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Alphabetical [« »] paradoxical 1 parallel 4 parmenides 1 part 52 parted 1 particles 7 particular 14 | Frequency [« »] 54 circular 54 shape 53 reason 52 part 52 way 51 nor 51 rest | Aristotle On the Heavens IntraText - Concordances part |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | concerns itself for the most part with bodies and magnitudes 2 I, 1 | determined relatively to that part which is next to it by contact, 3 I, 3 | of what has been said, in part by way of assumption and 4 I, 3 | way of assumption and in part by way of proof, it is clear 5 I, 3 | of the whole and of its part of earth, for instance, 6 I, 3 | own, either itself or any part of it, since the reasoning 7 I, 3 | whole applies also to the part.~It is equally reasonable 8 I, 6 | from the infinite mass a part BD of weight E. Then let 9 I, 7 | a certain time, and the part of this infinite, E, cannot 10 I, 7 | so is E to some finite part of B. This part will necessarily 11 I, 7 | some finite part of B. This part will necessarily be moved 12 I, 9 | it is composed not of a part but of the whole of matter, 13 I, 11| also a power to effect any part of the maximum-since we 14 I, 12| once for all, is to destroy part of the data. For (1) everything 15 II, 2 | taking principle to mean that part, in a thing capable of movement, 16 II, 2 | for front is simply the part to which the senses are 17 II, 2 | inanimate thing do we observe a part from which movement originates. 18 II, 3 | the same character as that part? Because there must be something 19 II, 3 | body; and of that body no part can be at rest, either elsewhere 20 II, 4 | a thing outside which no part of itself can be found, 21 II, 6 | proper places, and no single part occupies its own place. 22 II, 7 | and particularly in that part where the sun is attached 23 II, 8 | dependent or projecting part, as a rectilinear figure 24 II, 11| wanes show for the most part a crescent-shaped or gibbous 25 II, 12| by the bright and shining part. Similar accounts of other 26 II, 13| that the most important part of the world, which is the 27 II, 13| sun rises and sets, the part concealed by the earth shows 28 II, 13| obviously be the case with any part of it. But observation shows 29 II, 13| fire to the corresponding part of the extremity, each fourth 30 II, 13| the extremity, each fourth part, for instance, to a fourth 31 II, 13| for instance, to a fourth part of the circumference. For 32 II, 14| movement; but in fact every part moves in a straight line 33 II, 14| natural movement of the earth, part and whole alike, is the 34 II, 14| to the point to which the part naturally moves. Since, 35 II, 14| compression and convergence of part and part until the centre 36 II, 14| convergence of part and part until the centre is reached. 37 III, 1 | then, that the greater part of the inquiry into nature 38 III, 1 | lines of points, so that a part of a line need not be a 39 III, 1 | follow that every indivisible part possesses weight. For suppose 40 III, 2 | there is no reason why a part of B should not stand in 41 III, 2 | the whole distance CE, the part must in the same time move 42 III, 2 | subtract from the heavy body a part which will in the same time 43 III, 5 | will have to say that a part of fire is not fire, because 44 III, 5 | composed of elements, since a part of fire will be neither 45 III, 7 | divisible there would be a part of fire which was not fire 46 III, 7 | which was not fire and a part of earth which was not earth, 47 III, 7 | the reason that not every part of a pyramid is a pyramid 48 III, 7 | element alone should have no part in the transformations, 49 III, 7 | pyramid. Either, then, a part of fire is not fire, so 50 IV, 1 | these questions is a proper part of the theory of movement, 51 IV, 2 | inquiry have for the most part spoken of light and heavy 52 IV, 3 | movement of each single part is also that of the whole.