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Alphabetical    [«  »]
or 443
order 18
ordinary 1
organ 45
organism 1
organized 2
organs 14
Frequency    [«  »]
45 even
45 he
45 just
45 organ
45 part
45 senses
44 found
Aristotle
On the Soul

IntraText - Concordances

organ

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | another movement of that organ, or of some other; these 2 II, 1 | that what is literally an "organ", like an axe, were a natural 3 II, 1 | bodily part which is its organ, that the whole faculty 4 II, 7 | in movement not the sense organ but what is transparent, 5 II, 7 | continuously from the object to the organ, sets the latter in movement. 6 II, 7 | immediate contact with the organ no sensation is produced. 7 II, 7 | and this in turn sets the organ in movement: if what sounds 8 II, 7 | immediate contact with the organ, no sensation will be produced. 9 II, 8 | between themselves and the organ of hearing.~Actual sound 10 II, 8 | impinging body up to the organ of hearing. The organ of 11 II, 8 | the organ of hearing. The organ of hearing is physically 12 II, 8 | something else, not of the organ itself. That is why we say 13 II, 8 | their gills or some similar organ. Voice is the sound made 14 II, 8 | and that with a special organ. As we saw, everything that 15 II, 8 | discussed elsewhere.~The organ of respiration is the windpipe, 16 II, 8 | is the windpipe, and the organ to which this is related 17 II, 9 | which shows that in us the organ is inaccurate. It is probable 18 II, 9 | is to differences in the organ of touch and to nothing 19 II, 9 | immediate contact with the organ of sense, but our failure 20 II, 9 | explanation is that in man the organ of smell has a certain superiority 21 II, 9 | certain species of animals the organ of smell is like the eye 22 II, 9 | moist. Consequently the organ of smell is potentially 23 II, 10| be tasted is liquid, the organ for its perception cannot 24 II, 10| tasted as such; hence the organ of taste must be liquefied, 25 II, 11| also a problem, what is the organ of touch; is it or is it 26 II, 11| medium" of touch, the real organ being situated farther inward. 27 II, 11| the question whether the organ of touch lies inward or 28 II, 11| that it was by a single organ that we perceived sounds, 29 II, 11| placed immediately upon the organ, e.g. if a white object 30 II, 11| place the object on the organ it is not perceived, here 31 II, 11| therefore flesh is not the organ but the medium of touch.~ 32 II, 11| treatise on the elements. The organ for the perception of these 33 II, 11| other sense-organs), so the organ of touch must be neither 34 II, 12| are combined.~(B) By "an organ of sense" is meant that 35 II, 12| seated.~The sense and its organ are the same in fact, but 36 II, 12| object is too strong for the organ, the equipoise of contrary 37 II, 12| contrary qualities in the organ, which just is its sensory 38 III, 1 | pupil is made of water, the organ of hearing is made of air, 39 III, 1 | is made of air, and the organ of smell of one or other 40 III, 1 | with the components of the organ of touch; wherefore it would 41 III, 4 | or cold, or even have an organ like the sensitive faculty: 42 III, 13| tangible qualities, and its organ is capable of receiving 43 III, 13| no other sense, and the organ of touch cannot consist 44 III, 13| quality excess destroys the organ, so here what is tangible 45 III, 13| destroys not merely the organ, but the animal itself,


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