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bodies 45
bodies-namely 1
bodily 5
body 170
bone 7
bones 1
book 8
Frequency    [«  »]
185 each
185 than
184 sense
170 body
170 would
169 cannot
169 only
Aristotle
Physics

IntraText - Concordances

body

    Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | set make the underlying body one either one of the three 2 I, 4 | Hence, since every finite body is exhausted by the repeated 3 I, 4 | abstraction of a finite body, it seems obviously to follow 4 I, 4 | may be added: Since every body must diminish in size when 5 I, 4 | minimum quantity of flesh no body can be separated out; for 6 II, 2 | the limits of a physical body; nor does he consider the 7 III, 4 | holds that there is no body outside (the Forms are not 8 III, 4 | be comes from a similar body, and there is a coming to 9 III, 4 | Nevertheless for him the common body is a source of all things, 10 III, 4 | leads people to suppose that body also is infinite, and that 11 III, 4 | worlds. Why should there be body in one part of the void 12 III, 4 | there must be infinite body too, for in the case of 13 III, 5 | is or is not among them a body which is infinite in the 14 III, 5 | surface" is the definition of body there cannot be an infinite 15 III, 5 | there cannot be an infinite body either intelligible or sensible. 16 III, 5 | same result.~The infinite body must be either (1) compound, 17 III, 5 | 1) Compound the infinite body will not be, if the elements 18 III, 5 | numerically definite-the infinite body will obviously prevail over 19 III, 5 | and annihilate the finite body. On the other hand, it is 20 III, 5 | each should be infinite. "Body" is what has extension in 21 III, 5 | extended, so that the infinite body would be extended in all 22 III, 5 | Nor (2) can the infinite body be one and simple, whether 23 III, 5 | that there should be such a body; not because it is infinite 24 III, 5 | of fact, no such sensible body, alongside the so-called 25 III, 5 | it is composed. Hence the body in question would have been 26 III, 5 | be an infinite sensible body. The following arguments 27 III, 5 | of every kind of sensible body to be somewhere, and there 28 III, 5 | that the infinite sensible body is homogeneous. Then each 29 III, 5 | hypothesi the place of the body akin to it is infinite. 30 III, 5 | dissimilar also, and the body of the All will have no 31 III, 5 | or earth the one infinite body, but either water or air 32 III, 5 | finite; for the place and the body cannot but fit each other. 33 III, 5 | what can be filled by the body (and then the body would 34 III, 5 | by the body (and then the body would no longer be infinite), 35 III, 5 | be infinite), nor is the body larger than the place; for 36 III, 5 | would be an empty space or a body whose nature it is to be 37 III, 5 | Any part of the infinite body ought to remain at rest. 38 III, 5 | that there is an infinite body is plainly incompatible 39 III, 5 | proper place for each kind of body, if every sensible body 40 III, 5 | body, if every sensible body has either weight or lightness, 41 III, 5 | weight or lightness, and if a body has a natural locomotion 42 III, 5 | Further, every sensible body is in place, and the kinds 43 III, 5 | itself. But in the infinite body they cannot exist. In general, 44 III, 5 | infinite place, and if every body is in place, there cannot 45 III, 5 | there cannot be an infinite body.~Surely what is in a special 46 III, 5 | arguments that there is no body which is actually infinite.~ 47 III, 6 | physicists hold to be true of the body which is outside the world, 48 III, 6 | be in this way a sensible body which is infinite in the 49 III, 6 | evidently there can no more be a body which is potentially infinite 50 III, 8 | there should be a sensible body which is actually infinite. 51 IV, 1 | When therefore another body occupies this same place, 52 IV, 1 | void as place bereft of body.~These considerations then 53 IV, 1 | and that every sensible body is in place. Hesiod too 54 IV, 1 | is some sort of "bulk" of body or some entity other than 55 IV, 1 | dimensions by which all body also is bounded. But the 56 IV, 1 | But the place cannot be body; for if it were there would 57 IV, 1 | same place.~(2) Further, if body has a place and space, clearly 58 IV, 1 | and the other limits of body; for the same statement 59 IV, 1 | it has size, it has not body. But the elements of sensible 60 IV, 1 | 6) Again, just as every body is in place, so, too, every 61 IV, 1 | too, every place has a body in it. What then shall we 62 IV, 2 | primarily contains each body, it would be a limit, so 63 IV, 2 | the form or shape of each body by which the magnitude or 64 IV, 2 | this is the limit of each body.~If, then, we look at the 65 IV, 2 | Timaeus.)~Further, how could a body be carried to its own place, 66 IV, 2 | destroyed, for the resulting body is not in the same place. 67 IV, 3 | namely, as "white" is in body (for the visible surface 68 IV, 3 | the visible surface is in body), and science is in the 69 IV, 3 | in man because it is in body, and in body because it 70 IV, 3 | because it is in body, and in body because it resides in the 71 IV, 3 | it or as the hot is "in" body as an affection. So we escape 72 IV, 4 | moved, e.g. the parts of the body or the nail in the ship, 73 IV, 4 | surface of the surrounding body, and this surface is neither 74 IV, 4 | coincident.~Further, if one body is in continuity with another, 75 IV, 4 | the eye or the hand in the body: when it is separate, as 76 IV, 4 | the hand is moved with the body and the water in the cask.~ 77 IV, 4 | surfaces of the containing body, or this boundary itself 78 IV, 4 | and above the bulk of the body which comes to be in it.~ 79 IV, 4 | place is the boundary of the body which contains it.~(2) The 80 IV, 4 | something over and above the body displaced. But there is 81 IV, 4 | boundary of the containing body at which it is in contact 82 IV, 4 | contact with the contained body. (By the contained body 83 IV, 4 | body. (By the contained body is meant what can be moved 84 IV, 4 | the displacement of the body that is moved takes place 85 IV, 4 | inner side of the rotating body remains always coincident 86 IV, 5 | 5~If then a body has another body outside 87 IV, 5 | then a body has another body outside it and containing 88 IV, 5 | se in place, namely every body which is movable either 89 IV, 5 | as we must suppose, no body contains it. On the line 90 IV, 5 | contact with the movable body; and for this reason the 91 IV, 5 | place should grow with the body in it,~(2) Nor that a point 92 IV, 5 | boundaries of the place is any body which may chance to be there, 93 IV, 5 | there, not an interval in body.~Further, (5) place is also 94 IV, 5 | place, but only movable body.~Also (6) it is reasonable 95 IV, 5 | reasonable that each kind of body should be carried to its 96 IV, 5 | to its own place. For a body which is next in the series 97 IV, 6 | which there is no sensible body. They hold that everything 98 IV, 6 | that everything which is in body is body and say that what 99 IV, 6 | everything which is in body is body and say that what has nothing 100 IV, 6 | which divides the whole body so as to break its continuity, 101 IV, 6 | which is outside the whole body, which remains continuous.~ 102 IV, 6 | follow also that the smallest body would contain the greatest; 103 IV, 6 | implies that the compressed body contracts into the voids 104 IV, 6 | of void, for nutriment is body, and it is impossible for 105 IV, 7 | people take what exists to be body, and hold that while every 106 IV, 7 | and hold that while every body is in place, void is place 107 IV, 7 | place in which there is no body, so that where there is 108 IV, 7 | so that where there is no body, there must be void.~Every 109 IV, 7 | there must be void.~Every body, again, they suppose to 110 IV, 7 | an interval in tangible body.~But at all events we observe 111 IV, 7 | described as what is not full of body perceptible to touch; and 112 IV, 7 | void is the matter of the body (they identify the place, 113 IV, 7 | exists, be place deprived of body, and we have stated both 114 IV, 7 | void is meant to be, not body but rather an interval in 115 IV, 7 | but rather an interval in body. This is why the void is 116 IV, 7 | any and every part of the body is increased, or bodies 117 IV, 7 | than by the addition of body, or there may be two bodies 118 IV, 7 | existence of void), or the whole body must be void, if it is increased 119 IV, 8 | sort of place deprived of body, when there is a void where 120 IV, 8 | there is a void where will a body placed in it move to? It 121 IV, 8 | does not take place when a body is placed as a whole in 122 IV, 8 | We see the same weight or body moving faster than another 123 IV, 8 | being equal, the moving body differs from the other owing 124 IV, 8 | density of the hindering body. For let B be water and 125 IV, 8 | air is twice as thin, the body will traverse B in twice 126 IV, 8 | the void is exceeded by body, as there is no ratio of 127 IV, 8 | to the time H. For if the body Z be as much thinner than 128 IV, 8 | H. If, then, there is no body in Z, A will traverse Z 129 IV, 8 | for there will be some body which is in the same ratio 130 IV, 8 | same ratio to the other body as the time is to the time.~ 131 IV, 8 | an excess of one moving body over another. We see that 132 IV, 8 | by the impulse which the body that is carried along or 133 IV, 8 | always in the case of any body that can be displaced, must, 134 IV, 8 | the nature of the inserted body. Now in the void this is 135 IV, 8 | impossible; for it is not body; the void must have penetrated 136 IV, 8 | itself. How then will the body of the cube differ from 137 IV, 9 | both a large and a small body. This is evident; for when 138 IV, 11| being affected through the body, if any movement takes place 139 IV, 11| corresponds to the point the body which is carried along, 140 IV, 11| the market-place. And the body which is carried along is 141 IV, 11| now" corresponds to the body that is carried along, as 142 IV, 11| For it is by means of the body that is carried along that 143 IV, 11| versa. just as the moving body and its locomotion involve 144 IV, 11| the number of the moving body and the number of its locomotion. 145 IV, 11| corresponds to the moving body, and is like the unit of 146 IV, 11| locomotion and the moving body. For the motion or locomotion 147 IV, 11| the other hand, since the body carried is moving, is always 148 V, 1 | thing in question: thus the body is restored to health because 149 V, 1 | say a part of the whole body, is restored to health. 150 V, 2 | present case? It is either the body or the soul that undergoes 151 VI, 9 | in the assumption that a body occupies an equal time in 152 VI, 9 | passing with equal velocity a body that is in motion and a 153 VI, 9 | that is in motion and a body of equal size that is at 154 VI, 10| motion only in so far as the body or the magnitude is in motion 155 VII, 2 | that proceed through the body, whether secretive or assimilative, 156 VII, 2 | characteristics: for every body differs from another in 157 VII, 2 | is a motion through the body in the course of which the 158 VII, 2 | the alteration, and the body that undergoes alteration 159 VII, 3 | acquired states, whether of the body or of the soul, are not 160 VII, 3 | health and a good state of body we regard as consisting 161 VII, 3 | cold elements within the body in due proportion, in relation 162 VII, 3 | of which (like those of body) exist in virtue of particular 163 VII, 3 | acquisition of the states of the body must be the result of the 164 VII, 3 | alteration of something in the body, as we see in the case of 165 VII, 4 | undergone by one half of a body’s length and a locomotion 166 VIII, 2| motions are produced in the body by its environment, and 167 VIII, 4| itself naturally: but the body of the animal may be in 168 VIII, 6| sense: that is to say, the body changes its place, so that 169 VIII, 6| that that which is in the body changes its place also and 170 VIII, 8| starting-point at which the moving body has ceased to be, and it


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