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Alphabetical [« »] sooner 2 sort 2 sought 1 soul 28 sounds 4 source 27 sources 2 | Frequency [« »] 28 left 28 necessarily 28 several 28 soul 28 where 27 indeed 27 order | Aristotle On the Parts of Animals IntraText - Concordances soul |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | the living being be the soul, or part of the soul, or 2 I, 1 | the soul, or part of the soul, or something that without 3 I, 1 | something that without the soul cannot exist; as would seem 4 I, 1 | at any rate that when the soul departs, what is left is 5 I, 1 | inform himself concerning the soul, and to treat of it, either 6 I, 1 | his duty to say what this soul or this part of a soul is; 7 I, 1 | this soul or this part of a soul is; and to discuss the attributes 8 I, 1 | senses that either the whole soul or some part of it constitutes 9 I, 1 | it is the presence of the soul that enables matter to constitute 10 I, 1 | matter which so enables the soul, the inquirer into nature 11 I, 1 | every ground to treat of the soul rather than of the matter. 12 I, 1 | whether it is the whole soul or only some part of it, 13 I, 1 | Now if it be of the whole soul that this should treat, 14 I, 1 | therefore the intelligent soul and the objects of intellect, 15 I, 1 | perhaps it is not the whole soul, nor all its parts collectively, 16 I, 1 | that it is not of the whole soul that we have to treat. For 17 I, 1 | For it is not the whole soul that constitutes the animal 18 I, 3 | functions common to body and soul, by Flying, for instance, 19 I, 5 | or other be made for the soul, and each part of it for 20 II, 7 | writers assert that the soul is fire or some such force. 21 II, 7 | be better to say that the soul is incorporate in some substance 22 II, 7 | to the operations of the soul as that which is possessed 23 II, 7 | motion are offices of the soul, and it is by heat that 24 II, 7 | effected. To say then that the soul is fire is much the same 25 III, 5 | source, is that the sensory soul is in all animals actually 26 III, 5 | one-ness of the sensory soul determines a corresponding 27 III, 5 | Where, however, the sensory soul is lodged, there also and 28 III, 10| wherein abides the sensory soul may be undisturbed, and