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Alphabetical    [«  »]
perceiver 1
perceives 1
perceiving 2
perceptible 42
perception 21
perchance 2
perfectly 1
Frequency    [«  »]
42 circle
42 fire
42 less
42 perceptible
42 separate
42 shall
42 speak
Aristotle
Metaphysics

IntraText - Concordances

perceptible

   Book, Paragraph
1 III, 2 | with things that are not perceptible, evidently there will also 2 III, 2 | healthy things besides the perceptible healthy things and the healthy-itself.— 3 III, 2 | that mensuration deals with perceptible and perishable magnitudes; 4 III, 2 | astronomy cannot be dealing with perceptible magnitudes nor with this 5 III, 2 | above us. For neither are perceptible lines such lines as the 6 III, 2 | geometer speaks of (for no perceptible thing is straight or round 7 III, 2 | between the Forms and the perceptible things exist, not apart 8 III, 2 | exist, not apart from the perceptible things, however, but in 9 III, 2 | Forms also might be in the perceptible things; for both statements 10 III, 2 | since they are in the moving perceptible things. And in general to 11 III, 2 | indeed, but to exist in perceptible things? For the same paradoxical 12 III, 4 | eternal or unmovable; for all perceptible things perish and are in 13 III, 4 | are not as in the case of perceptible things different for different 14 III, 5 | belong (for they cannot be in perceptible bodies), there can be no 15 III, 6 | question why after all, besides perceptible things and the intermediates, 16 III, 6 | if there are not-besides perceptible and mathematical objects-others 17 V, 15| knowable to knowledge, and the perceptible to perception.~(1) Relative 18 VI, 1 | concavity is independent of perceptible matter. If then all natural 19 VII, 10| the sense that it is its perceptible matter. For even if the 20 VII, 10| individual circles, whether perceptible or intelligible (I mean 21 VII, 10| the mathematical, and by perceptible circles those of bronze 22 VII, 10| itself. And some matter is perceptible and some intelligible, perceptible 23 VII, 10| perceptible and some intelligible, perceptible matter being for instance 24 VII, 10| that which is present in perceptible things not qua perceptible, 25 VII, 10| perceptible things not qua perceptible, i.e. the objects of mathematics.~ 26 VII, 11| for an animal is something perceptible, and it is not possible 27 VII, 11| because these parts are perceptible things"; for they are not. 28 VII, 11| some things which are not perceptible must have matter; indeed 29 VII, 11| while one kind of matter is perceptible, there is another which 30 VII, 11| determine the nature of perceptible substances as well, since 31 VII, 11| sense the inquiry about perceptible substances is the work of 32 VIII, 3| composite kind, whether it be perceptible or intelligible; but the 33 VIII, 6| some is intelligible, some perceptible, and in a formula there 34 VIII, 6| either intelligible or perceptible, each is by its nature essentially 35 IX, 3 | cold or hot or sweet or perceptible at all if people are not 36 X, 3 | and the divisible is more perceptible than the indivisible, so 37 XI, 1 | now looking for deals with perceptible substances or not with them, 38 XI, 1 | mathematics between the Forms and perceptible things, as a kind of third 39 XI, 1 | again it does not deal with perceptible substances; for they are 40 XII, 4 | perhaps the elements of perceptible bodies are, as form, the 41 XII, 8 | about substance which is perceptible but eternal, but the other 42 XIII, 2| be one? For things in our perceptible world are one in virtue


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