Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
coincidence 1
coincidentally 1
coincides 1
cold 57
cold-the 1
collide 1
colour 4
Frequency    [«  »]
60 passing-away
59 been
59 while
57 cold
57 two
56 can
55 at
Aristotle
On the Generation and Corruption

IntraText - Concordances

cold

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1| rain everywhere dark and cold;~ ~and he distinctively 2 I, 3| i.e. a "form", whereas "cold" is a privation, and that 3 I, 6| would not be cooled and the cold thing in turn be warmed: 4 I, 6| be warmed: for heat and cold do not change reciprocally 5 I, 7| understand why fire heats and the cold thing cools, and in general 6 I, 7| other times we say "what is cold is "being warmed", "what 7 I, 8| be, e.g. either hard or cold. Yet it is surely a paradox 8 I, 8| its "contrary" also ("the cold") is bound to belong to 9 I, 8| these properties (heat and cold) do belong to the "indivisibles", 10 I, 8| indivisible" should be cold and that "indivisible" hot. 11 II, 1| either light or heavy, either cold or hot. And (ii) what Plato 12 II, 1| is not matter for "the cold" nor "the cold" for "the 13 II, 1| for "the cold" nor "the cold" for "the hot", but the 14 II, 1| contrarieties (I mean, e.g. heat and cold), and thirdly Fire, Water, 15 II, 2| other hand (ii) hot and cold, and dry and moist, are 16 II, 2| what is foreign), while "cold" is that which brings together, 17 II, 2| moist essentially hot or cold: nor are the cold and the 18 II, 2| hot or cold: nor are the cold and the dry derivative forms, 19 II, 3| same thing to be hot and cold, or moist and dry. Hence 20 II, 3| moist with hot, and again cold with dry and cold with moist. 21 II, 3| again cold with dry and cold with moist. And these four 22 II, 3| aqueous vapour); and Water is cold and moist, while Earth is 23 II, 3| and moist, while Earth is cold and dry. Thus the differences 24 II, 3| or rather the hot and the cold: for it is these which are 25 II, 3| just as ice is an excess of cold. For freezing and boiling 26 II, 3| are excesses of heat and cold respectively. Assuming, 27 II, 3| a freezing of moist and cold, fire analogously will be 28 II, 3| Earth by dry rather than by cold, Water by cold rather than 29 II, 3| rather than by cold, Water by cold rather than by moist, Air 30 II, 4| and the second moist and cold: while in others one of 31 II, 4| and the second moist and cold. It is evident, therefore, 32 II, 4| the hot be overcome by the cold: for Air, as we saw, is 33 II, 4| and moist while Water is cold and moist, so that, if the 34 II, 4| For Water is moist and cold while Earth is cold and 35 II, 4| and cold while Earth is cold and dry-so that, if the 36 II, 4| dry and hot while Earth is cold and dry, Fire will result 37 II, 4| result from Earth if the cold pass-away.~It is evident, 38 II, 4| result from Water, both the cold and the moist must pass-away: 39 II, 4| pass-away: and again, both the cold and the dry must pass-away 40 II, 4| there will be Air, when the cold of the Water and the dry 41 II, 4| dry of the Fire and the cold of the Water. So, too, in 42 II, 4| moist of the former and the cold of the latter are left): 43 II, 4| moist of the Air and the cold of the Earth have passed-away, 44 II, 5| to Air, and Air will be a cold something: hence it is impossible 45 II, 5| be simultaneously hot and cold. Both Fire and Air, therefore, 46 II, 7| taken together-e.g. from "cold" and hot", or from Fire 47 II, 7| differences of degree in hot and cold. Although, therefore, when 48 II, 7| hot which (for a "hot") is cold and a cold which (for a " 49 II, 7| for a "hot") is cold and a cold which (for a "cold") is 50 II, 7| and a cold which (for a "cold") is hot; then what results 51 II, 7| potentially more hot than cold or vice versa, will possess 52 II, 7| potentially-cold and the actually cold potentially-hot; so that 53 II, 7| potentially-hot; so that hot and cold, unless they are equally 54 II, 7| the like-the hot becoming cold and the cold becoming hot 55 II, 7| hot becoming cold and the cold becoming hot when they have 56 II, 7| mean" is neither hot nor cold. The "mean", however, is 57 II, 9| hot to dissociate, of the cold to bring together, and of


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL