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| Alphabetical [« »] holds 5 homoeomeries 4 homogeneous 1 hot 62 hot-cold 2 hotter 1 house 5 | Frequency [« »] 63 bodies 63 than 62 earth 62 hot 60 action 60 also 60 an | Aristotle On the Generation and Corruption IntraText - Concordances hot |
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1 I, 1| everywhere bright to see, and hot,~The rain everywhere dark 2 I, 1| calls the sun "white and hot", and the earth "heavy and 3 I, 3| Suppose, e.g. that "the hot" is a positive predication, 4 I, 6| not have occurred". The hot thing, e.g. would not be 5 I, 6| quality, like white" or "hot", in respect to which they 6 I, 7| other times that "what is hot", produces heat.) Now the 7 I, 7| and that that which can he hot must be made hot, provided 8 I, 7| can he hot must be made hot, provided the heating agent 9 I, 7| Now fire contains "the hot" embodied in matter: but 10 I, 7| embodied in matter: but a "hot" separate from matter (if 11 I, 7| is impossible that "the hot" should exist in separation 12 I, 8| exception is made of "the hot" - "the hot" being assigned 13 I, 8| made of "the hot" - "the hot" being assigned as peculiar 14 I, 8| cold and that "indivisible" hot. For, on that supposition, 15 II, 1| or heavy, either cold or hot. And (ii) what Plato has 16 II, 1| contrary qualities: for the hot" is not matter for "the 17 II, 1| nor "the cold" for "the hot", but the substratum is 18 II, 2| On the other hand (ii) hot and cold, and dry and moist, 19 II, 2| second pair susceptibility. "Hot" is that which "associates" 20 II, 2| further reduction. For the hot is not essentially moist 21 II, 2| nor the moist essentially hot or cold: nor are the cold 22 II, 2| of one another or of the hot and the moist. Hence these 23 II, 3| for the same thing to be hot and cold, or moist and dry. 24 II, 3| qualities will be four: hot with dry and moist with 25 II, 3| with dry and moist with hot, and again cold with dry 26 II, 3| with theory. For Fire is hot and dry, whereas Air is 27 II, 3| and dry, whereas Air is hot and moist (Air being a sort 28 II, 3| the dense, or rather the hot and the cold: for it is 29 II, 3| be a boiling of dry and hot: a fact, by the way, which 30 II, 3| by moist rather than by hot, and Fire by hot rather 31 II, 3| than by hot, and Fire by hot rather than by dry.~ 32 II, 4| first of these being dry and hot, and the second moist and 33 II, 4| the first being moist and hot, and the second moist and 34 II, 4| for Fire, as we saw, is hot and dry while Air is hot 35 II, 4| hot and dry while Air is hot and moist, so that there 36 II, 4| will result from Air if the hot be overcome by the cold: 37 II, 4| for Air, as we saw, is hot and moist while Water is 38 II, 4| and moist, so that, if the hot changes, there will be Water. 39 II, 4| again, since Fire is dry and hot while Earth is cold and 40 II, 4| have passed-away (since the hot of the latter and the moist 41 II, 4| left): whereas, when the hot of the Fire and the moist 42 II, 4| will be Water, when the hot of the Air and the dry of 43 II, 4| owing to the survival of the hot of the Air and the dry of 44 II, 4| were to pass-away: for the hot is left in both. On the 45 II, 4| On the other hand, if the hot pass-away out both, the 46 II, 5| Fire will certainly not be "hot Air". For a change of that 47 II, 5| by the conversion of the hot into its contrary: this 48 II, 5| impossible for Fire to be "hot Air", since in that case 49 II, 5| thing will be simultaneously hot and cold. Both Fire and 50 II, 6| correspondence": e.g. "as x is hot, so correspondingly y is 51 II, 6| equally" or "similarly" hot. For the same thing, if 52 II, 7| together-e.g. from "cold" and hot", or from Fire and Earth. 53 II, 7| differences of degree in hot and cold. Although, therefore, 54 II, 7| that there exist instead a hot which (for a "hot") is cold 55 II, 7| instead a hot which (for a "hot") is cold and a cold which ( 56 II, 7| which (for a "cold") is hot; then what results from 57 II, 7| as it is potentially more hot than cold or vice versa, 58 II, 7| potentially-hot; so that hot and cold, unless they are 59 II, 7| and bones and the like-the hot becoming cold and the cold 60 II, 7| cold and the cold becoming hot when they have been brought 61 II, 7| at the "mean" is neither hot nor cold. The "mean", however, 62 II, 9| it is the nature of the hot to dissociate, of the cold