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Alphabetical    [«  »]
slow 1
slowly 1
small 5
smell 43
smell-i 1
smelling 3
smells 13
Frequency    [«  »]
44 found
44 imagination
43 more
43 smell
43 water
43 who
42 i.e.
Aristotle
On the Soul

IntraText - Concordances

smell

   Book, Paragraph
1 II, 3 | neither sight, hearing, nor smell. Again, among living things 2 II, 7 | holds also of sound and smell; if the object of either 3 II, 7 | corresponding medium in the case of smell has no name. But, corresponding 4 II, 7 | to possess the sense of smell, and "in air" because man 5 II, 9 | 9~Smell and its object are much 6 II, 9 | characteristic of the object of smell is less obvious than those 7 II, 9 | this is that our power of smell is less discriminating and 8 II, 9 | men have a poor sense of smell and our apprehension of 9 II, 9 | there is an analogy between smell and taste, and that the 10 II, 9 | discriminating than our sense of smell, because the former is a 11 II, 9 | things the flavour and the smell have the same quality, i.e. 12 II, 9 | they diverge. Similarly a smell, like a flavour, may be 13 II, 9 | extended from the taste to the smell of saffron or honey, "pungent" 14 II, 9 | visible and the invisible, smell has for its object both 15 II, 9 | be either (a) what has no smell at all, or (b) what has 16 II, 9 | what has a small or feeble smell. The same ambiguity lurks 17 II, 9 | non-sanguineous) seem to smell just as much as land-animals; 18 II, 9 | problem for us. All animals smell in the same way, but man 19 II, 9 | his breath, he ceases to smell, no difference being made 20 II, 9 | odour cannot be anything but smell. Further, they are observed 21 II, 9 | animals must be able to smell without being able to breathe. 22 II, 9 | that in man the organ of smell has a certain superiority 23 II, 9 | of animals the organ of smell is like the eye of hard-eyed 24 II, 9 | why such animals cannot smell under water; to smell they 25 II, 9 | cannot smell under water; to smell they must first inhale, 26 II, 9 | Consequently the organ of smell is potentially dry.~ 27 II, 11| taken sight, hearing, and smell to be a single sense. But 28 II, 11| objects of hearing, sight, and smell, through a "medium", only 29 II, 11| those of sight, hearing, and smell. Hence in neither the one 30 II, 12| raised: Can what cannot smell be said to be affected by 31 II, 12| It might be said that a smell is just what can be smelt, 32 II, 12| so as to make something smell it, and it might be argued 33 II, 12| argued that what cannot smell cannot be affected by smells 34 II, 12| and further that what can smell can be affected by it only 35 II, 12| it has in it the power to smell (similarly with the proper 36 II, 12| perceptible to the sense of smell, smelling is an observing 37 III, 1 | enumerated-sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch-may be established 38 III, 1 | of air, and the organ of smell of one or other of these 39 III, 2 | sight, and in the case of smell excess of strength whether 40 III, 4 | powerful odour we cannot see or smell, but in the case of mind 41 III, 12| All the other senses, e.g. smell, sight, hearing, apprehend 42 III, 13| intensity in colour, sound, and smell, destroys not the but only 43 III, 13| the objects of sight or of smell certain other things are


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