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"Reproduction Early works to 1800."
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In Aristotelis De generatione et corruptione
Richard Rufus of Cornwall was an early Scholastic philosopher-theologian who taught at the Universities of Paris and Oxford between 1231 and 1255. In those years he played a vital part in the transformation of philosophy and theology in early thirteenth-century Western Europe. He pioneered the teaching of metaphysics, physics, chemistry, psychology, and ethics. At Paris Rufus gave the earliest lectures on Aristotelian physics and metaphysics of which a record survives. Although acknowledged as a great scholar in his lifetime, his devotion to the Franciscan ideal of humility led him deliberately to seek obscurity and for 500 years his work was lost or misattributed. This is the second volume of Richard Rufus's writings in the Auctores Britannici Medii Aevi series, a companion to In Physicam Aristotelis also edited by Professor Rega Wood. De Generatione et corruptione is particularly notable for its accounts of divisibility, growth and Aristotelian mixture. This transforms our understanding of the introduction of Aristotelian natural philosophy to the West and provides insight into the early history and prehistory of chemistry.
Anatomical exercitations, concerning the generation of living creatures to which are added particular discourses, of births, and of conceptions, &c. By William Harvey, Doctor of physick, and Professor of anatomy, and chirurgery, in the Colledge of Physitians of London
by
Harvey, William
in
Embryology - Early works to 1800
,
Medical texts
,
Reproduction - Early works to 1800
1653
The history of generation Examining the several opinions of divers authors, especially that of Sir Kenelm Digby, in his Discourse of bodies. With a general relation of the manner of generation, as well in plants as animals: with some figures delineating the first originals of some creatures, evidently demonstrating the rest. To which is joyned a discourse of the cure of wounds by sympathy, or without any real applycation of medicines to the part affected, but especially by that powder, known chi
by
Highmore, Nathaniel
in
Medical texts
,
Reproduction - Early works to 1800
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Wounds and injuries - Treatment - Early works to 1800
1651
Aristotle's master-piece compleated in two parts: the first containing the secrets of generation, in all the parts thereof. Treating, of the benefit of marriage, and the prejudice of unequal matches, signs of insufficiency in men or women; of the infusion of the soul; of the likeness of children to parents; of monstrous births; the cause and cure of the green-sickness: a discourse of virginity. Directions and cautions for mid-wives. Of the organs of generation in women, and the fabrick of the wo
by
Anon
in
Gynecology - Early works to 1800
,
Human reproduction - Early works to 1800
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Medical texts
1697
Aristotle's master-piece: or, The secrets of generation display'd in all the parts thereof Containing 1. The signs of barrenness. 2. The way of getting a boy or girl. 3. Of the likeness of children to parents. 4. Of the infusion of the soul into the infant. 5. Of monsturous sic births, and the reasons thereof. 6. Of the benefit of marriage to both sexes. 7. The prejudice of unequal matches. 8. The discovery of insufficiency. 9. The cause and cure of the green sickness. 10. A discourse of v
by
Anon
in
Gynecology - Early works to 1800
,
Human reproduction - Early works to 1800
,
Medical texts
1690
Aristotle's compleat master-piece in three parts : displaying the secrets of nature in the generation of man : regularly digested into chapters and sections, rendring it far more useful and easie than any yet extant : to which is added, a treasure of health, or, The family physician, being choice and approved remedies for all the several distempers incident to humane bodies
by
Anon
in
Gynecology - Early works to 1800
,
Human reproduction - Early works to 1800
,
Medical texts
1690
Aristotle's master-piece, or, The secrets of generation displayed in all the parts thereof containing 1. The signs of barrenness, 2. The way of getting a boy or girl, 3. Of the likeness of children to parents, 4. Of the infusion of the soul into the infant, 5. Of monstrous births and the reasons thereof, 6. Of the benefit of marriage to both sexes, 7. The prejudice of unequal matches, 8. The discovery of insufficiency, 9. The cause and cure of the green sickness, 10. A discourse of virginity, 11
by
Anon
in
Gynecology - Early works to 1800
,
Human reproduction - Early works to 1800
,
Medical texts
1700