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| Alphabetical [« »] agreement 1 agrees 1 aim 2 air 76 air-air 1 air-envelope 1 akin 1 | Frequency [« »] 82 may 78 either 78 when 76 air 75 power 75 two 74 animals | Aristotle On the Soul IntraText - Concordances air |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | them to the motes in the air which we see in shafts of 2 I, 2 | them declared the motes in air, others what moved them, 3 I, 2 | others) held the soul to be air because he believed air 4 I, 2 | air because he believed air to be finest in grain and 5 I, 2 | soul also one (e.g. fire or air), while those who admit 6 I, 5 | soul when it resides in air or fire not form an animal, 7 I, 5 | question, why the soul in air is maintained to be higher 8 I, 5 | paradox to say that fire or air is an animal, and it is 9 I, 5 | with all its parts. If the air sucked in is homogeneous, 10 I, 5 | exist in the inbreathed air, some other part will not. 11 II, 7 | else; of this character are air, water, and many solid bodies. 12 II, 7 | many solid bodies. Neither air nor water is transparent 13 II, 7 | transparent because it is air or water; they are transparent 14 II, 7 | is transparent, e.g. the air, and that, extending continuously 15 II, 7 | in the case of sounds is air; the corresponding medium 16 II, 7 | a quality found both in air and water, which serves 17 II, 7 | sense of smell, and "in air" because man and all other 18 II, 7 | smells only when they breathe air in. The explanation of this 19 II, 8 | that sound is heard both in air and in water, though less 20 II, 8 | the latter. Yet neither air nor water is the principal 21 II, 8 | another and against the air. The latter condition is 22 II, 8 | condition is satisfied when the air impinged upon does not retreat 23 II, 8 | outrun the dispersion of the air, just as one might get in 24 II, 8 | occurs, when, a mass of air having been unified, bounded, 25 II, 8 | containing walls of a vessel, the air originally struck by the 26 II, 8 | rebounds from this mass of air like a ball from a wall. 27 II, 8 | mean by "the vacuum" is the air, which is what causes hearing, 28 II, 8 | causes hearing, when that air is set in movement as one 29 II, 8 | the surface with which the air is in contact at the other 30 II, 8 | movement a single mass of air which is continuous from 31 II, 8 | is physically united with air, and because it is in air, 32 II, 8 | air, and because it is in air, the air inside is moved 33 II, 8 | because it is in air, the air inside is moved concurrently 34 II, 8 | moved concurrently with the air outside. Hence animals do 35 II, 8 | admit of the entrance of air; for even the part which 36 II, 8 | moved and can sound has not air everywhere in it. Air in 37 II, 8 | not air everywhere in it. Air in itself is, owing to its 38 II, 8 | its movement sound. The air in the ear is built into 39 II, 8 | of the movements of the air outside. That is why we 40 II, 8 | water cannot get into the air chamber or even, owing to 41 II, 8 | reverberate like a horn; the air inside the ear has always 42 II, 8 | contains a bounded mass of air.~Which is it that "sounds", 43 II, 8 | be smooth, to enable the air to rebound and be shaken 44 II, 8 | is a certain movement of air. The fish, like those in 45 II, 8 | a space, (c) filled with air; hence it is only to be 46 II, 8 | except those which take in air. Once air is inbreathed, 47 II, 8 | which take in air. Once air is inbreathed, Nature uses 48 II, 8 | what primarily requires the air drawn in by respiration 49 II, 8 | when animals breathe the air must penetrate inwards.~ 50 II, 8 | impact of the inbreathed air against the "windpipe", 51 II, 8 | do not breathe or take in air. Why they do not is a question 52 II, 9 | through a medium, i.e. through air or water-I add water, because 53 II, 9 | in others which take in air it probably has a curtain 54 II, 11| could be constructed of air or water; it must be something 55 II, 11| air-air being to bodies in air precisely what water is 56 II, 11| observation, because we live in air, just as animals that live 57 II, 11| condition as we are now to air or water in which we are 58 II, 11| organs of touch and taste, as air and water are to those of 59 II, 11| is meant (a) what like air possesses some quality of 60 II, 12| sound of the thunder but the air which accompanies thunder. 61 II, 12| disintegrate, as in the instance of air, which does become odorous, 62 II, 12| the answer that, while the air owing to the momentary duration 63 III, 1 | the simple elements, e.g. air and water (and this is so 64 III, 1 | the sense-organ is made of air, and air is a medium both 65 III, 1 | sense-organ is made of air, and air is a medium both for sound 66 III, 1 | as e.g. water as well as air can transmit colour, both 67 III, 1 | simple elements two only, air and water, go to form sense-organs ( 68 III, 1 | organ of hearing is made of air, and the organ of smell 69 III, 1 | anything except water and air); and if these sense-organs 70 III, 7 | is like that in which the air modifies the pupil in this 71 III, 12| beyond the object dipped: in air the disturbance is propagated 72 III, 12| propagated farthest of all, the air acting and being acted upon, 73 III, 12| reflected, to say that the air, so long as it remains one, 74 III, 12| On a smooth surface the air possesses unity; hence it 75 III, 13| element such as fire or air. For without touch it is 76 III, 13| which, since it lives in air or water, or generally in