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| Alphabetical [« »] parties 3 parting 1 partly 8 parts 139 parts-or 1 party 1 pass 8 | Frequency [« »] 140 come 140 should 139 definition 139 parts 137 genus 137 nothing 136 apart | Aristotle Metaphysics IntraText - Concordances parts |
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1 II, 2 | infinite in general, all the parts down to that now present 2 III, 1 | things the genera, or the parts present in each thing, into 3 III, 2 | for both statements are parts of the same theory. Further, 4 III, 3 | e.g. it is the primary parts of which articulate sounds 5 III, 3 | say there is one, say the parts of which bodies are compounded 6 III, 3 | anything else, we examine the parts of which, e.g. a bed consists 7 III, 3 | which states the constituent parts of a thing.~(7) Besides 8 IV, 2 | the work of the specific parts of the science.~If, now, 9 IV, 2 | And there are as many parts of philosophy as there are 10 IV, 2 | for mathematics also has parts, and there is a first and 11 V, 2 | of the octave), and the parts included in the definition. ( 12 V, 2 | causes of bodies, and the parts are causes of the whole, 13 V, 2 | the substratum (e.g. the parts), others as the essence ( 14 V, 3 | elements of speech are the parts of which speech consists 15 V, 3 | they are divided, their parts are of the same kind, as 16 V, 4 | something identical in both parts, which makes them grow together 17 V, 4 | e.g. the animals and their parts; and not only is the first 18 V, 6 | Coriscus" because one of the parts of the phrase is an accident 19 V, 6 | form; e.g. if we saw the parts of a shoe put together anyhow 20 V, 8 | and divine beings, and the parts of these. All these are 21 V, 8 | being of an animal.-(3) The parts which are present in such 22 V, 11 | e.g. the whole without the parts, and others in respect of 23 V, 13 | two or more constituent parts of which each is by nature 24 V, 13 | potentially into non-continuous parts, "magnitude" that which 25 V, 13 | divisible into continuous parts; of magnitude, that which 26 V, 16 | find any, even one, of its parts; e.g. the complete time 27 V, 18 | directly or in one of its parts; e.g. a surface is white 28 V, 19 | arrangement of that which has parts, in respect either of place 29 V, 20 | even the excellence of the parts is a "habit" of the whole 30 V, 23 | that the whole holds the parts.-(4) That which hinders 31 V, 24 | matter and shape, as the parts come from the whole, and 32 V, 25 | three. It means (b), of the parts in the first sense, only 33 V, 25 | quantity are also called parts of it; for which reason 34 V, 25 | reason we say the species are parts of the genus.-(3) The elements 35 V, 25 | characteristic angle are parts.-(4) The elements in the 36 V, 25 | explains a thing are also parts of the whole; this is why 37 V, 26 | which is absent none of the parts of which it is said to be 38 V, 26 | unity consisting of several parts, especially if they are 39 V, 27 | things consist of unlike parts, not even these things can 40 V, 27 | sense a number has unlike parts (e.g. two and three) as 41 V, 27 | scale consists of unlike parts and has position, but cannot 42 V, 27 | privation of any part. For the parts removed must be neither 43 V, 27 | the essence nor any chance parts, irrespective of their position; 44 VI, 1 | not immovable, and some parts of mathematics deal with 45 VII, 2 | animals and plants and their parts are substances, but also 46 VII, 2 | all things that are either parts of these or composed of 47 VII, 2 | composed of these (either of parts or of the whole bodies), 48 VII, 2 | physical universe and its parts, stars and moon and sun. 49 VII, 10 | formula, and every formula has parts, and as the formula is to 50 VII, 10 | whether the formula of the parts must be present in the formula 51 VII, 10 | cases the formulae of the parts are seen to be present, 52 VII, 10 | letters.-And further if the parts are prior to the whole, 53 VII, 10 | prior; for in formula the parts are explained by reference 54 VII, 10 | wholes are prior to the parts.~Perhaps we should rather 55 VII, 10 | let us inquire about the parts of which substance consists. 56 VII, 10 | letters; for the letters are parts of the formula of the form, 57 VII, 10 | matter, but the segments are parts in the sense of matter on 58 VII, 10 | are composed of these as parts of their essence, but rather 59 VII, 10 | as matter; and these are parts of the concrete thing, but 60 VII, 10 | then, the formula of such parts will be present, but in 61 VII, 10 | their constituent principles parts into which they pass away, 62 VII, 10 | materials are principles and parts of the concrete things, 63 VII, 10 | the form they are neither parts nor principles. And therefore 64 VII, 10 | the question again. The parts of the formula, into which 65 VII, 10 | of a man". Therefore the parts which are of the nature 66 VII, 10 | which are of the nature of parts of the formula, and of the 67 VII, 10 | perception), so that the parts of soul are prior, either 68 VII, 10 | animal; and the body and parts are posterior to this, the 69 VII, 10 | that is divided into these parts as its matter:-this being 70 VII, 10 | finger only in name. Some parts are neither prior nor posterior 71 VII, 10 | matter itself. But only the parts of the form are parts of 72 VII, 10 | the parts of the form are parts of the formula, and the 73 VII, 10 | which they consist, i.e. the parts, we must meet the inquiry 74 VII, 10 | in one sense, i.e. to the parts included in the formula 75 VII, 10 | in the formula and to the parts of the individual right 76 VII, 10 | are posterior to their parts); while the immaterial right 77 VII, 10 | angle is posterior to the parts included in the formula, 78 VII, 10 | the animal, even so some parts must, as we have maintained, 79 VII, 11 | raised, viz. what sort of parts belong to the form and what 80 VII, 11 | not evident what sort of parts are of the nature of matter 81 VII, 11 | found in flesh and bones and parts of this kind; are these 82 VII, 11 | kind; are these then also parts of the form and the formula? 83 VII, 11 | possibly exist without his parts, as the circle can without 84 VII, 11 | without reference to the parts’ being in a certain state. 85 VII, 11 | are the formulae of the parts not parts of the formulae 86 VII, 11 | formulae of the parts not parts of the formulae of the wholes; 87 VII, 11 | be said, "because these parts are perceptible things"; 88 VII, 11 | semicircles, then, will not be parts of the universal circle, 89 VII, 11 | universal circle, but will be parts of the individual circles, 90 VII, 11 | elements in the formula are parts of the definition, and why 91 VII, 11 | thing one, although it has parts?),-this must be considered 92 VII, 11 | some things contains the parts of the thing defined, while 93 VII, 11 | the substance the material parts will not be present (for 94 VII, 11 | present (for they are not even parts of the substance in that 95 VII, 13 | substance, if it consists of parts, should not consist of substances 96 VII, 14 | this" and exists apart, the parts also of which he consists, 97 VII, 15 | elements are prior to and parts of the compound; nay more, 98 VII, 16 | only potencies,-both the parts of animals (for none of 99 VII, 16 | most readily suppose the parts of living things and the 100 VII, 16 | of living things and the parts of the soul nearly related 101 VII, 16 | when divided. Yet all the parts must exist only potentially, 102 VIII, 1 | second plants and their parts, and animals and the parts 103 VIII, 1 | parts, and animals and the parts of animals; and finally 104 VIII, 1 | physical universe and its parts; while some particular schools 105 VIII, 1 | formula, and a formula has parts, we had to consider also 106 VIII, 1 | notion of "part", what are parts of the substance and what 107 VIII, 1 | are not, and whether the parts of the substance are also 108 VIII, 1 | of the substance are also parts of the definition. Further, 109 VIII, 2 | qualities, because some parts of them are mixed, others 110 VIII, 3 | intelligible; but the primary parts of which this consists cannot 111 VIII, 3 | divisible, and into indivisible parts (for definitory formulae 112 VIII, 3 | 2) as, when one of the parts of which a number consists 113 VIII, 6 | things which have several parts and in which the totality 114 VIII, 6 | is something beside the parts, there is a cause; for even 115 IX, 6 | fat-removal, and the bodily parts themselves when one is making 116 XI, 4 | mathematics must be classed as parts of Wisdom.~ 117 XI, 7 | the eye and of the other parts must always be stated without 118 XI, 10 | b) if the All has unlike parts, the proper places of the 119 XI, 10 | the proper places of the parts are unlike also, and, firstly, 120 XI, 10 | contact, and, secondly, the parts will be either finite or 121 XI, 10 | contrary elements. But if the parts are infinite and simple, 122 XI, 11 | the things that change in parts; the body becomes healthy, 123 XII, 7 | magnitude, but is without parts and indivisible (for it 124 XII, 10 | or as the order of the parts. Probably in both ways, 125 XII, 10 | produced out of unextended parts? For number will not, either 126 XIII, 2 | plurality, and splits up into parts. But in the case of the 127 XIII, 4 | plane figure" and the other parts of the definition apply 128 XIII, 4 | to "plane" or to all the parts of the definition? For all 129 XIII, 7 | another, and all Forms will be parts of one Form. And so with 130 XIII, 8 | together out of the smallest parts, as some others also have 131 XIII, 9 | objections; for (a) each of the parts must be indivisible (or 132 XIII, 9 | can there be indivisible parts of a distance, as the elements 133 XIII, 9 | be made are indivisible parts of plurality; for number 134 XIII, 10| are unique, so too are the parts of which they consist; there 135 XIV, 1 | relative in general and to its parts and kinds. For there is 136 XIV, 5 | only in this way, "three parts of fire and two of earth". 137 XIV, 5 | certain things, either of parts of fire or earth or of units; 138 XIV, 6 | numbers; e.g. it is "three parts to two", not "three times 139 XIV, 6 | is that there are three parts of the mouth and one letter