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| Alphabetical [« »] turning 2 twanging 1 twice 1 two 75 two-ness 1 tympanic 1 type 2 | Frequency [« »] 78 when 76 air 75 power 75 two 74 animals 74 their 73 objects | Aristotle On the Soul IntraText - Concordances two |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | angles of a triangle to two right angles to know the 2 I, 1 | to characterize the other two? Must we not say that there 3 I, 2 | soul in its very nature. Two characteristic marks have 4 I, 2 | It may be said that these two are what our predecessors 5 I, 2 | ascribing each of these two characters to soul; soul 6 I, 3 | itself be moved. There are two senses in which anything 7 I, 3 | single circle he divided into two circles united at two common 8 I, 3 | into two circles united at two common points; one of these 9 I, 3 | a special nature in the two interagents. All, however, 10 I, 4 | we have one or other of two cases in our mind; the most 11 I, 4 | the body, there will be two sets of units both occupying 12 I, 4 | And yet, if there can be two, why cannot there be an 13 I, 5 | soul be a kind of body, be two bodies in the same place; 14 I, 5 | moulds~Won of clear Water two parts out of eight,~And 15 II, 1 | of the latter there are two grades related to one another 16 II, 1 | Now the word actuality has two senses corresponding respectively 17 II, 2 | proportional between the two unequal sides of the given 18 II, 2 | the explanation of these two facts is, we must discuss 19 II, 2 | insects which have been cut in two; each of the segments possesses 20 II, 2 | we live and perceive" has two meanings, just like the 21 II, 2 | the body; and since of the two terms thus contrasted knowledge 22 II, 4 | We must here recall the two senses of "that for the 23 II, 5 | use the word "perceive" in two ways, for we say (a) that 24 II, 5 | Hence "sense" too must have two meanings, sense potential, 25 II, 5 | and during the change the two factors are unlike, after 26 II, 5 | their active exercise. The two kinds of transition are 27 II, 5 | the extinction of one of two contraries by the other, 28 II, 5 | or (b) we must recognize two senses of alteration, viz. ( 29 II, 5 | knowledge. But between the two cases compared there is 30 II, 5 | be potential in either of two senses, (a) in the sense 31 II, 5 | an adult, and there are two corresponding senses of 32 II, 5 | no separate names for the two stages of potentiality; 33 II, 5 | upon or altered" of the two transitions involved. As 34 II, 5 | its being acted upon the two interacting factors are 35 II, 6 | three kinds of objects, two kinds of which are, in our 36 II, 6 | perceptible. Of the first two kinds one (a) consists of 37 II, 6 | affects the senses. Of the two former kinds, both of which 38 II, 7 | certainly not a body, for two bodies cannot be present 39 II, 8 | Sound may mean either of two things (a) actual, and ( 40 II, 8 | for its occurrence (i, ii) two such bodies and (iii) a 41 II, 8 | of sound is an impact of two solids against one another 42 II, 8 | inbreathed, Nature uses it for two different purposes, as the 43 II, 8 | articulating; in that case of the two functions tasting is necessary 44 II, 10| colour, (a) simple, i.e. the two contraries, the sweet and 45 II, 11| dimensions, and that if two bodies have a third body 46 II, 11| contain water, and that if two bodies touch one another 47 II, 11| it follows that in water two bodies cannot be in contact 48 II, 11| another. The same holds of two bodies in air-air being 49 II, 11| can sound; in the latter two cases we perceive because 50 II, 11| is a "mean" between any two opposite qualities which 51 II, 12| sense which possess one of two opposite sensible qualities 52 III, 1 | if of the simple elements two only, air and water, go 53 III, 1 | of one or other of these two, while fire is found either 54 III, 1 | a sense for each of the two qualities, in virtue of 55 III, 1 | one and the same moment to two disparate qualities in one 56 III, 2 | either (1) there will be two senses both percipient of 57 III, 2 | sweet cannot be effected by two agencies which remain separate; 58 III, 2 | apparent. What says that two things are different must 59 III, 2 | not possible by means of two agencies which remain separate 60 III, 2 | separate to discriminate two objects which are separate, 61 III, 2 | is divided that perceives two separate objects at once, 62 III, 2 | as being at once one and two, properly said to be divisible, 63 III, 2 | as it takes the limit as two” it discriminates two separate 64 III, 2 | as two” it discriminates two separate objects with what 65 III, 3 | 3~There are two distinctive peculiarities 66 III, 4 | or by the same faculty in two different states: for flesh 67 III, 4 | For interaction between two factors is held to require 68 III, 5 | nature as a whole, we find two factors involved, (1) a 69 III, 6 | Since the word "simple" has two senses, i.e. may mean either ( 70 III, 6 | whole consisting of these two possible parts, then also 71 III, 7 | connecting term. And the two faculties it connects, being 72 III, 9 | animals is characterized by two faculties, (a) the faculty 73 III, 10| 10~These two at all events appear to 74 III, 10| justification for regarding these two as the sources of movement, 75 III, 10| appetite; for if there had been two sources of movement-mind