Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | not only in the case of coming to be in the full sense
2 I, 3 | but also in the case of coming to have a quality-as if
3 I, 4 | things were together" and the coming into being of such and such
4 I, 4 | Anaxagoras right about the coming to be of homogeneous bodies.
5 I, 7 | survives; we speak of "a statue coming to be from bronze", not
6 I, 7 | are different senses of "coming to be". In some cases we
7 I, 7 | that these are all cases of coming to be from a substratum.~
8 I, 8 | the road which leads to coming to be and passing away and
9 I, 9 | so that it will be before coming to be. (For my definition
10 II, 1 | But whether in unqualified coming to be there is privation,
11 II, 3 | do this as regards both coming to be and passing away and
12 II, 3 | source of the change or coming to rest; e.g. the man who
13 II, 4 | some definite cause, e.g. coming "by chance" into the market
14 II, 4 | it when they see nothing coming to be spontaneously in the
15 II, 5 | the causes of the man’s coming and getting the money (when
16 II, 5 | things which are capable of coming to pass not necessarily,
17 II, 6 | spontaneously", because, though his coming saved him, he did not come
18 II, 7 | cause. For in respect of coming to be it is mostly in this
19 II, 7 | essence of that which is coming to be, i.e. the form; for
20 III, 1 | to be and can pass away, coming to he and passing away:
21 III, 4 | similar body, and there is a coming to be of all things, though
22 III, 4 | must also be an origin of coming to be. One such source there
23 III, 4 | of the infinite.~(3) If coming to be and passing away do
24 III, 6 | after another is always coming into existence. For of these
25 III, 6 | consists in a process of coming to be or passing away; definite
26 III, 7 | consists in a process of coming to be, like time and the
27 III, 8 | valid.~(1) In order that coming to be should not fail, it
28 III, 8 | of one thing may be the coming to be of another, the All
29 IV, 12| such things that there is coming to be and passing away.~
30 IV, 13| destruction rather than of coming into being (for change,
31 IV, 13| and only incidentally of coming into being, and of being.
32 IV, 14| alteration nor increase nor coming into being can be regular,
33 IV, 14| have a natural movement and coming into being and passing away.
34 V, 1 | unqualified way, "particular coming to be" when the change is
35 V, 1 | not-white to white is a coming to be of the particular
36 V, 1 | unqualified not-being to being is coming to be in an unqualified
37 V, 1 | that made in the case of coming to be.~Now the expression "
38 V, 2 | motion or the corresponding coming to rest, and a thing that
39 V, 3 | natural junction is last in coming to be: for the extremities
40 V, 5 | same kind as that between coming to be and ceasing to be);
41 V, 5 | to the same thing. Thus coming to be is contrary to ceasing
42 V, 6 | thing is at rest is rather a coming to rest, the coming to rest
43 V, 6 | rather a coming to rest, the coming to rest being found to come
44 V, 6 | contrary to a motion or else coming to be and ceasing to be
45 V, 6 | from it and the thing’s coming to be is change to it.~Again,
46 V, 6 | and is this becoming a coming to a standstill? If so,
47 V, 6 | carried violently upward was coming to a standstill. But whereas
48 V, 6 | having become so. Moreover "coming to a standstill" is generally
49 V, 6 | contrariety.~[With regard to coming to a standstill the question
50 VI, 7 | Moreover it is the same with coming to rest as with motion.
51 VI, 7 | infinite extent of motion or of coming to rest, whether the motion
52 VI, 8 | and manner, that which is coming to a stand, when it is coming
53 VI, 8 | coming to a stand, when it is coming to a stand, must be in motion:
54 VI, 8 | which is at rest cannot be coming to rest. From this it evidently
55 VI, 8 | it evidently follows that coming to a stand must occupy a
56 VI, 8 | time, and that which is coming to a stand has been shown
57 VI, 8 | in motion: consequently coming to a stand must occupy a
58 VI, 8 | time, and the process of coming to a stand may be quicker
59 VI, 8 | follows.~And that which is coming to a stand must be coming
60 VI, 8 | coming to a stand must be coming to a stand in any part of
61 VI, 8 | primary time in which it is coming to a stand. For if it is
62 VI, 8 | to a stand. For if it is coming to a stand in neither of
63 VI, 8 | be divided, it cannot be coming to a stand in the whole
64 VI, 8 | that that that which is coming to a stand will not be coming
65 VI, 8 | coming to a stand will not be coming to a stand. If on the other
66 VI, 8 | on the other hand it is coming to a stand in only one of
67 VI, 8 | primary time in which it is coming to a stand: for it is coming
68 VI, 8 | coming to a stand: for it is coming to a stand in the whole
69 VI, 8 | time in which that which is coming to a stand is coming to
70 VI, 8 | is coming to a stand is coming to a stand, there being
71 VI, 8 | of being in motion or of coming to a stand. For let AB be
72 VI, 8 | time in which a thing is coming to a stand. Now AB cannot
73 VI, 8 | movement: and that which is coming to a stand has been shown
74 VI, 8 | divisible, the thing is coming to a stand in every one
75 VI, 8 | have shown above that it is coming to a stand in every one
76 VI, 8 | in which it is primarily coming to a stand. Since then,
77 VI, 8 | which primarily a thing is coming to a stand must be a period
78 VI, 8 | in which primarily it is coming to a stand.~Nor again can
79 VI, 10| e.g. being is the limit of coming to be and not-being is the
80 VI, 10| should be in process of coming to be, it follows that it
81 VI, 10| that again by a process of coming to be: in this way there
82 VII, 3 | not the things that are coming into existence that are
83 VIII, 8| back necessarily implies coming to a stand, not only when
84 VIII, 8| of the necessity of this coming to a stand not only on the
85 VIII, 8| motion divides the line by coming to a stand at that point
86 VIII, 8| locomotion will always be coming to a stand: for it is impossible
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