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| Alphabetical [« »] people 1 per 1 perceivable 1 perceive 39 perceived 19 perceives 9 perceiving 17 | Frequency [« »] 40 into 40 sight 39 colour 39 perceive 38 actuality 38 appetite 38 hearing | Aristotle On the Soul IntraText - Concordances perceive |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | is that thus the soul may perceive or come to know everything 2 I, 5 | what means will it know or perceive the composite whole, e.g. 3 I, 5 | 1) not all beings that perceive can originate movement; 4 I, 5 | the whole soul we think, perceive, move ourselves, act or 5 II, 2 | that whereby we live and perceive" has two meanings, just 6 II, 2 | which primarily we live, perceive, and think:-it follows that 7 II, 5 | a problem: why do we not perceive the senses themselves as 8 II, 5 | recall that we use the word "perceive" in two ways, for we say ( 9 II, 7 | land animals that breathe, perceive smells only when they breathe 10 II, 9 | to all the senses not to perceive what is in immediate contact 11 II, 10| lived in water, we should perceive a sweet object introduced 12 II, 11| while all other senses perceive over a distance? The distinction 13 II, 11| distinction is unsound; we perceive what is hard or soft, as 14 II, 11| escape our notice. For we do perceive everything through a medium; 15 II, 11| the latter two cases we perceive because the medium produces 16 II, 11| hard and soft we cannot perceive; what we perceive must have 17 II, 11| cannot perceive; what we perceive must have a degree of the 18 II, 11| the other. As what is to perceive both white and black must, 19 II, 12| the having the power to perceive or the sense itself is a 20 II, 12| explains also why plants cannot perceive. in spite of their having 21 III, 1 | 1) all objects that we perceive by immediate contact with 22 III, 1 | 2) all objects that we perceive through media, i.e. without 23 III, 1 | either alone will be able to perceive the kind of objects transmissible 24 III, 1 | i.e. the objects which we perceive incidentally through this 25 III, 1 | unity; for all these we perceive by movement, e.g. magnitude 26 III, 1 | of Cleon’s son, where we perceive him not as Cleon’s son but 27 III, 1 | white thing which we really perceive happens to be Cleon’s son.~ 28 III, 1 | sensibility which enables us to perceive them directly; there is 29 III, 1 | above described.~The senses perceive each other’s special objects 30 III, 2 | this new sensation must perceive both sight and its object, 31 III, 2 | presents a difficulty: if to perceive by sight is just to see, 32 III, 2 | clear therefore that "to perceive by sight" has more than 33 III, 2 | every other, with what do we perceive that they are different? 34 III, 3 | existing except when we perceive, (such that in virtue of 35 III, 7 | different from movement.~To perceive then is like bare asserting 36 III, 12| are to survive, they must perceive not only by immediate contact 37 III, 12| be possible if they can perceive through a medium, the medium 38 III, 13| organs of sense, no doubt, perceive by contact, only the contact 39 III, 13| it, in order that it may perceive these qualities in its nutriment