Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | arrived at as a reasoned result, as well as in the way just
2 I, 8 | as a constituent of the result. Yet this causes surprise,
3 I, 9 | and which persists in the result.) And if it ceases to be
4 II, 2 | difference, nor does any falsity result, if they are separated.
5 II, 3 | presence brings about one result is sometimes blamed for
6 II, 4 | be and to come to be as a result of chance and spontaneity.
7 II, 5 | whatever may be done as a result of thought or of nature.)
8 II, 5 | are intentional and the result of intelligent deliberation.
9 II, 5 | is called "good" when the result is good, "evil" when it
10 II, 5 | fortune" are used when either result is of considerable magnitude.
11 II, 5 | none of the things which result from it can be invariable
12 II, 6 | is the wider term. Every result of chance is from what is
13 II, 6 | the sake of B, does not result in B. For instance, taking
14 II, 6 | which though they might result from intelligence or nature,
15 II, 7 | this that will necessarily result ("from this" either without
16 II, 8 | become water and descend, the result of this being that the corn
17 II, 8 | might be spoiled-but that result just followed. Why then
18 II, 8 | was merely a coincident result; and so with all other parts
19 II, 8 | that things are either the result of coincidence or for an
20 II, 8 | and these cannot be the result of coincidence or spontaneity,
21 II, 9 | hypothesis; it is not a result necessarily determined by
22 III, 4 | difficult: many contradictions result whether we suppose it to
23 III, 5 | led as follows to the same result.~The infinite body must
24 IV, 7 | light in it, is void.~This result, then, as I have said, is
25 IV, 8 | the void? For the expected result does not take place when
26 IV, 8 | the void, this impossible result will follow: it will be
27 IV, 8 | matter up, the cause of this result is obvious, viz. that between
28 IV, 8 | are the consequences that result from a difference in the
29 IV, 8 | that, if there is a void, a result follows which is the very
30 V, 6 | are violent and not the result of natural necessity, and
31 VI, 4 | continuous. And the same result follows if the division
32 VI, 5 | continuous. Thus we have the result that the thing that has
33 VI, 5 | change, we shall get a like result, for here too the change
34 VI, 8 | the whole time, with the result that that that which is
35 VI, 9 | divided into halves. The result of the argument is that
36 VI, 9 | certain way leads to the result that the goal is not reached,
37 VI, 9 | arrow is at rest, which result follows from the assumption
38 VII, 1 | give rise to any impossible result.~
39 VII, 3 | becoming is necessarily the result of something’s being altered,
40 VII, 3 | something’s being altered, the result, e.g. of the material’s
41 VII, 3 | specific character or form, the result of the alteration of certain
42 VII, 3 | becoming is necessarily the result of an alteration of the
43 VII, 3 | of the body must be the result of the alteration of something
44 VII, 3 | but in either case the result is brought about through
45 VII, 4 | or analogically, with the result that they seem not to be
46 VIII, 5 | Ly we shall get this same result as follows. If everything
47 VIII, 5 | suppositions we have the result that in all cases of things
48 VIII, 7 | rest. And we have a similar result in the case of changes that
49 VIII, 8 | get, so that we have the result that when the whole distance
50 VIII, 8 | finishing-point: and this same result is also produced by the
51 VIII, 8 | halves, it is clear that this result follows: for then one point
52 VIII, 8 | general theory, the same result would also appear to be
53 VIII, 9 | has perished. Moreover the result at which we have arrived,
54 VIII, 9 | point gives a convertible result: on the one hand, because
55 VIII, 10| assigned limit. So we get the result that the finite force will
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