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Alphabetical [« »] word 9 words 9 worked 1 world 42 worlds 6 worn 1 worship 1 | Frequency [« »] 42 does 42 like 42 something 42 world 41 even 41 moved 41 suppose | Aristotle On the Heavens IntraText - Concordances world |
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1 I, 1 | the Pythagoreans say, the world and all that is in it is 2 I, 2 | to its distance from this world of ours.~ 3 I, 5 | a circle; nor could the world, if it were infinite.~(3) 4 I, 7 | is impossible while the world is conceived as infinite. 5 I, 8 | the same power as in our world. For if these names are 6 I, 8 | belong can only be called a world by equivocation. Clearly, 7 I, 8 | each are identical in this world. That this must be the case 8 I, 8 | earth, then, in another world move naturally also to our 9 I, 8 | earth must, in its own world, move upwards, and fire 10 I, 8 | same way the earth of our world must move naturally away 11 I, 8 | if the portions in this world behave similarly both to 12 I, 8 | and to those in another world, then the portion which 13 I, 8 | the portions in another world or from those in the same 14 I, 8 | or from those in the same world, but similarly to them, 15 I, 9 | fact impossible if this world contains the entirety of 16 I, 9 | outside the circumference. The world as a whole, therefore, includes 17 I, 10| to the dispute.~That the world was generated all are agreed, 18 I, 10| impossible. Suppose that the world was formed out of elements 19 I, 10| have been otherwise, the world could never have come into 20 I, 10| into being. And (2) if the world did come into being, then, 21 I, 10| But if this is so, the world cannot be indestructible, 22 I, 10| those who hold that the world, though indestructible, 23 I, 10| combination of the whole is a world or heaven, then it will 24 I, 10| then it will not be the world that comes into being and 25 I, 10| its dispositions.~If the world is believed to be one, it 26 II, 1 | immortality and eternity of the world. Hence it is well to persuade 27 II, 1 | tale which says that the world needs some Atlas to keep 28 II, 1 | Empedocles when he says that the world, by being whirled round, 29 II, 2 | the spherical shape of the world, how there can be a distinction 30 II, 2 | motion. We must think of the world as of something in which 31 II, 4 | corners. Similarly, if the world had some other figure with 32 II, 13| most important part of the world, which is the centre, should 33 II, 13| be so disturbed about the world, or to call in a guard for 34 III, 1 | and destruction from the world altogether. Nothing that 35 III, 1 | asserted that everything in the world was subject to generation 36 III, 2 | that before the ordered world was made the elements moved 37 III, 2 | there was already an ordered world. For the prime mover must 38 III, 2 | their distribution in our world. There is a further question, 39 III, 2 | motions: indeed, in the world we know, not all bodies, 40 III, 2 | power of Love, since our world has its constituent elements 41 III, 8 | removes generation from the world.~Further, the very properties, 42 IV, 1 | went on to think of the world as formed on this pattern