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Alphabetical    [«  »]
existence 40
existence-i 1
existent 21
existing 56
exists 78
exists-one 1
expanse 1
Frequency    [«  »]
58 necessary
58 s
57 terms
56 existing
56 none
56 suppose
56 well
Aristotle
Metaphysics

IntraText - Concordances

existing

   Book, Paragraph
1 III, 1 | else but the substance of existing things, or this is not the 2 III, 2 | reference to which kind of existing things we must look for 3 III, 3 | describe these as genera of existing things. Besides this, if 4 III, 3 | of all predicated of all existing things. But it is not possible 5 III, 3 | and must be capable of existing in separation from them; 6 III, 5 | thought to be capable of existing without body, but body incapable 7 III, 5 | body, but body incapable of existing without these. This is why, 8 IV, 1 | who sought the elements of existing things were seeking these 9 IV, 3 | that he whose subject is existing things qua existing must 10 IV, 3 | subject is existing things qua existing must be able to state the 11 IV, 4 | saying that the nature of existing things is of this kind? 12 IV, 5 | them to believe that among existing things there is also another 13 V, 5 | for it is incapable of existing without these; (b) the conditions 14 VII, 7 | produced if there were nothing existing before. Obviously then some 15 VII, 10 | respect also of the power of existing apart from each other the 16 VII, 13 | be composed of substances existing in complete reality, every 17 IX, 8 | number with a potentially existing thing is to it. I mean that 18 IX, 8 | these are other actually existing things, from which they 19 IX, 8 | For from the potentially existing the actually existing is 20 IX, 8 | potentially existing the actually existing is always produced by an 21 IX, 8 | produced by an actually existing thing, e.g. man from man, 22 IX, 9 | therefore, the potentially existing constructions are discovered 23 X, 2 | white. And similarly if all existing things were tunes, they 24 X, 3 | It is predicated of all existing things; for everything that 25 XI, 7 | this as about something existing and real,-not however qua 26 XI, 7 | qua being and capable of existing apart, we must consider 27 XI, 7 | deals with the highest of existing things, and each science 28 XI, 7 | substances are the first of existing things, physics must be 29 XI, 8 | sometime to the already existing condition. Therefore since 30 XI, 9 | to detect but capable of existing.~And evidently movement 31 XII, 1 | assert to be capable of existing apart, some dividing it 32 XII, 6 | substances are the first of existing things, and if they are 33 XII, 6 | things to be capable of existing but not yet to exist.~Yet 34 XII, 6 | if there is no actually existing cause? Wood will surely 35 XII, 7 | moves while itself unmoved, existing actually, this can in no 36 XII, 10 | tells us; for they make all existing things out of the same principles. 37 XII, 10 | principles. Further, some make existing things out of the nonexistent; 38 XIII, 1 | principles and substances of existing things or not, but only 39 XIII, 1 | substances and the principles of existing things are numbers and Ideas; 40 XIII, 2 | there will also be animals existing apart, since there will 41 XIII, 3 | correctly; they talk about existing things, and their subjects 42 XIII, 8 | numbers are the first of existing things, and the 1-itself 43 XIII, 8 | of number as capable of existing separately removes many 44 XIII, 8 | of number as capable of existing separately, so that it is 45 XIII, 10| will not be other things existing besides the elements, but 46 XIV, 2 | it must be capable of not existing, just as that which is any 47 XIV, 2 | old is as capable of not existing as that which is a day old; 48 XIV, 2 | if this is capable of not existing, so is that which has lasted 49 XIV, 2 | which is capable of not existing is not eternal, as we had 50 XIV, 2 | provide some sort of cause for existing things, since each number 51 XIV, 2 | rather says it is a thing existing by itself), nor is it observed 52 XIV, 3 | should they be capable of existing apart?~Again, if we are 53 XIV, 4 | substances, and as capable of existing apart, and as Forms.~ 54 XIV, 5 | One itself is not even an existing thing. This is incorrect, 55 XIV, 5 | place is.~Those who say that existing things come from elements 56 XIV, 5 | elements and that the first of existing things are the numbers,


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