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Alphabetical    [«  »]
blow 2
blunt 2
blunting 1
bodies 37
bodily 9
body 139
body-an 1
Frequency    [«  »]
38 appetite
38 hearing
38 man
37 bodies
37 certain
37 first
37 hence
Aristotle
On the Soul

IntraText - Concordances

bodies

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | properties active and passive of bodies or materials thus or thus 2 I, 2 | environment compresses the bodies of animals, and tends to 3 I, 2 | primary and indivisible bodies, and its power of originating 4 I, 3 | characteristics of these bodies. The same reasoning applies 5 I, 3 | movements, termini, and bodies. Further, since the soul 6 I, 4 | the soul, why have not all bodies souls? For all bodies contain 7 I, 4 | all bodies souls? For all bodies contain points or an infinity 8 I, 4 | or separated from their bodies, seeing that lines cannot 9 I, 5 | be a kind of body, be two bodies in the same place; and for 10 II, 1 | general consent reckoned bodies and especially natural bodies; 11 II, 1 | bodies and especially natural bodies; for they are the principles 12 II, 1 | principles of all other bodies. Of natural bodies some 13 II, 1 | other bodies. Of natural bodies some have life in them, 14 II, 1 | but seeds and fruits are bodies which possess the qualification. 15 II, 4 | order of nature; all natural bodies are organs of the soul. 16 II, 4 | it alone of the primary bodies or elements is observed 17 II, 4 | the pair are elementary bodies only one of the contraries, 18 II, 7 | air, water, and many solid bodies. Neither air nor water is 19 II, 7 | certainly not a body, for two bodies cannot be present in the 20 II, 8 | occurrence (i, ii) two such bodies and (iii) a space between 21 II, 8 | As we have said, not all bodies can by impact on one another 22 II, 8 | struck because it is smooth; bodies which are hollow owing to 23 II, 8 | bronze, and other smooth bodies, to cast a shadow, which 24 II, 8 | with all parts of their bodies, nor do all parts admit 25 II, 8 | between different sounding bodies show themselves only in 26 II, 11| naturally attached to our bodies, the difference of the various 27 II, 11| dimensions, and that if two bodies have a third body between 28 II, 11| contain water, and that if two bodies touch one another under 29 II, 11| follows that in water two bodies cannot be in contact with 30 II, 11| another. The same holds of two bodies in air-air being to bodies 31 II, 11| bodies in air-air being to bodies in air precisely what water 32 II, 11| precisely what water is to bodies in water-but the facts are 33 II, 12| sounds and smells leave bodies quite unaffected; what does 34 II, 12| unaffected; what does affect bodies is not these but the bodies 35 II, 12| bodies is not these but the bodies which are their vehicles, 36 II, 12| but, it may be objected, bodies are affected by what is 37 II, 12| true account this, that all bodies are capable of being affected


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