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naming 2
narrow 5
natural 50
naturally 32
nature 233
natures 1
nay 3
Frequency    [«  »]
32 him
32 inquiry
32 moving
32 naturally
32 rest
32 saying
32 single
Aristotle
Metaphysics

IntraText - Concordances

naturally

   Book, Paragraph
1 IV, 2 | it, another because it is naturally adapted to it, another because 2 IV, 3 | ultimate belief; for this is naturally the starting-point even 3 V, 1 | the movement or the change naturally first begins, as a child 4 V, 4 | though that from which they naturally come to be or are is already 5 V, 12 | of something that would naturally have the capacity, or even 6 V, 12 | at the time when it would naturally already have it; for the 7 V, 22 | attributes which a thing might naturally have, even if this thing 8 V, 22 | this thing itself would not naturally have it; e.g. a plant is 9 V, 22 | itself or its genus would naturally have an attribute, it has 10 V, 22 | 3) If, though it would naturally have the attribute, and 11 V, 22 | attribute, and when it would naturally have it, it has it not; 12 V, 22 | the age at which one would naturally have it. Similarly a thing 13 V, 22 | circumstances in which, it would naturally have it.-(4) The violent 14 V, 22 | equality though it would naturally have it, and invisible either 15 V, 26 | of which it is said to be naturally a whole, and (2) that which 16 VI, 2 | angles".-And this happens naturally enough; for the accidental 17 VII, 7 | is something which exists naturally; and the something which 18 VII, 11 | 11~Another question is naturally raised, viz. what sort of 19 IX, 1 | and (2) that which might naturally have it but has not it, 20 IX, 1 | general or (b) when it might naturally have it, and either (a) 21 IX, 1 | certain cases if things which naturally have a quality lose it by 22 IX, 3 | not sight though it would naturally have it, when it would naturally 23 IX, 3 | naturally have it, when it would naturally have it and when it still 24 X, 1 | has all these meanings-the naturally continuous and the whole, 25 X, 5 | neither great nor small but is naturally fitted to be either great 26 XI, 10 | or that which, though it naturally admits of traverse, is not 27 XI, 12 | and where and as it would naturally be moved. This alone among 28 XI, 12 | according to its nature, naturally arrives before it arrives 29 XI, 12 | things out of which a unity naturally arises in virtue of their 30 XII, 10 | this difficulty is solved naturally by the fact that there is 31 XIII, 9 | objects of mathematics exist, naturally separated the two. Therefore 32 XIII, 10| these difficulties follow naturally, when they make the Ideas


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