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| Alphabetical [« »] destroyed 17 destroys 3 destructible 7 destruction 34 destruction-absolute 1 destructions 1 destructive 1 | Frequency [« »] 35 position 34 contrariety 34 definitions 34 destruction 34 difficulties 34 motion 34 perhaps | Aristotle Metaphysics IntraText - Concordances destruction |
Book, Paragraph
1 II, 2 | comes from air implies the destruction of the other thing. This 2 II, 2 | into one another, for the destruction of either is the generation 3 II, 2 | the first thing by whose destruction something came to be must 4 III, 4 | a principle that causes destruction, but even strife would seem 5 III, 4 | cause of existence as of destruction. And similarly love is not 6 IV, 5 | which neither movement nor destruction nor generation at all belongs.~ 7 IV, 5 | is always in process of destruction and generation; but this 8 IV, 7 | intermediate between generation and destruction.-Again, in all classes in 9 V, 8 | individuals, and by whose destruction the whole is destroyed, 10 V, 8 | destroyed, as the body is by the destruction of the plane, as some say, 11 V, 8 | say, and the plane by the destruction of the line; and in general 12 V, 16| in no wise falls short of destruction and badness, but is at its 13 VII, 15| former sense are capable of destruction (for they are capable also 14 VII, 15| generation), but there is no destruction of the formula in the sense 15 VII, 15| but without generation and destruction formulae are and are not; 16 VII, 17| the case of genesis and destruction, the final cause is sought 17 VIII, 1| matter for generation and destruction.~The difference between 18 VIII, 3| account of the generation and destruction of so-called substances 19 IX, 1 | change for the worse and to destruction by another thing or by the 20 IX, 3 | for it cannot be by the destruction of the object, for that 21 XI, 1 | species are involved in the destruction of the genera, the genera 22 XI, 1 | involves another in its destruction is a principle of it. These 23 XI, 10| infinite element would be destruction to the contrary elements. 24 XI, 11| destruction-absolute change absolute destruction, and partial change partial 25 XI, 11| and partial change partial destruction. If, then, "that which is 26 XI, 11| would be somewhere. Nor is destruction movement; for the contrary 27 XI, 11| rest, but the contrary of destruction is generation. Since every 28 XI, 11| the way of generation and destruction are not movements, and these 29 XI, 12| And so are generation and destruction; only, these are changes 30 XII, 2 | is simple generation and destruction, and change in quantity 31 XII, 3 | is there generation and destruction of these forms, but it is 32 XII, 6 | is to be generation and destruction, there must be something 33 XIV, 1 | no proper generation or destruction or movement, as in respect 34 XIV, 1 | substance simple generation and destruction. In respect of relation