Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
move 8
moved 29
moved-nor 1
movement 28
movement-a 1
movement-are 1
movements 6
Frequency    [«  »]
29 way
29 well
28 fact
28 movement
28 neither
28 potentially
28 single
Aristotle
On the Generation and Corruption

IntraText - Concordances

movement

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 8 | of property through the movement facilitated by the pores, 2 II, 6 | very nature of Love is a movement of this kind and the very 3 II, 6 | very nature of Strife a movement of that kind. He ought, 4 II, 6 | is due to compulsion, and movement by compulsion actually occurs; 5 II, 6 | it follows that "natural movement" can also occur in fact. 6 II, 6 | fact. Is this, then, the movement that Love sets going? No: 7 II, 6 | the contrary, the "natural movement" moves Earth downwards and 8 II, 6 | themselves have absolutely no movement or rest. But this is paradoxical: 9 II, 6 | sometimes he attributes its movement to something like chance (" 10 II, 9 | coming-to-be, since "the movement originates from the matter".~ 11 II, 9 | matter generates owing to its movement" would be, no doubt, more 12 II, 9 | that which can initiate movement as the producing cause. 13 II, 10| Now the continuity of this movement is caused by the motion 14 II, 10| distance is thus unequal, its movement will be irregular. Therefore, 15 II, 10| But (a) if there is to be movement (as we have explained elsewhere, 16 II, 10| initiates it; if there is to be movement always, there must always 17 II, 10| which initiates it; if the movement is to be continuous, what 18 II, 10| since time is continuous, movement must be continuous, inasmuch 19 II, 10| there can be no time without movement. Time, therefore, is a " 20 II, 10| therefore, of the circular movement, as was established in the 21 II, 10| the beginning. But (c) is movement continuous because of the 22 II, 10| because that in which the movement occurs (I mean, e.g. the 23 II, 10| contributes to make the movement continuous, this is true 24 II, 10| with itself throughout the movement. The conclusion therefore 25 II, 10| what produces continuous movement, viz. the body which is 26 II, 10| moved in a circle; and its movement makes time continuous.~ 27 II, 11| members.~It is in circular movement, therefore, and in cyclical 28 II, 11| something else in motion, the movement of the things it moves must


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