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| Alphabetical [« »] priority 2 private 1 privately 1 privation 67 privation-are 1 privation-not 1 privations 4 | Frequency [« »] 68 place 68 right 67 moved 67 privation 66 besides 66 produced 65 element | Aristotle Metaphysics IntraText - Concordances privation |
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1 IV, 2 | investigate the negation and the privation because in both cases we 2 IV, 2 | which the negation or the privation is a negation or privation ( 3 IV, 2 | privation is a negation or privation (for we either say simply 4 IV, 2 | thing in question, while in privation there is also employed an 5 IV, 2 | underlying nature of which the privation is asserted):-in view of 6 IV, 6 | of contraries, one is a privation no less than it is a contrary-and 7 IV, 6 | than it is a contrary-and a privation of the essential nature; 8 IV, 6 | the essential nature; and privation is the denial of a predicate 9 V, 10| to relative terms, and to privation and possession, and to the 10 V, 12| deprived of something; but if privation is in a sense "having" or " 11 V, 12| principle, and by having the privation of this, if it is possible 12 V, 12| it is possible to have a privation; and if privation is not 13 V, 12| have a privation; and if privation is not in a sense "habit", " 14 V, 12| good tone.~Incapacity is privation of capacity-i.e. of such 15 V, 15| some relative terms imply privation of potency, i.e. "incapable" 16 V, 22| 22~We speak of "privation" (1) if something has not 17 V, 22| not; for blindness is a privation, but one is not "blind" 18 V, 22| away of anything is called privation.~Indeed there are just as 19 V, 27| wholes are mutilated by the privation of any part. For the parts 20 VII, 7 | for the substance of a privation is the opposite substance, 21 VII, 7 | thing comes both from its privation and from its substratum, 22 VII, 7 | to come rather from its privation (e.g. it is from an invalid 23 VII, 7 | as for the things whose privation is obscure and nameless, 24 VII, 7 | nameless, e.g. in brass the privation of a particular shape or 25 VII, 7 | in bricks and timber the privation of arrangement as a house, 26 VII, 8 | this be taken to be not the privation but the matter; for the 27 VIII, 1| underlies it in respect of a privation of positive character. And 28 VIII, 5| the other in virtue of the privation of its positive state and 29 IX, 1 | impotent" stand for the privation which is contrary to potency 30 IX, 1 | corresponding impotence. Privation has several senses; for 31 IX, 1 | we say they have suffered privation.~ 32 IX, 2 | explains a thing and its privation, only not in the same way; 33 IX, 2 | contrary is the primary privation, and this is the removal 34 X, 2 | black, and black is the privation of white, as darkness of 35 X, 4 | and privation-not every privation, however (for "privation" 36 X, 4 | privation, however (for "privation" has several meanings), 37 X, 4 | opposition are contradiction and privation and contrariety and relation, 38 X, 4 | contrariety are not the same. But privation is a kind of contradiction; 39 X, 4 | contradiction; for what suffers privation, either in general or in 40 X, 4 | distinguished elsewhere. Privation, therefore, is a contradiction 41 X, 4 | admit of an intermediate, privation sometimes does; for everything 42 X, 4 | possession of the form or from a privation of the form or shape, clearly 43 X, 4 | all contrariety must be privation, but presumably not all 44 X, 4 | but presumably not all privation is contrariety (the reason 45 X, 4 | being that that has suffered privation may have suffered it in 46 X, 4 | as one of its terms, a privation, but not all cases are alike; 47 X, 4 | alike; inequality is the privation of equality and unlikeness 48 X, 4 | the other hand vice is the privation of virtue. But the cases 49 X, 4 | that the thing has suffered privation, in another case that it 50 X, 5 | either as negation or as privation. It cannot be the negation 51 X, 5 | cannot be the negation or privation of one of the two; for why 52 X, 5 | But it is not a necessary privation; for not everything which 53 X, 10| imperishable are contraries (for privation is a determinate incapacity), 54 XI, 3 | one must maintain that the privation is not of the whole definition, 55 XI, 3 | and in this respect the privation will attach to him; and 56 XI, 6 | every contrariety depends on privation. This is evident if we reduce 57 XI, 9 | form", and the other is "privation"; and as regards quality 58 XI, 9 | be classed either under privation or under potency or under 59 XI, 11| or intermediate (for even privation must be regarded as contrary), 60 XI, 12| movement, so that it must be a privation in that which is receptive 61 XII, 2 | and form and the other is privation, and the third being the 62 XII, 4 | sense the cold, which is the privation; and, as matter, that which 63 XII, 4 | principles-the form, the privation, and the matter. But each 64 XII, 5 | form and matter, and the privation, e.g. darkness or disease; 65 XII, 5 | either by the form or by the privation.) But the distinction of 66 XII, 5 | neither matter nor form nor privation of man nor of the same species 67 XII, 5 | sense, that matter, form, privation, and the moving cause are