expel it in order to prevent its being swallowed simultaneously with
the food. Thus crustaceans, like the Carcini and Carabi, discharge
water through the folds beside their shaggy parts, while cuttlefish
and the polyps employ for this purpose the hollow above the head.
There is, however, a more precise account of these in the History of
Animals.
Thus it has been explained that the cause of the admission of the
water is refrigeration, and the fact that animals constituted for a
life in water must feed in it.
19
An account must next be given of refrigeration and the manner in
which it occurs in respiring animals and those possessed of gills.
We have already said that all animals with lungs respire. The reason
why some creatures have this organ, and why those having it need
respiration, is that the higher animals have a greater proportion of
heat, for at the same time they must have been assigned a higher
soul and they have a higher nature than plants. Hence too those with
most blood and most warmth in the lung are of greater size, and animal
in which the blood in the lung is purest and most plentiful is the
most erect, namely man; and the reason why he alone has his upper part
directed to the upper part of the universe is that he possesses such a
lung. Hence this organ as much as any other must be assigned to the
essence of the animal both in man and in other cases.
This then is the purpose of refrigeration. As for the constraining
and efficient cause, we must believe that it created animals like
this, just as it created many others also not of this constitution.
For some have a greater proportion of earth in their composition, like
plants, and others, e.g. aquatic animals, contain a larger amount of
water; while winged and terrestrial animals have an excess of air
and fire respectively. It is always in the region proper to the