On Plants

Book

The work is divided into two parts.

Part 1

The first part discusses the nature of plant life, sex in plants, the parts of plants, the structure of plants, the classification of plants, the composition and products of plants, the methods of propagation and fertilization of plants, and the changes and variations of plants.

Part 2

The second part describes the origins of plant life, the material of plants, the effects of external conditions and climate on plants, water plants, rock plants, effects of locality on plants, parasitism, the production of fruits and leaves, the colors and shapes of plants, and fruits and their flavors.

Translations

" Alfred the Englishman translated the Arabic version into Latin in the reign of Henry III. It was retranslated from this version into Greek at the Renaissance by a Greek resident in Italy.[2]"

gollark: I've seen a bunch of non-object-oriented projects.
gollark: You can do procedural code in most higher-ish-level languages if you want to.
gollark: I mean, some people like using them, I personally don't, either way is easier to work on than assembly, mostly.
gollark: C# actually allows you to do neat functional programming things now, to some extent.
gollark: There are *at least* three high-level languages, and not all of them are C# and Java.

See also

  • Historia plantarum (Theophrastus)
  • Andrea Cesalpino (wrote De Plantis Libri XVI in 1583)

References

  1. Barnes, Jonathan (1984). The Complete Works of Aristotle. 2. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 1251–1271. ISBN 0-691-01651-8.
  2. Burnet, John (1930). Early Greek Philosophy. 4, 5 & 6 Soho Square, London, W.1: A. & C. Black, Ltd. p. 242.CS1 maint: location (link)
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