Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | unmusical" or any intermediate state there may be.~Nor again
2 I, 5 | unmusical" or any intermediate state there may be.~The same holds
3 I, 5 | principle, but the opposite state has not received a name,
4 I, 5 | certain things in a certain state of separation instead of
5 I, 5 | contrary or an intermediate state. But the intermediates are
6 II, 1 | from what is not. (This state of mind is clearly possible.
7 II, 2 | becomes plain if one tries to state in each of the two cases
8 III, 1 | distinguishing (1) what exists in a state of fulfilment only, (2)
9 III, 5 | Anything else might be in a state of rest, but there is no
10 IV, 2 | is neither a part nor a state of it, but is separable
11 IV, 7 | void is something. They state that the void is the condition
12 IV, 11| without change; for when the state of our own minds does not
13 IV, 11| stay in one indivisible state, and when we perceive and
14 IV, 14| because it is an attribute, or state, or movement (since it is
15 V, 4 | numerically one), but if the state is one, this is not in itself
16 V, 6 | another motion but also a state of rest, we must determine
17 V, 6 | also has for an opposite a state of rest (for rest is the
18 V, 6 | opposed. To take an example, a state of rest in health is (1)
19 V, 6 | health is (1) contrary to a state of rest in disease, and (
20 V, 6 | this absence of change a state of rest? If it is, then
21 V, 6 | it is not true that every state of rest is contrary to a
22 V, 6 | this absence of change is a state of rest: we must say that
23 V, 6 | that it is similar to a state of rest and call it absence
24 V, 6 | question arises, has every state of rest that is not permanent
25 V, 6 | decrease: so it will he in a state of rest without having become
26 V, 6 | discarded, so that if a state of rest is itself contrary
27 V, 6 | contrary to the motion from the state of rest to its contrary,
28 V, 6 | still stationary it is in a state of rest in a qualified sense?
29 V, 6 | another motion than in a state of rest.~With regard to
30 V, 6 | whether there is an opposite state of rest to unnatural as
31 V, 6 | being in a non-permanent state of rest without having become
32 V, 6 | thing may be in an unnatural state of rest. Further, some things
33 V, 6 | to be a sense in which a state of rest and a motion are
34 VI, 1 | but was in an intermediate state: while if it is passing
35 VI, 4 | unvarying condition is not in a state of change); it follows,
36 VI, 8 | place: for we defined a state of rest to be the state
37 VI, 8 | state of rest to be the state of a thing to which motion
38 VI, 8 | implies that the previous state of a thing is still unaltered,
39 VI, 10| to another, or from some state to its contradictory-and
40 VII, 3 | have a thing in its natural state: e.g. we have a perfect
41 VII, 3 | such as health and a good state of body we regard as consisting
42 VII, 3 | intellect has reached a state of rest and come to a standstill,
43 VII, 3 | becoming that leads to a state of rest, since, as we have
44 VII, 3 | any one has passed from a state of intoxication or sleep
45 VII, 3 | disease to the contrary state, that he has become possessed
46 VII, 3 | originally acquires the state, it is incorrect to say
47 VII, 3 | settle down and come to a state of rest for the performance
48 VII, 4 | different in the two cases. I state it thus because we have
49 VIII, 1| period of time there is a state of rest. Probably also those
50 VIII, 1| say that there is first a state of rest for an infinite
51 VIII, 1| adduce cases where such a state of things exists, as he
52 VIII, 2| if an animal is ever in a state of absolute rest, we have
53 VIII, 3| supporters of this theory do not state clearly what kind of motion
54 VIII, 4| be in the contradictory state of not knowing. In regard
55 VIII, 5| move itself. Perhaps we may state the case thus: there is
56 VIII, 6| unvarying and in the same state, will cause motion that
57 VIII, 7| rest in the contradictory state, or if there is no state
58 VIII, 7| state, or if there is no state of rest as a contrary to
59 VIII, 7| sense the opposite both of a state of rest and of the contrary
60 VIII, 8| consequently A will be in a state of rest at B, and similarly
61 VIII, 8| already enumerated, and the state of rest that it undergoes
62 VIII, 8| previously undergoing the state of rest that is the opposite
63 VIII, 8| opposite of the motion, the state of rest being privation
64 VIII, 8| undergone there must occur a state of rest at G: for this,
65 VIII, 8| this, as we found, is the state of rest that is the opposite
66 VIII, 9| finishing-point, it must be in a state of rest). On the other hand
67 VIII, 9| of locomotion can be in a state of rest as having traversed
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