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Alphabetical    [«  »]
material 33
materials 6
mathematicians 1
matter 45
matters 14
maturity 2
may 85
Frequency    [«  »]
46 say
46 without
45 bones
45 matter
44 both
44 just
44 most
Aristotle
On the Parts of Animals

IntraText - Concordances

matter

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | has been laid down in this matter. So also there is a like 2 I, 1 | convertibility.~Another matter which must not be passed 3 I, 1 | action, the substratum of matter being assumed to have certain 4 I, 1 | embodied in this or that matter, or such and such a matter 5 I, 1 | matter, or such and such a matter with this or that form; 6 I, 1 | of a thing is either its matter or its essence; nature as 7 I, 1 | of the soul that enables matter to constitute the animal 8 I, 1 | than it is the presence of matter which so enables the soul, 9 I, 1 | soul rather than of the matter. For though the wood of 10 I, 1 | much more than does its matter. There are indeed passages 11 I, 3 | combination differentia and matter. For no part of an animal 12 II, 1 | other such properties of matter as there may be. second 13 II, 1 | also have a share in the matter; and it must be admitted 14 II, 2 | at the expense of fluid matter; while a third set are the 15 II, 2 | principles; and it is a matter of frequent dispute what 16 II, 2 | other such properties of matter. That this should be so 17 II, 2 | melting combustible or fusible matter, while flame has. So again 18 II, 2 | clear that it is no simple matter to decide which of two bodies 19 II, 2 | constituent is water, the solid matter is again soluble. What kinds 20 II, 3 | receptacle for the entire matter taken as food, and also 21 II, 4 | qualities belongs to the earthy matter. For the thinner and purer 22 II, 5 | coagulate, just as the fibrous matter of blood coagulates, or 23 II, 5 | which contain such fibrous matter. Thus it is that in those 24 II, 6 | water-animals, it is also a matter of necessity that some of 25 II, 7 | This brain is not residual matter, nor yet is it one of the 26 II, 8 | is within, and the earthy matter, which holds the soft parts 27 II, 9 | has used all the earthy matter on the skin; and she is 28 II, 10| configuration of plants is a matter then for separate consideration. 29 III, 2 | greatest force was not the only matter to be considered, but the 30 III, 2 | heavy the horns are, is a matter of actual necessity.~In 31 III, 2 | of corporeal and earthy matter which they contain. Thus 32 III, 2 | animals have most earthy matter, we say so because such 33 III, 2 | general rule. Now this earthy matter is used in the animal body 34 III, 3 | coughing ensue. This must be a matter of astonishment to any of 35 III, 4 | blood is fluid, it is also a matter of necessity that there 36 III, 7 | becomes to a certain extent a matter of necessity in all animals, 37 III, 8 | excreted with its own residual matter. The residual fluid must 38 III, 8 | the explanation of the matter being that in the sea-tortoises 39 III, 9 | this is the reason why oily matter is light, and floats on 40 III, 10| whatsoever itself in the matter, but, lying in close proximity 41 III, 12| amount of foul residual matter within is but small. Hence 42 III, 14| self-evident. For it is a matter of necessity that an animal 43 III, 14| exhausted. This residual matter, again, must not occupy 44 III, 14| nature uses the earthy matter which is saved from the 45 III, 14| which holds the residual matter, which by the time it has


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