Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | first principle, others water. If (b) more than one, then
2 I, 3 | which are unities, e.g. this water? Again, why is qualitative
3 I, 4 | from flesh and flesh from water. Hence, since every finite
4 I, 4 | flesh be extracted from water and again more flesh be
5 I, 4 | no flesh in the remaining water); if on the other hand it
6 I, 4 | another in which it is not. Water and air are, and are generated "
7 I, 6 | for fire, earth, air, and water are already involved with
8 I, 6 | the others; and after air, water. All, however, agree in
9 II, 1 | bodies (earth, fire, air, water)-for we say that these and
10 II, 1 | say bronze (or gold) to water, bones (or wood) to earth
11 II, 1 | earth, others fire or air or water or some or all of these,
12 II, 8 | been cooled must become water and descend, the result
13 III, 5 | infinite, and not air or water, in order that the other
14 III, 5 | each other-air is cold, water moist, fire hot; if one
15 III, 5 | applies equally to all, air, water, or anything else-but simply
16 III, 5 | air and fire and earth and water: but nothing of the kind
17 III, 5 | others were not, e.g. fire or water will be infinite. But, as
18 III, 5 | infinite body, but either water or air or what is intermediate
19 IV, 1 | mutual replacement. Where water now is, there in turn, when
20 IV, 1 | there in turn, when the water has gone out as from a vessel,
21 IV, 1 | contains air formerly contained water, so that clearly the place
22 IV, 1 | the bounding planes of the water were, there in turn will
23 IV, 2 | pointed out, where air was, water in turn comes to be, the
24 IV, 2 | have a place.~Further, when water is produced from air, the
25 IV, 4 | when it is separate, as the water in the cask or the wine
26 IV, 4 | moved with the body and the water in the cask.~It will now
27 IV, 4 | container remains the same (as water may be poured from a vessel)-
28 IV, 4 | same thing. For when the water and the air change places,
29 IV, 4 | previously played by all the water in the vessel; at the same
30 IV, 4 | are that the air and the water (or the parts of the water)
31 IV, 4 | water (or the parts of the water) succeed each other, not
32 IV, 4 | because what was air is now water, in the other because where
33 IV, 4 | formerly was there a is now water. But the matter, as we said
34 IV, 5 | even if there were to be water which had not a container,
35 IV, 5 | this reason the earth is in water, and this in the air, and
36 IV, 5 | when one moves a part of water or air: so, too, air is
37 IV, 5 | too, air is related to water, for the one is like matter,
38 IV, 5 | it were the actuality of water, for water is potentially
39 IV, 5 | actuality of water, for water is potentially air, while
40 IV, 5 | while air is potentially water, though in another way.~
41 IV, 5 | are the same thing (for water is both, the one potentially,
42 IV, 5 | the other completely), water will be related to air in
43 IV, 6 | ashes, which absorb as much water as the empty vessel.~The
44 IV, 7 | as, for instance, when water is compressed the air within
45 IV, 7 | qualitative change; e.g. if water were to be transformed into
46 IV, 7 | increase of size and that about water poured on to the ashes get
47 IV, 8 | moves through, as between water, air, and earth, or because,
48 IV, 8 | hindering body. For let B be water and D air; then by so much
49 IV, 8 | and more incorporeal than water, A will move through D faster
50 IV, 8 | speed, then, that air has to water. Then if air is twice as
51 IV, 8 | as, if one puts a cube in water, an amount of water equal
52 IV, 8 | cube in water, an amount of water equal to the cube will be
53 IV, 8 | the void, just as if the water or air had not been displaced
54 IV, 8 | for that matter, would water, if fishes were made of
55 IV, 9 | Xuthus said, or air and water must always change into
56 IV, 9 | made out of a cupful of water, at the same time out of
57 IV, 9 | amount of air a cupful of water must have been made), or
58 IV, 9 | or a transformation of water into air will always be
59 IV, 9 | transformation of air into water (for it is clear that the
60 IV, 9 | that the air produced from water is bulkier than the water):
61 IV, 9 | water is bulkier than the water): it is necessary therefore,
62 IV, 9 | must be an equal amount of water produced out of air, so
63 IV, 9 | when air is produced from water, the same matter has become
64 IV, 9 | potentially, and, again, water is produced from air in
65 VII, 4 | meaning whether applied to water or to air, yet water and
66 VII, 4 | to water or to air, yet water and air are not commensurable
67 VII, 4 | proportion of two to one), yet water and air are not commensurable
68 VII, 4 | in respect of size. But water and speech are not commensurable
69 VIII, 3 | worn away by the drop of water or split by plants growing
70 VIII, 4 | from heavy, e.g. air from water (for water is the first
71 VIII, 4 | e.g. air from water (for water is the first thing that
72 VIII, 4 | not only when a thing is water is it in a sense potentially
73 VIII, 4 | stone from a wineskin in the water is the accidental cause
74 VIII, 10| movent either to air or to water or to something else of
75 VIII, 10| kind takes place in air and water. Some say that it is "mutual
76 VIII, 10| thrown, since the air or the water, being divisible, is a movent
|