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| Alphabetical [« »] brings 3 broad 5 broken 1 bronze 41 bronze-i 1 brought 3 build 6 | Frequency [« »] 42 shall 42 speak 42 think 41 bronze 41 earth 41 having 41 perishable | Aristotle Metaphysics IntraText - Concordances bronze |
Book, Paragraph
1 V, 2 | comes into being, e.g. the bronze is the cause of the statue 2 V, 2 | art of sculpture and the bronze are causes of the statue 3 V, 2 | of an image, and of this bronze or of bronze or of matter 4 V, 2 | and of this bronze or of bronze or of matter in general; 5 V, 4 | its own potency, as e.g. bronze is said to be the nature 6 V, 4 | nature of a statue and of bronze utensils, and wood the nature 7 V, 4 | in the case of works in bronze, bronze is first with reference 8 V, 4 | case of works in bronze, bronze is first with reference 9 V, 23| have the thing; e.g. the bronze has the form of the statue, 10 V, 24| sense the statue comes from bronze.-(2) As from the first moving 11 V, 24| which the statue comes from bronze; for the composite substance 12 V, 25| has the form; e.g. of the bronze sphere or of the bronze 13 V, 25| bronze sphere or of the bronze cube both the bronze-i.e. 14 VII, 3 | mean, for instance, the bronze, by the shape the pattern 15 VII, 10| snubness it is a part; and the bronze is a part of the concrete 16 VII, 10| nearer the form than the bronze is when roundness is produced 17 VII, 10| roundness is produced in bronze. But in a sense not even 18 VII, 10| together, e.g. the snub, or the bronze circle, pass away into these 19 VII, 10| into clay and the ball into bronze and Callias into flesh and 20 VII, 10| perceptible circles those of bronze and of wood),-of these there 21 VII, 10| matter being for instance bronze and wood and all matter 22 VII, 10| right angle which is made of bronze, and that which is formed 23 VII, 11| as a circle may exist in bronze or stone or wood, it seems 24 VII, 11| seems plain that these, the bronze or the stone, are no part 25 VII, 11| had ever been seen were of bronze; for none the less the bronze 26 VII, 11| bronze; for none the less the bronze would be no part of the 27 VII, 11| and bones are to man, and bronze or stone to the statue; 28 VII, 11| the circle can without the bronze. But the case is not similar; 29 VIII, 6| as would arise if "round bronze" were the definition of " 30 VIII, 6| the unity of "round" and "bronze"? The difficulty disappears, 31 VIII, 6| health, and the fact that the bronze is a triangle will be a " 32 VIII, 6| will be a "composition" of bronze and triangle, and the fact 33 XI, 9 | movement. By qua I mean this: bronze is potentially a statue; 34 XI, 9 | the complete reality of bronze qua bronze that is movement. 35 XI, 9 | complete reality of bronze qua bronze that is movement. For it 36 XI, 9 | not the same thing to be bronze and to be a certain potency. 37 XI, 9 | the complete reality of bronze would have been a movement. 38 XII, 3 | infinity, if not only the bronze comes to be round but also 39 XII, 3 | but also the round or the bronze comes to be; therefore there 40 XII, 3 | exists; and the shape of a bronze sphere exists at the same 41 XII, 3 | at the same time as the bronze sphere. (But we must examine