Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | truth of the alternative necessarily followed, namely that things
2 I, 9 | in its own nature, but is necessarily outside the sphere of becoming
3 II, 5 | went there as a rule or necessarily, nor is the end effected (
4 II, 5 | capable of coming to pass not necessarily, nor normally, and with
5 II, 6 | action generally. Therefore necessarily chance is in the sphere
6 II, 7 | that from this that will necessarily result ("from this" either
7 II, 8 | therefore certain things necessarily are and come to be-and if
8 II, 9 | that the wall of a house necessarily comes to be because what
9 II, 9 | hypothesis; it is not a result necessarily determined by antecedents.
10 II, 9 | kind, certain things must necessarily come to be or be there already,
11 II, 9 | this, these things must necessarily come to be or be there already.
12 III, 2 | but such things are not necessarily moved, whether they are "
13 III, 3 | acted on-the teacher will necessarily be learning everything that
14 III, 4 | each of these at least is necessarily infinite or finite, even
15 III, 4 | some starting-point. So necessarily all things must have been
16 III, 5 | the doctrine that there is necessarily a proper place for each
17 III, 8 | anything. Again, contact is not necessarily possible between any two
18 IV, 4 | which is displaced-place necessarily is the one of the four which
19 IV, 9 | been made), or void must necessarily exist; for compression and
20 IV, 12| conjunction, whereas the other is necessarily involved: that which is
21 IV, 12| involved: that which is in time necessarily involves that there is time
22 IV, 12| though what is in motion is necessarily moved. For time is not motion,
23 IV, 12| exist, at another do not-are necessarily in time: for there is a
24 V, 1 | expressed. So it follows necessarily from what has been said
25 V, 1 | contradiction, are not motions: it necessarily follows that only change
26 V, 1 | Activity or Passivity, it necessarily follows that there are three
27 V, 3 | for that which touches is necessarily in succession, but not everything
28 V, 3 | there is continuity there is necessarily contact, but if there is
29 V, 3 | may be "together" without necessarily being one: but they cannot
30 V, 3 | cannot be one without being necessarily together. So natural junction
31 V, 3 | for the extremities must necessarily come into contact if they
32 V, 4 | specifically one is not necessarily one in an unqualified sense.
33 VI, 2 | magnitude is continuous-it necessarily follows that the quicker
34 VI, 2 | time: and this being so, it necessarily follows that time also is
35 VI, 2 | of continuous, it follows necessarily that time is continuous.
36 VI, 3 | 3~The present also is necessarily indivisible-the present,
37 VI, 8 | because the moving thing would necessarily have been already moved
38 VI, 9 | thing white or not-white not necessarily because it is be one or
39 VII, 1 | moved by anything does not necessarily cease from its motion because
40 VII, 3 | that every such becoming is necessarily the result of something’
41 VII, 3 | becoming or perishing is necessarily, like the becoming or perishing
42 VII, 3 | though their becoming is necessarily the result of an alteration
43 VII, 5 | in a time D, it does not necessarily follow that E can move twice
44 VII, 5 | amount of time, it does not necessarily follow that half the force
45 VIII, 1| perishing of the worlds necessarily involve motion), whereas
46 VIII, 1| kind of motion, therefore, necessarily involves the presence of
47 VIII, 2| perhaps say that it must necessarily be the case-that many motions
48 VIII, 5| is not accidentally but necessarily in motion-so that, if it
49 VIII, 5| teaching, whereas teaching necessarily implies possessing knowledge,
50 VIII, 5| alteration should as such necessarily have a capacity, let us
51 VIII, 5| that is moved but does not necessarily impart motion but may or
52 VIII, 5| that is moved but does not necessarily move anything else: and
53 VIII, 6| intermission, there must necessarily be something, one thing
54 VIII, 6| it clear that there must necessarily be some such thing, which,
55 VIII, 6| we have said makes this necessarily true of every movent. So
56 VIII, 7| first movent, and so it is necessarily one and the same and continuous
57 VIII, 7| anything has become it must necessarily perish and cannot continue
58 VIII, 8| the fact that turning back necessarily implies coming to a stand,
59 VIII, 8| goal that is reached is necessarily one that is actually, not
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