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Alphabetical    [«  »]
perceiving 17
perceiving-i 1
perceptible 13
perception 32
perceptive 5
perceptiveness 1
percipient 7
Frequency    [«  »]
32 light
32 matter
32 nothing
32 perception
32 possible
32 white
31 actually
Aristotle
On the Soul

IntraText - Concordances

perception

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | else, the objects of its perception, being similarly constituted. 2 I, 2 | it to be blood; they take perception to be the most characteristic 3 I, 5 | because of its knowledge or perception of what is compounded out 4 I, 5 | endowed with locomotion or perception, while a large number of 5 II, 2 | is, may mean thinking or perception or local movement and rest, 6 II, 3 | facts are that the power of perception is never found apart from 7 II, 9 | parallel failure in the perception of colour by animals that 8 II, 10| which we perceived; our perception would be due to the solution 9 II, 10| no parallel here to the perception of colour, which is due 10 II, 10| flavour. But nothing excites a perception of flavour without the help 11 II, 10| liquid, the organ for its perception cannot be either (a) actually 12 II, 11| problem, then, is: does the perception of all objects of sense 13 II, 11| upon us, whereas in the perception of objects of touch we are 14 II, 11| the other can there be any perception of an object if it is placed 15 II, 11| elements. The organ for the perception of these is that of touch-that 16 III, 1 | for, if that were so, our perception of it would be exactly parallel 17 III, 1 | parallel to our present perception of what is sweet by vision. 18 III, 1 | it were not like this our perception of the common qualities 19 III, 1 | incidental, i.e. as is the perception of Cleon’s son, where we 20 III, 1 | sense required for their perception: if there were, our perception 21 III, 1 | perception: if there were, our perception of them would have been 22 III, 1 | a unity: this incidental perception takes place whenever sense 23 III, 3 | in their opposites; for perception of the special objects of 24 III, 3 | must be the blending of the perception of white with the opinion 25 III, 3 | that it is good with the perception that it is white): to imagine 26 III, 3 | characteristic is as follows. Perception (1) of the special objects 27 III, 3 | deceived; for while the perception that there is white before 28 III, 3 | us cannot be false, the perception that what is white is this 29 III, 3 | false. (3) Third comes the perception of the universal attributes 30 III, 3 | especially when the object of perception is far off. If then imagination 31 III, 7 | if they were contents of perception (and when it asserts or 32 III, 13| all of them bring about perception only through something else,


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