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Alphabetical    [«  »]
flavour 17
flavoured 2
flavours 5
flesh 28
fluid 1
flute 1
flutes 1
Frequency    [«  »]
29 qualities
29 true
28 fact
28 flesh
28 mean
28 movements
28 opinion
Aristotle
On the Soul

IntraText - Concordances

flesh

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | the mixture which makes flesh has a different ratio between 2 I, 4 | elements which constitutes flesh or the other parts of the 3 I, 5 | whole, e.g. what God, man, flesh, bone (or any other compound) 4 II, 7 | instances of it are fungi, flesh, heads, scales, and eyes 5 II, 9 | endowment are due; men whose flesh is hard are ill-endowed 6 II, 9 | ill-endowed by nature, men whose flesh is soft, wellendowed.~As 7 II, 11| is it or is it not the flesh (including what in certain 8 II, 11| animals is homologous with flesh)? On the second view, flesh 9 II, 11| flesh)? On the second view, flesh is "the medium" of touch, 10 II, 11| look any farther than the flesh), no indication in favour 11 II, 11| comes into contact with the flesh it is at once perceived. 12 II, 11| stretching it tight over the flesh, as soon as this web is 13 II, 11| could be grown on to the flesh, the report would travel 14 II, 11| travel still quicker. The flesh plays in touch very much 15 II, 11| naturally attached "medium" as flesh, for no living body could 16 II, 11| these, which is just what flesh and its analogue in animals 17 II, 11| animals which have no true flesh tend to be. Hence of necessity 18 II, 11| Suppose all the rest of our flesh was, like the tongue, sensitive 19 II, 11| simultaneous.~In general, flesh and the tongue are related 20 II, 11| here if you place it on the flesh it is perceived; therefore 21 II, 11| is perceived; therefore flesh is not the organ but the 22 III, 2 | is also obvious that the flesh cannot be the ultimate sense-organ: 23 III, 4 | its form are identical), flesh and what it is to be flesh 24 III, 4 | flesh and what it is to be flesh are discriminated either 25 III, 4 | two different states: for flesh necessarily involves matter 26 III, 4 | certain ratio constitute flesh: the essential character 27 III, 4 | the essential character of flesh is apprehended by something 28 III, 7 | an actuality without the flesh in which it is embodied:


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