animal rationabile mortale de sensibilibus etia̅ hominibus dicaturAlexandri Aphrodisiei Commentaria in duodecim Aristotelis libros de prima philosophia (ed. J.G. de Sepulvéda, 1527): lib. I, 39.
- 1531/36
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homo est animal rationabileVives, J.L. (1531/36). De disciplinis libri xx in tres tomos: 564: cf. Alexander of Aphrodisias (3rd century). Commentaria in duodecim Aristotelis libros de prima philosophia, interprete Ioanne Genesio Sepulueda Cordubensi, ad Clementem VII. Pont. Max. (Rome 1527?): I, 39.
- 1702
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if no signs of Rationality, no Acts of Reason seem to be exerted, as in Embryo’s it’s demonstratively plain, and in Infants, all their Operations at first are but meer Mechanism, what Grounds has any one to define such a Creature Animal Rationale. He may be indeed term’d Animal Rationabile, because by the Act of Generation, such a Body, or Compositum seems to be produce’d, which in process of time will become Rational, and exert all or most Acts of ReasonCoward, W. (1702). Second Thoughts Concerning Human Soul: 177 (2nd ed. 1704: 153).
- 1798
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[Vom Menschen gilt,] daß er einen Charakter hat, den er sich selbst schafft, indem er vermögend ist, sich nach seinen von ihm selbst genommenen Zwecken zu perfectioniren; wodurch er als mit Vernunftfähigkeit begabtes Thier (animal rationabile) aus sich selbst ein vernünftiges Thier (animal rationale) machen kann
Kant, I. (1798). Anthropologie in pragmatischer Hinsicht (AA, vol. 7, 117-333): 321.