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particular 14
particularly 5
particulars 2
parts 60
parts-in 1
party 1
pass 15
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61 number
60 case
60 elements
60 parts
60 while
59 because
59 heaven
Aristotle
On the Heavens

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parts

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 1 | which is divisible into parts always capable of subdivision, 2 I, 1 | bodies which are classed as parts of the whole are each complete 3 I, 1 | whole of which they are parts must necessarily be complete, 4 I, 2 | will now speak of those parts of the whole which are specifically 5 I, 3 | bodies of animals and their parts and with vegetable bodies, 6 I, 3 | or in any of its proper parts. The common name, too, which 7 I, 7 | similar or of dissimilar parts. If its parts are dissimilar, 8 I, 7 | dissimilar parts. If its parts are dissimilar, they must 9 I, 7 | kinds, then each of its parts must necessarily be infinite 10 I, 7 | exist as a whole of similar parts. For, in the first place, 11 I, 7 | considered as a whole of similar parts, cannot, on the one hand, 12 I, 7 | Leucippus think, in the form of parts separated by void, there 13 II, 2 | all such distinctions of parts as this of right and left 14 II, 2 | heaven such a distinction of parts, we must exect, as we have 15 II, 2 | own members, such as the parts of a statue possess; or 16 II, 2 | to speak of the opposite parts as right and left, a boy 17 II, 2 | and left within it, all parts being alike and all for 18 II, 2 | discussion of the distinctions of parts created by the three dimensions 19 II, 4 | whole by cutting it into its parts, but division of another 20 II, 4 | of another fashion into parts different in form. It is 21 II, 6 | slow to fast, or in its parts. That there is no irregularity 22 II, 6 | is no irregularity in the parts is obvious, since, if there 23 II, 9 | to a moving body, as the parts to a ship, can no more create 24 II, 13| cannot be confined to the parts; it concerns the whole universe. 25 II, 13| whirling" movement by which its parts came together at the centre 26 II, 13| is a point, it will have parts. The expansion, when the 27 II, 14| rise and set in the same parts of the earth.~Further, the 28 II, 14| centre, and the jostling of parts greater and smaller would 29 II, 14| the centre. Whether the parts which came together at the 30 II, 14| is continuity between the parts about the pillars of Hercules 31 II, 14| pillars of Hercules and the parts about India, and that in 32 III, 1 | the first heaven and its parts, the moving stars within 33 III, 1 | heaven as a whole and its parts, animals, again, and plants 34 III, 1 | again, and plants and their parts. By attributes and functions 35 III, 1 | It is impossible, if two parts of a thing have no weight, 36 III, 1 | no weight can consist of parts not possessing weight. For 37 III, 1 | number and character of the parts which will produce weight? 38 III, 4 | divisible into homoeomerous parts; examples are flesh, bone, 39 III, 4 | conformation is composed of parts like itself. Obviously then 40 III, 4 | sphere has eight pyramidal parts. The figures must have their 41 III, 5 | the body with the finer parts must have priority in the 42 III, 5 | since a thing with small parts is fine and a thing with 43 III, 5 | fine and a thing with large parts coarse. For that which spreads 44 III, 5 | thing composed of small parts is so spread out. In the 45 III, 5 | greatness and smallness of their parts. This method of distinction 46 III, 5 | that which has the finest parts, so all solid figures are 47 III, 5 | primary and has the smallest parts; and the primary body must 48 III, 5 | it as the of the finest parts, which in combination will 49 III, 5 | and of all bodies whose parts are relatively fine. (2) 50 III, 5 | that which has the smallest parts is the element. Further, 51 III, 6 | one another in the various parts. It will follow that there 52 IV, 2 | greater number of identical parts is relatively heavy, while 53 IV, 2 | are composed of identical parts and of a single material. 54 IV, 2 | fewer of these homogeneous parts and to be heavier is to 55 IV, 2 | being in the number of such parts, which must therefore explain 56 IV, 2 | equal number of primary parts: for that would give equality 57 IV, 2 | that the primary or atomic parts, of which bodies endowed 58 IV, 2 | composed of a number of solid parts equal to, or even smaller 59 IV, 4 | difference of their uncompounded parts: that is to say, according 60 IV, 4 | need only speak of these parts, since they are primary


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