Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | on the other hand, must take for granted that the things
2 I, 3 | not follow, because if we take only white things, and if "
3 I, 4 | complete separation never will take place is correct enough,
4 I, 5 | does not matter whether we take attunement, order, or composition
5 I, 5 | worse; some, as I have said, take as their contraries what
6 II, 9 | the stones and foundations take the lowest place, with earth
7 III, 1 | our science, we must first take each of them in hand and
8 III, 1 | actual, at another not. Take for instance the buildable
9 III, 5 | direction? I mean, e.g, if you take a clod, where will it be
10 III, 5 | too any part of it you may take will remain in itself. The
11 III, 6 | already marked off. For if we take a determinate part of a
12 III, 6 | the part, so as always to take in the same amount, we shall
13 III, 6 | will always be possible to take something ah extra. Yet
14 III, 6 | it is always possible to take a part which is outside
15 III, 6 | such that we can always take a part outside what has
16 IV, 1 | a marvellous thing, and take precedence of all other
17 IV, 3 | 3~The next step we must take is to see in how many senses
18 IV, 4 | elucidated as follows.~Let us take for granted about it the
19 IV, 6 | increase, too, is thought to take always by means of void,
20 IV, 7 | for this is that people take what exists to be body,
21 IV, 8 | expected result does not take place when a body is placed
22 IV, 8 | none of these things can take place, nor can anything
23 IV, 9 | But if this were not to take place, either there would
24 IV, 9 | compression and expansion cannot take place otherwise.~Now, if
25 IV, 11 | independent of movement.~We must take this as our starting-point
26 IV, 11 | of another. But when you take it in this way, using the
27 V, 1 | motion: for instance, we may take the three things "wood", "
28 V, 1 | these three those which take the form of "becoming" and "
29 V, 6 | contraries are opposed. To take an example, a state of rest
30 VI, 1 | but of starts, and will take place by a thing’s having
31 VI, 2 | infinitely divisible: and if we take this as the definition of
32 VI, 4 | the whole motion, it will take less of the motion to occupy
33 VI, 4 | of the thing: for if we take separately the being-in
34 VI, 5 | the rest.~Moreover, if we take each kind of change separately,
35 VI, 5 | divisible have no primary part. Take the case of magnitudes:
36 VI, 5 | thing has changed. And if we take the case of quantitative
37 VI, 6 | such cases we have only to take the time in which a thing
38 VI, 6 | process: and we can never take any stage and say that it
39 VI, 7 | a finite time. For if we take a part of the motion which
40 VI, 7 | the less so), let us then take AE a part of the whole stretch
41 VI, 7 | whole AB. And if again I take another part equal to AE,
42 VI, 7 | or irregular. For if we take a part which shall be a
43 VI, 7 | part of the time that we take, whether equal or unequal
44 VI, 7 | does it make whether we take the motion or the magnitude
45 VI, 9 | different position: for if we take the orbit as described from
46 VII, 1 | moved by something, let us take the case in which a thing
47 VII, 1 | that this is not so and take the series to be infinite.
48 VII, 1 | are simultaneous. Let us take the motion of each separately
49 VII, 1 | another, yet we may still take the motion of each as numerically
50 VII, 1 | above. Now let us further take the time in which A has
51 VII, 1 | the series: for we shall take as actual that which is
52 VII, 4 | But here again may we not take up the same position and
53 VII, 4 | e.g. when the alterations take the form of becoming white
54 VIII, 1 | First Principle.~Let us take our start from what we have
55 VIII, 1 | last period of time that we take must be found in some moment,
56 VIII, 3 | process of change cannot take place in an instant: yet
57 VIII, 3 | occasional rest.~We have now to take the assertion that all things
58 VIII, 3 | previously advanced. We must take our start as before from
59 VIII, 5 | being unmixed.~We will now take the second alternative.
60 VIII, 5 | part moves it in return. I take then the possible case of
61 VIII, 5 | being necessary, we may take the case of their not being
62 VIII, 5 | eventually arrive at G we may take it that there is only one
63 VIII, 5 | ABG moves itself. But if I take away G, AB will move itself,
64 VIII, 7 | for the present let us take it for granted), and no
65 VIII, 8 | no difference whether we take the intermediate stages
66 VIII, 10| be shown as follows: we take it for granted that the
67 VIII, 10| in which its action could take place. Suppose that A is
68 VIII, 10| Z in moving D. Now if I take a magnitude twice as great
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