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| Alphabetical [« »] heap 1 hear 9 heard 4 hearing 38 hearkening 3 hears 2 heart 4 | Frequency [« »] 39 perceive 38 actuality 38 appetite 38 hearing 38 man 37 bodies 37 certain | Aristotle On the Soul IntraText - Concordances hearing |
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1 II, 3 | animals have neither sight, hearing, nor smell. Again, among 2 II, 5 | what is actually seeing or hearing, "sees" or "hears". Hence " 3 II, 6 | object of sight, sound of hearing, flavour of taste. Touch, 4 II, 8 | distinctions about sound and hearing.~Sound may mean either of 5 II, 8 | themselves and the organ of hearing.~Actual sound requires for 6 II, 8 | part in the production of hearing, for what people mean by " 7 II, 8 | air, which is what causes hearing, when that air is set in 8 II, 8 | body up to the organ of hearing. The organ of hearing is 9 II, 8 | of hearing. The organ of hearing is physically united with 10 II, 8 | ear. If this does happen, hearing ceases, as it also does 11 II, 8 | what is acute or grave to hearing and what is sharp or blunt 12 II, 9 | the same sense in which hearing has for its object both 13 II, 10| over brilliant), and to hearing, which apprehends both sound 14 II, 10| corresponds in the case of hearing to over-bright light in 15 II, 11| sight, acute and grave for hearing, bitter and sweet for taste; 16 II, 11| to sound in the case of hearing.~To the question whether 17 II, 11| should have taken sight, hearing, and smell to be a single 18 II, 11| as well as the objects of hearing, sight, and smell, through 19 II, 11| water are to those of sight, hearing, and smell. Hence in neither 20 III, 1 | the five enumerated-sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch-may 21 III, 1 | made of water, the organ of hearing is made of air, and the 22 III, 2 | aware that we are seeing or hearing, it must be either by sight 23 III, 2 | actual sound and actual hearing: a man may have hearing 24 III, 2 | hearing: a man may have hearing and yet not be hearing, 25 III, 2 | have hearing and yet not be hearing, and that which has a sound 26 III, 2 | which can hear is actively hearing and which can sound is sounding, 27 III, 2 | sounding, then the actual hearing and the actual sound are 28 III, 2 | both the sound and the hearing so far as it is actual must 29 III, 2 | which has the faculty of hearing; for it is in the passive 30 III, 2 | of that which can hear is hearing or hearkening; "sound" and " 31 III, 2 | hearkening; "sound" and "hearing" are both ambiguous. The 32 III, 2 | their modes of being, actual hearing and actual sounding appear 33 III, 2 | and if the voice and the hearing of it are in one sense one 34 III, 2 | always implies a ratio, hearing as well as what is heard 35 III, 2 | or the flat destroys the hearing. (So also in the case of 36 III, 7 | thing (and similarly in hearing), while the ultimate point 37 III, 12| senses, e.g. smell, sight, hearing, apprehend through media; 38 III, 13| to be set in motion, and hearing that it may have communication