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kbg 1
keep 1
ki 1
kind 128
kind-either 1
kinds 30
king 1
Frequency    [«  »]
133 equal
132 their
130 been
128 kind
126 come
126 else
126 into
Aristotle
Physics

IntraText - Concordances

kind

    Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | sense-perception, and a generality is a kind of whole, comprehending 2 I, 2 | Democritus believed one in kind, but differing in shape 3 I, 2 | or form; or different in kind and even contrary.~A similar 4 I, 2 | is bound to solve every kind of difficulty that may be 5 I, 2 | hot or something of the kind? These are all very different 6 I, 3 | from each other.~The same kind of argument holds good against 7 I, 4 | being of such and such a kind of thing is reduced to change 8 I, 4 | is infinite in variety of kind is unknowable in quality. 9 I, 4 | both in multitude and in kind. Therefore it is impossible 10 I, 8 | and an animal of a certain kind from an animal of a certain 11 I, 8 | from an animal of a certain kind. Thus, suppose a dog to 12 I, 8 | from an animal of a certain kind) but not as animal, for 13 I, 9 | therefore of quite a different kind from ours. For they got 14 II, 1 | have a principle of this kind. Each of them is a substance; 15 II, 1 | are many things of this kind, and to prove what is obvious 16 II, 3 | and passing away and every kind of physical change, in order 17 II, 3 | and even within the same kind one may be prior to another ( 18 II, 4 | mind or something of the kind being the cause of them ( 19 II, 4 | seed but an olive from one kind and a man from another); 20 II, 5 | know that things of this kind are due to chance and that 21 II, 5 | due to chance are of this kind.~But, secondly, some events 22 II, 5 | nature.) Things of this kind, then, when they come to 23 II, 5 | then; when a thing of this kind comes to pass among events 24 II, 5 | conclude, since causes of this kind are indefinite, chance too 25 II, 6 | happiness, and happiness to be a kind of moral action, since it 26 II, 7 | such as are not of this kind are no longer inside the 27 II, 7 | motion in itself. Of this kind is whatever causes movement, 28 II, 8 | are of such and such a kind, therefore certain things 29 II, 8 | arguments (and others of the kind) which may cause difficulty 30 II, 8 | nourishment, it is plain that this kind of cause is operative in 31 II, 9 | house is of such-and-such a kind, certain things must necessarily 32 II, 9 | sawing as being a certain kind of dividing, then this cannot 33 II, 9 | saw has teeth of a certain kind; and these cannot be unless 34 III, 1 | thing, if it is of a certain kind, can be both potential and 35 III, 1 | moved: when a thing of this kind causes motion, it is itself 36 III, 1 | For each thing of this kind is capable of being at one 37 III, 1 | being built must be the kind of actuality required But 38 III, 1 | required But building is a kind of motion, and the same 39 III, 2 | actuality, or actuality of the kind described, hard to grasp, 40 III, 3 | things which are different in kind. Yet there will be, if teaching 41 III, 4 | who have touched on this kind of science in a way worth 42 III, 5 | water: but nothing of the kind is observed.~(b) Nor can 43 III, 5 | It is the nature of every kind of sensible body to be somewhere, 44 III, 5 | or infinite in variety of kind. (i) Finite they cannot 45 III, 5 | a proper place for each kind of body, if every sensible 46 III, 6 | air or something of the kind. But if there cannot be 47 IV, 4 | is the most satisfactory kind of exposition.~First then 48 IV, 4 | there had not been a special kind of motion, namely that with 49 IV, 4 | constant movement. Of this kind of change there are two 50 IV, 4 | place is thought to be a kind of surface, and as it were 51 IV, 5 | is reasonable that each kind of body should be carried 52 IV, 7 | place; and this would be the kind of thing that some say place 53 IV, 10 | supposed to be (3) motion and a kind of change, we must consider 54 IV, 10 | certain amount or a certain kind of it.~Clearly then it is 55 IV, 11 | by time. Time then is a kind of number. (Number, we must 56 IV, 11 | or something else of the kind), but it has different attributes 57 IV, 13 | are not the same.~So one kind of "now" is described in 58 IV, 13 | when the time is near this kind of "now". "He will come 59 IV, 14 | Must we not say "of any kind"? For things both come into 60 IV, 14 | movement, not of any particular kind of it.~But other things 61 IV, 14 | simultaneous are one in kind; for if there were dogs, 62 IV, 14 | time is the measure of this kind of locomotion and is itself 63 IV, 14 | For a figure of the one kind is a circle and a figure 64 IV, 14 | and a figure of another kind of triangle, and a triangle 65 IV, 14 | triangle, and a triangle of one kind is equilateral and a triangle 66 IV, 14 | and a triangle of another kind scalene. They are the same 67 V, 1 | for the fourth conceivable kind, that from non-subject to 68 V, 1 | then, every motion is a kind of change, and there are 69 V, 2 | a change to a particular kind of opposite, while the other, 70 V, 2 | a change to a different kind.) So, if there is to be 71 V, 2 | Change within the same kind from a lesser to a greater 72 V, 2 | so. This last is the only kind of immovable thing of which 73 V, 3 | changes but in every other kind as well. (Now every change 74 V, 3 | there is nothing of the same kind as itself between it and 75 V, 3 | something of a different kind being between). For that 76 V, 4 | will make clear what this kind of motion is. There are 77 V, 4 | one of degree. In every kind of motion we may have regularity 78 V, 5 | would seem, is of the same kind as that between coming to 79 V, 6 | contrary), and motion of one kind has for its opposite rest 80 V, 6 | its opposite rest of that kind, e.g. local motion has local 81 VI, 1 | is nothing of their own kind intermediate between them-nothing 82 VI, 1 | is nothing of their own kind intermediate between them, 83 VI, 1 | be anything of any other kind intermediate between the 84 VI, 4 | also susceptible of another kind of division, that according 85 VI, 5 | the two in each case.~One kind of change, then, being change 86 VI, 5 | if this is true in this kind of change, it will be true 87 VI, 5 | Moreover, if we take each kind of change separately, the 88 VI, 5 | applies universally to every kind of change, and its truth 89 VII, 1 | to bad, which is not of a kind specifically distinct: it 90 VII, 2 | evident that there is no other kind of motion but combination 91 VII, 2 | animate is capable of every kind of alteration of which the 92 VII, 2 | is not capable of every kind of alteration of which the 93 VII, 3 | becomings of the former kind cannot be alterations.~Moreover 94 VII, 3 | Thus all pleasure of this kind must be produced by sensible 95 VIII, 1 | far as it is movable. Each kind of motion, therefore, necessarily 96 VIII, 1 | would admit that in each kind of motion it is that which 97 VIII, 1 | number of motion or itself a kind of motion, it follows that, 98 VIII, 1 | moment, and the moment a kind of middle-point, uniting 99 VIII, 1 | of motion, time being a kind of affection of motion.)~ 100 VIII, 1 | being destroyed also is a kind of change. If, then, view 101 VIII, 1 | for in a system of this kind we have at once a certain 102 VIII, 3 | do not state clearly what kind of motion they mean, or 103 VIII, 3 | thought to be motions of a kind. But to investigate this 104 VIII, 4 | naturally: it depends upon the kind of motion that it may chance 105 VIII, 4 | to be suffering and the kind of element of which it is 106 VIII, 4 | suppose that in only one kind of motion is their motion 107 VIII, 4 | all other things of this kind.~In the same way, too, what 108 VIII, 5 | immediate movent being of this kind there is no need of an intermediate 109 VIII, 5 | other to a movent of this kind.~And if we consider the 110 VIII, 5 | which is moved with the same kind of motion, or with a different 111 VIII, 5 | assumption we must say that one kind of motion is derived from 112 VIII, 5 | suffering some different kind of motion. But the series 113 VIII, 5 | a motion of a different kind; e.g. that which has a capacity 114 VIII, 5 | other we arrived at the same kind of motion). Now the first 115 VIII, 6 | existence of things of this kind is clear to all: but we 116 VIII, 6 | themselves only with one kind of motion, and that this 117 VIII, 6 | perishing and no change of any kind in other things, which require 118 VIII, 7 | locomotion than in any other kind of motion: it is the only 119 VIII, 7 | We have now to show which kind of locomotion is primary. 120 VIII, 7 | undergoing any particular kind of motion, but though previously 121 VIII, 8 | universally in respect of every kind of motion. If the motion 122 VIII, 9 | locomotion or motion of any other kind, can be so, since in all 123 VIII, 9 | that impart motion of this kind. Thus "separation" and " 124 VIII, 9 | assert no cause of this kind but say that "void" accounts 125 VIII, 10| in fact, in causing any kind of motion. Then that on 126 VIII, 10| resides a force the same in kind as that which resides in 127 VIII, 10| to something else of the kind, naturally adapted for imparting 128 VIII, 10| another: and so motion of this kind takes place in air and water.


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