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| Alphabetical [« »] pitch 1 pities 1 pity 1 place 37 placed 5 places 2 plain 1 | Frequency [« »] 37 certain 37 first 37 hence 37 place 37 were 36 capable 36 since | Aristotle On the Soul IntraText - Concordances place |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | should naturally be led to place in the front rank the study 2 I, 3 | species enumerated involve place, place must be natural to 3 I, 3 | enumerated involve place, place must be natural to it. But 4 I, 3 | inhere; hence they have no place: but if the soul naturally 5 I, 3 | follows that it must have a place.~Further, if there be a 6 I, 3 | natural movement is the place of its natural rest, and 7 I, 3 | enforced movement is the place of its enforced rest. But 8 I, 3 | Now the body is moved from place to place with movements 9 I, 3 | body is moved from place to place with movements of locomotion. 10 I, 3 | the body change either its place as a whole or the relative 11 I, 3 | heavens.~Now, in the first place, it is a mistake to say 12 I, 3 | join the soul to a body, or place it in a body, without adding 13 I, 4 | arise either from changes of place in certain parts or from 14 I, 4 | it involves in the first place all the impossibilities 15 I, 4 | both occupying the same place; for each unit will occupy 16 I, 5 | be two bodies in the same place; and for those who call 17 I, 5 | whole when breathing takes place, being borne in upon the 18 I, 5 | winds. Now this cannot take place in the case of plants, nor 19 II, 4 | given in the appropriate place.~ 20 II, 5 | the male parent and takes place before birth so that at 21 II, 7 | cannot be present in the same place. The opposite of light is 22 II, 8 | without a movement from place to place.~As we have said, 23 II, 8 | a movement from place to place.~As we have said, not all 24 II, 8 | generation of sound echo takes place, though it is frequently 25 II, 9 | previously examined, takes place through a medium, i.e. through 26 II, 11| all objects of sense take place in the same way, or does 27 II, 11| senses. In their case if you place the object on the organ 28 II, 11| not perceived, here if you place it on the flesh it is perceived; 29 II, 11| it can put itself in the place of the other. As what is 30 II, 12| be conceived of as taking place in the way in which a piece 31 III, 1 | incidental perception takes place whenever sense is directed 32 III, 3 | seeing: imagination takes place in the absence of both, 33 III, 4 | 2) how thinking can take place.~If thinking is like perceiving, 34 III, 4 | idea to call the soul "the place of forms", though (1) this 35 III, 12| the patient’s changing its place. Thus if an object is dipped 36 III, 12| until submersion has taken place, and in stone it goes no 37 III, 13| through the media. Touch takes place by direct contact with its