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Alphabetical    [«  »]
reaches 1
readily 1
ready 1
real 34
realities 3
reality 40
realization 3
Frequency    [«  »]
34 motion
34 perhaps
34 points
34 real
34 spatial
34 world
33 act
Aristotle
Metaphysics

IntraText - Concordances

real

   Book, Paragraph
1 III, 5 | alone persists as something real and as a substance. But, 2 IV, 5 | forms of knowledge, the real things also are at the same 3 VII, 1 | these are seen to be more real because there is something 4 VII, 2 | more in number and more real; e.g. Plato posited two 5 VII, 3 | prior to the matter and more real, it will be prior also to 6 VII, 6 | is the essence of reality real, nor the essence of unity 7 VII, 6 | essence of reality is not real, neither is any of the others. 8 IX, 4 | clear that if, when A is real, B must be real, then, when 9 IX, 4 | when A is real, B must be real, then, when A is possible, 10 IX, 4 | if A were supposed to be real; and then B must of course 11 IX, 4 | then B must of course be real. But we supposed B to be 12 IX, 4 | so related that if A,is real, B must be real. If, then, 13 IX, 4 | if A,is real, B must be real. If, then, A and B being 14 IX, 4 | be possible, then if A is real, B also must be real. For 15 IX, 4 | is real, B also must be real. For to say that B must 16 IX, 4 | means this, that if A is real both at the time when and 17 IX, 4 | supposed capable of being real, B also must then and in 18 IX, 4 | then and in that way be real.~ 19 XI, 2 | or that these are the real things and Wisdom is concerned 20 XI, 7 | about something existing and real,-not however qua real; the 21 XI, 7 | and real,-not however qua real; the science that does this 22 XI, 9 | potential and the completely real, I call the actuality of 23 XI, 9 | potentially, when it is completely real and actual, not qua itself, 24 XII, 7 | object of appetite, and the real good is the primary object 25 XIII, 8 | thinkers identify number with real things; at any rate they 26 XIII, 8 | number is a self-subsistent real thing, that it should exist 27 XIII, 8 | series up to 10 is more of a real thing and a Form than 10 28 XIII, 9 | elements and principles of real things, we must inquire 29 XIII, 10| individual and not universal, (a) real things will be just of the 30 XIV, 1 | of all a substance and a real thing is the fact that it 31 XIV, 3 | sensible bodies, supposed real things to be numbers-not 32 XIV, 3 | however, but numbers of which real things consist. But why? 33 XIV, 3 | solid, think there must be real things of this sort. We 34 XIV, 4 | This they do to avoid a real objection which confronts


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