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Alphabetical    [«  »]
certainty 2
cfpies 1
chance 13
change 32
changed 6
changes 4
changing 1
Frequency    [«  »]
33 take
33 ungenerated
32 c
32 change
32 clear
32 divisible
32 follows
Aristotle
On the Heavens

IntraText - Concordances

change

   Book,  Paragraph
1 I, 3 | all natural bodies which change their properties we see 2 I, 3 | inherited records reach, no change appears to have taken place 3 I, 7 | alike that any process of change is impossible which can 4 I, 8 | and always it is a finite change. For instance, to recover 5 I, 8 | to recover health is to change from disease to health, 6 I, 8 | health, to increase is to change from smallness to greatness. 7 I, 9 | moves in a circle cannot change its place. And, secondly, 8 I, 9 | age it; nor is there any change in any of the things which 9 I, 10| have to be some cause of change, and if this had been present 10 I, 10| must have been capable of change and not eternal: after combination 11 I, 10| does not matter whether the change of condition has actually 12 I, 10| that, we hold, could never change if it was never generated. 13 I, 11| no process of becoming or change being involved. Such is 14 II, 6 | same, or if both were to change, the result might well be 15 II, 6 | irregularity occurs, there must be change either in the movement as 16 II, 6 | observed. Nor again is a change in the movement as a whole 17 II, 8 | where they were, and not change their place, as, by observation 18 II, 13| not having room enough to change its place because it is 19 II, 14| observations made as the shapes change by which the order of the 20 II, 14| size. For quite a small change of position to south or 21 II, 14| the horizon. There is much change, I mean, in the stars which 22 II, 14| the effect of so slight a change of place would not be quickly 23 III, 7 | material-so that it involves no change of anything. And even if 24 III, 7 | one of two ways, either by change of shape, as the same wax 25 III, 7 | planes. (a) Generation by change of shape would necessarily 26 III, 7 | according to which all alike change into one another. In fact 27 IV, 2 | which and into which the change carries it. Also what is 28 IV, 3 | forms of generation and change. There are, in fact, three 29 IV, 3 | each it is observable that change proceeds from a contrary 30 IV, 3 | intermediate: it is never the change of any chance subject in 31 IV, 3 | thought to have a spring of change within themselves, while 32 IV, 3 | Sometimes, however, even they change of themselves, ie. in response


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