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Alphabetical [« »] supreme 1 sure 1 surely 8 surface 40 surfaces 1 surprise 1 surprising 2 | Frequency [« »] 40 eternal 40 form 40 lightness 40 surface 40 us 39 however 39 mass | Aristotle On the Heavens IntraText - Concordances surface |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | is a line, if two ways a surface, and if three a body. Beyond 2 I, 1 | we passed from length to surface, and from surface to body. 3 I, 1 | length to surface, and from surface to body. For if we could, 4 I, 3 | that which rises to the surface of everything that moves 5 I, 5 | so only in length, so a surface cannot be infinite in that 6 I, 6 | body which rises to the surface involves infinite lightness.) 7 I, 8 | body which rises to the surface; since, if not here, it 8 II, 4 | is embraced by a single surface, while rectilinear solids 9 II, 4 | possessing more than one surface: for the division into surfaces 10 II, 4 | contiguous with them-and if the surface of water is spherical, and 11 II, 4 | heavens are spherical. But the surface of water is seen to be spherical 12 II, 4 | circular: therefore the surface of the water BEC is spherical.~ 13 II, 13| Indeed, as in any case the surface of the earth is not actually 14 II, 13| produced by the flatness of the surface which the earth presents 15 II, 13| the middle and stay on the surface respectively. Thus, before 16 II, 14| bring about not a waved surface, but rather compression 17 II, 14| the form of the earth’s surface, which is therefore spherical. 18 III, 1 | For a thing is soft if its surface can be pressed in, hard 19 IV, 1 | any point on the earth’s surface a man by advancing far enough 20 IV, 4 | that which rises to the surface of all things. I use the 21 IV, 4 | since while they rise to the surface of some bodies they sink 22 IV, 4 | portion of either rises to the surface of it-but heavier than fire, 23 IV, 4 | any quantity rises to the surface of water, while water in 24 IV, 4 | in air but rises to the surface in water.~The following 25 IV, 4 | body which rises to the surface of all things-and we observe 26 IV, 4 | extremity and thus rose to the surface of all moving things. In 27 IV, 4 | every side with the earth’s surface: it must therefore be directed 28 IV, 4 | that which rises to the surface moves to the extremity of 29 IV, 4 | that which rises to the surface. This also gives a reasonable 30 IV, 5 | while air rises to the surface of all things except fire. 31 IV, 5 | only which rises to the surface of all things and one only 32 IV, 5 | some bodies and rise to the surface of others. The kinds of 33 IV, 5 | lightness among bodies to whose surface they rise. Hence when a 34 IV, 5 | air which has had a common surface with it is swift enough 35 IV, 5 | at all, because a common surface is not possible to it. Hence 36 IV, 5 | its own place or to the surface of the body in which it 37 IV, 6 | because they cover so wide a surface and the greater quantity 38 IV, 6 | occupy so little of the surface, which is therefore easily 39 IV, 6 | force of the continuous surface, there must be some ratio 40 IV, 6 | weaker, will it ride upon the surface.~We have now finished our