Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | mean that it does so in virtue of a concomitant attribute.
2 I, 5 | except, it may be, in virtue of a concomitant attribute),
3 I, 7 | does not come from it in virtue of a concomitant attribute;
4 I, 9 | matter, is not-being only in virtue of an attribute which it
5 II, 1 | it belongs primarily, in virtue of itself and not in virtue
6 II, 1 | virtue of itself and not in virtue of a concomitant attribute.~
7 II, 1 | attribute.~I say "not in virtue of a concomitant attribute",
8 II, 1 | change in themselves in virtue of a concomitant attribute-it
9 II, 1 | things themselves (but not in virtue of what they are).~"Nature"
10 II, 1 | which belong to them in virtue of what they are, for instance
11 II, 3 | same thing not merely in virtue of a concomitant attribute),
12 II, 3 | statue qua statue, not in virtue of anything else that it
13 II, 3 | and a builder builds in virtue of his art of building.
14 II, 5 | thing is something either in virtue of itself or incidentally,
15 II, 5 | housebuilding faculty is in virtue of itself the cause of a
16 III, 6 | limited; not, however, in virtue of its own nature, but in
17 III, 6 | of its own nature, but in virtue of what is other than it.
18 III, 7 | movement is called infinite in virtue of the magnitude covered
19 IV, 3 | that it is in surface in virtue of something other than
20 IV, 3 | will receive the wine in virtue not of its being wine but
21 IV, 3 | wine will be in the jar in virtue not of its being a jar but
22 IV, 4 | belongs to it actually, in virtue of its own nature, or (2)
23 IV, 4 | its own nature, or (2) in virtue of something conjoined with
24 IV, 9 | productive of locomotion in virtue of this contrariety, and
25 IV, 9 | this contrariety, and in virtue of their hardness and softness
26 IV, 11 | in place; and there in virtue of relative position. Since
27 V, 1 | belonging to it, but in virtue of being itself directly
28 V, 2 | but a passive quality in virtue of which a thing is said
29 V, 3 | things that naturally in virtue of their mutual contact
30 V, 4 | may be one), nor merely in virtue of community of nature (
31 V, 4 | consecutive or successive in virtue of the time being continuous,
32 V, 4 | can be continuity only in virtue of the motions themselves
33 V, 4 | motion, therefore, while in virtue of being continuous it is
34 VI, 1 | the partless section A in virtue of the presence of the motion
35 VI, 3 | applied to one thing in virtue of another, but in its proper
36 VI, 3 | the proper sense but in virtue of something else: for the
37 VI, 4 | place it is divisible in virtue of the time that it occupies.
38 VI, 5 | question of itself and not in virtue of the possession of them
39 VI, 8 | time not primarily but in virtue of something distinct from
40 VI, 10 | part may be in motion in virtue of the motion of the whole. (
41 VII, 1 | essentially of itself and not in virtue of the fact that something
42 VII, 2 | alteration are altered in virtue of their being affected
43 VII, 3 | Each of them exists in virtue of a particular relation
44 VII, 3 | those of body) exist in virtue of particular relations,
45 VIII, 1 | adequate first principle in virtue of the fact that something
46 VIII, 2 | motion that is the same in virtue of being continuous and
47 VIII, 4 | continuous not merely in virtue of contact, it is impassive:
48 VIII, 5 | movent that is not so in virtue of being moved by something
49 VIII, 5 | stick moves something in virtue of being moved by the hand,
50 VIII, 5 | that which is so only in virtue of being itself dependent
51 VIII, 5 | If, then, it is moved in virtue of some part of it being
52 VIII, 8 | which the middle-point in virtue of the relations in which
53 VIII, 8 | in motion from A will in virtue of the same direction of
54 VIII, 10| divisible, is a movent only in virtue of the fact that different
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