Literatura científica selecionada sobre o tema "Zoologie – Antiquité"
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Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Zoologie – Antiquité"
Pajón Leyra, Irene, Arnaud Zucker e Catherine Faron-Zucker. "Thezoo : un thésaurus de zoologie ancienne et médiévale pour l’annotation de sources de données hétérogènes". Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi 73, n.º 1 (2015): 321–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/alma.2015.1180.
Texto completo da fonteVilley, Émilie. "A Companion to Byzantine Science edited by Stavros Lazaris". Aestimatio: Sources and Studies in the History of Science 3, n.º 1 (30 de setembro de 2023): 182–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/aestimatio.v3i1.41826.
Texto completo da fontePUGH, PHILIP J. A., e PETER CONVEY. "Scotia Arc Acari: antiquity and origin". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 130, n.º 2 (outubro de 2000): 309–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2000.tb01633.x.
Texto completo da fonteLalchhandama, K. "The making of oncology: The tales of false carcinogenic worms". Science Vision 17, n.º 1 (31 de março de 2017): 33–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.33493/scivis.17.01.06.
Texto completo da fonteDegnan, B. M. "Sponge Development and Antiquity of Animal Pattern Formation". Integrative and Comparative Biology 45, n.º 2 (1 de abril de 2005): 335–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icb/45.2.335.
Texto completo da fonteBauer, Aaron M., Alessandro Ceregato e Massimo Delfino. "The oldest herpetological collection in the world: the surviving amphibian and reptile specimens of the Museum of Ulisse Aldrovandi". Amphibia-Reptilia 34, n.º 3 (2013): 305–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685381-00002894.
Texto completo da fonteNGÔ-MULLER, VALERIE, MICHAEL S. ENGEL, ANDRE NEL e JACQUES NEL. "First fossil Eriocottidae discovered in Eocene Baltic amber (Insecta: Lepidoptera)". Zootaxa 4834, n.º 2 (19 de agosto de 2020): 273–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4834.2.7.
Texto completo da fonteSenter, Phil. "Homology between and Antiquity of Stereotyped Communicatory Behaviors of Crocodilians". Journal of Herpetology 42, n.º 2 (junho de 2008): 354–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1670/07-150.1.
Texto completo da fonteRomanov, S. V. "Strategies of Human Self-Development in Ancient Philosophy". Siberian Journal of Philosophy 19, n.º 2 (21 de outubro de 2021): 145–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/2541-7517-2021-19-2-145-157.
Texto completo da fontePENNEY, DAVID, YURI MARUSIK, C. PHILIP WHEATER e A. MARK LANGAN. "First Gambian Ricinulei (Arachnida: Ricinoididae): northernmost African record for the order". Zootaxa 2021, n.º 1 (27 de fevereiro de 2009): 66–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2021.1.5.
Texto completo da fonteTeses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Zoologie – Antiquité"
Normand, Hélène. "Les rapaces dans les mondes grec et romain : catégorisation, représentations culturelles et pratiques". Thesis, Montpellier 3, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014MON30025.
Texto completo da fonteIn this thesis, our general aim is to try to know what people thought about birds of prey inGreek and Roman Antiquity. We focus first on zoological classes in order to see in what waywe can speak about raptors as a category. We then study the cultural image for the most usualzoonyms in order to find what place these birds have in the imagination. Lastly, through thequestion of the relationships between humans and raptors, we wonder whether these birdscan’t belong to some other categories whose unity is maybe not only zoological
Zucker, Arnaud. "Classes zoologiques et modes de classement des animaux en Grèce d'Homère à Elien". Paris, EPHE, 1994. http://www.theses.fr/1994EPHE0009.
Texto completo da fonteThis work deals with the Greek zoological classes and the classification criteria which are used, implicitly or explicitly, in Greek literature from homer to Aelian, in technical and methodical texts as well as in non zoological texts. This thesis is divided into three main parts: the first one consists of a thematic and encyclopaedic lexicon of all the zoological supra-generic categories which are named in the Greek language. The second part proposes and historical analysis of the various clusters of animals appearing in the texts before Aristotle, in the Aristotelian corpus, and after Aristotle, and is mainly focused on the classifications mentioned and used in the biological treatises of the stagirit. The third part emphasizes the concordance and the differences between the theoretical classifications and the folk taxonomy of animals. This study reveal, beyond the permanence of the classification criteria (physical, topographical, morphological), the diversity of the classification glossary. There is not only a lack of taxonomic purpose but clearly an absence of a single and conventional classification scheme. Moreover, the choice of the zoological categories is always dependent of the objective outlook of the authors and is relative to their own theoretical field. Closely connected to the process of qualification of the animal species, and to the formalization of the zoological knowledge, the classification activity does never overlook the inter-specific differences which are, indeed, the central interest of the Greek zoology
Scaccuto, Alessandra. "La sexualité animale dans l'Antiquité grecque et romaine : science, morale et imagination". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Côte d'Azur, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024COAZ2007.
Texto completo da fonteThe aim of this study is to reconstruct the representations of animal sexual behaviour in the ancient zoologies. To this end, we have defined a corpus of Greek and Latin texts, consisting of Aristotle's zoological treatises (mainly "History of Animals" and "Generation of Animals"), Varro's "On Agriculture", Columella's "On Agriculture", Pliny the Elder's "Natural History", Plutarch's treatises on animals (mainly "On the Cleverness of Animals" and "Whether Beasts Are Rational"), Elian's "On the Characteristics of Animals", Oppian of Cilicia's "Halieutica" and Oppian of Apamea's "Cynegetica". In Antiquity, animal sexuality was often presented as the expression of an original sexuality opposed to that of humans, which was described as morally and socially constructed or even perverted. Animals are invoked as a reference model, a 'touchstone', to measure human behaviours against a homogenous pattern that is considered to be intact. However, the sexual behaviour of animals is characterised by a considerable diversity, which is too poorly taken into account by this approach. Nonetheless, this diversity is well attested in ancient zoological texts. In our study, we wanted to go beyond the simplistic and idealised doxa of a naïve animal sexuality, by paying special attention to the particular and specific practices attested by passages which describe animals sexual behaviours as such and not just as a mirror of human sexuality. If we avoid these biases of interpretation, we can see that our sources attribute behaviours that are very often considered to be purely cultural and human to other animals, such as sexuality for recreational purposes.The first part of the thesis deals with reproduction. The different anatomical configurations linked to sexual differentiation and the different mating positions are considered here. This first part concludes with a theoretical section devoted to the question of the ideological use of animal sexuality in Antiquity. The passages highlighted here do not focus specifically on animals, but mention their sexuality as a source of exempla for humans. The second part, on the other hand, looks at all the sexual practices generally dismissed or denied by an ideological view of animal sexuality. Several passages depict non-human animals as desiring beings who can seek pleasure, in a dynamic reminiscent of the manifestations of human sexual desire and expressed in a common vocabulary. The texts cover a range of behaviours, from monogamy to homosexual practices, without excluding interspecific relationships, which can prove fertile. The third part deals with behaviours that the sources themselves present as excessive, first and foremost incest. In addition, certain sexual acts are associated with various forms of violence. Desire can also drive individuals to act against reproduction itself: this is the case with animals that try to free themselves from their offspring in order to mate. This reflection on animal sexuality has been enriched by an interdisciplinary approach combining literary criticism and philology with methodologies and reflections borrowed from anthropology, ethology, sexuality studies and Animal Studies
Vespa, Marco. "Les singes dans l'imaginaire culturel de la Grèce ancienne : Une étude zooanthropologique du singe dans les différentes représentations culturelles des sources grecques". Thesis, Université Côte d'Azur (ComUE), 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017AZUR2048.
Texto completo da fonteDespite being an exotic animal and coming from elsewhere, monkeys have been the subject of special attention from Greek and Greco-Roman culture. The animal that the contemporary imagination considers the closest to man by virtue of its morphotypical and ethological characters was, on the contrary, conceived by the ancients as the most aberrant living being when compared to man precisely because of such a failed similarity. Ancient Greek imaginary about monkeys feeds on relational practices largely different from those that may concern human beings nowadays: ancient Greeks indeed did not know any great apes and the prototypical representative of the non-human primates was the Barbary ape. By analysing the information that zoological and medical sources give us concerning both the anatomy and the ethology of monkeys, it is possible to understand other seemingly more obscure aspects that are part of the cultural representations conceived by the Greeks for this animal.In particular, monkeys enter into the same symbolic configurations as other figures in ancient Greek imagery especially when associated with imperfectly virile or masculine figures such as children or eunuchs as well as effeminate homosexuals. The association with elite social circles very often linked to a life considered debauched and their condition marked by physical imperfection in addition to a submission to the master always considered as precarious, make the monkey be considered a real geloion mimēma, a laughable counterfeit of the human being and of his perfect prototype, namely the adult male of free condition
Livros sobre o assunto "Zoologie – Antiquité"
Cambefort, Yves. How general are genera? The genus in systematic zoology. Editado por Karine Chemla, Renaud Chorlay e David Rabouin. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198777267.013.8.
Texto completo da fonteCapítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Zoologie – Antiquité"
Lennox, James G. "The Place of Zoology in Aristotle’s Natural Philosophy". In Philosophy and the Sciences in Antiquity, 55–71. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351151726-4.
Texto completo da fonte"Philosophy: Aristotle To Epicurus". In An Anthology of Greek Prose, editado por D. A. Russell, 133–44. Oxford University PressOxford, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198144984.003.0009.
Texto completo da fonteWest-Eberhard, Mary Jane. "Macroevolution". In Developmental Plasticity and Evolution. Oxford University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195122343.003.0037.
Texto completo da fonte