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Alphabetical    [«  »]
think 42
thinkable 2
thinker 7
thinkers 30
thinking 40
thinks 18
thinks-the 1
Frequency    [«  »]
30 mentioned
30 regarding
30 stated
30 thinkers
29 alike
29 few
29 identical
Aristotle
Metaphysics

IntraText - Concordances

thinkers

   Book, Paragraph
1 II, 1 | the truth; for from some thinkers we have inherited certain 2 IV, 2 | plurality. And nearly all thinkers agree that being and substance 3 IV, 2 | principles stated by other thinkers fall entirely under these 4 IV, 5 | general it is because these thinkers suppose knowledge to be 5 IV, 5 | But the reason why these thinkers held this opinion is that 6 VIII, 3| it is one, and this these thinkers cannot state, what makes 7 X, 1 | measures of objects. Such thinkers are saying nothing, then, 8 XI, 1 | mathematics. I mean that these thinkers place the objects of mathematics 9 XI, 2 | nearly all the most refined thinkers as something that exists; 10 XI, 6 | the same time, as these thinkers assert they are.~And if 11 XII, 1 | elements and causes. The thinkers of the present day tend 12 XII, 1 | their inquiry); but the thinkers of old ranked particular 13 XII, 1 | immovable, and this certain thinkers assert to be capable of 14 XII, 2 | actually". Therefore these thinkers seem to have had some notion 15 XII, 8 | be left to more powerful thinkers. But if there can be no 16 XII, 10| the views of the subtler thinkers, and which views are attended 17 XII, 10| is right; nor do these thinkers tell us how all the things 18 XII, 10| is a third element. These thinkers however make one of the 19 XII, 10| the Forms? And all other thinkers are confronted by the necessary 20 XIII, 2| mathematical solids to which these thinkers assign separate existence; 21 XIII, 7| exist.-Now none of these thinkers has said the units are inassociable 22 XIII, 8| consists of units, while these thinkers identify number with real 23 XIII, 8| infinite or finite; for these thinkers think of number as capable 24 XIII, 9| answers to the 1 different thinkers describe in different ways, 25 XIV, 1 | something different.~But these thinkers make one of the contraries 26 XIV, 1 | objections, which these thinkers take care to avoid because 27 XIV, 2 | must confront even these thinkers, whether it is ideal number, 28 XIV, 3 | string of conclusions. These thinkers, then, are wrong in this 29 XIV, 4 | 4~These thinkers say there is no generation 30 XIV, 4 | seem to agree with some thinkers of the present day, who


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