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| Alphabetical [« »] warmed 1 warmth 3 was 21 water 43 water-animals 1 water-but 1 water-i 1 | Frequency [« »] 44 imagination 43 more 43 smell 43 water 43 who 42 i.e. 42 upon | Aristotle On the Soul IntraText - Concordances water |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | by Earth we see Earth, by Water Water,~By Ether Ether divine, 2 I, 2 | Earth we see Earth, by Water Water,~By Ether Ether divine, 3 I, 2 | have pronounced it to be water; they seem to have argued 4 I, 5 | broad-bosomed moulds~Won of clear Water two parts out of eight,~ 5 II, 4 | precisely the same sense; water may be said to feed fire, 6 II, 4 | feed fire, but not fire water. Where the members of the 7 II, 7 | this character are air, water, and many solid bodies. 8 II, 7 | bodies. Neither air nor water is transparent because it 9 II, 7 | transparent because it is air or water; they are transparent because 10 II, 7 | quality found both in air and water, which serves as a medium 11 II, 7 | what has smell-I say "in water" because animals that live 12 II, 7 | because animals that live in water as well as those that live 13 II, 8 | heard both in air and in water, though less distinctly 14 II, 8 | latter. Yet neither air nor water is the principal cause of 15 II, 8 | when it is reflected from water, bronze, and other smooth 16 II, 8 | That is why we hear also in water, viz. because the water 17 II, 8 | water, viz. because the water cannot get into the air 18 II, 9 | through air or water-I add water, because water-animals too ( 19 II, 9 | animals cannot smell under water; to smell they must first 20 II, 9 | that they cannot do under water.~Smells come from what is 21 II, 10| tangible. Hence, if we lived in water, we should perceive a sweet 22 II, 10| object introduced into the water, but the water would not 23 II, 10| into the water, but the water would not be the medium 24 II, 11| be constructed of air or water; it must be something solid. 25 II, 11| body and must be or contain water, and that if two bodies 26 II, 11| touch one another under water, their touching surfaces 27 II, 11| cannot be dry, but must have water between, viz. the water 28 II, 11| water between, viz. the water which wets their bounding 29 II, 11| this it follows that in water two bodies cannot be in 30 II, 11| bodies in air precisely what water is to bodies in water-but 31 II, 11| as animals that live in water would not notice that the 32 II, 11| which touch one another in water have wet surfaces. The problem, 33 II, 11| as we are now to air or water in which we are immersed; 34 II, 11| touch and taste, as air and water are to those of sight, hearing, 35 III, 1 | simple elements, e.g. air and water (and this is so arranged 36 III, 1 | sensible objects, as e.g. water as well as air can transmit 37 III, 1 | elements two only, air and water, go to form sense-organs ( 38 III, 1 | for the pupil is made of water, the organ of hearing is 39 III, 1 | formed of anything except water and air); and if these sense-organs 40 III, 4 | to be such, and between water and what it is to be water, 41 III, 4 | water and what it is to be water, and so in many other cases ( 42 III, 12| distance at all, while in water the disturbance goes far 43 III, 13| since it lives in air or water, or generally in what is