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Alphabetical    [«  »]
safety 2
said 100
said-every 1
sake 49
same 489
same-white 1
sameness 3
Frequency    [«  »]
49 argument
49 greater
49 potentially
49 sake
48 about
48 contact
48 however
Aristotle
Physics

IntraText - Concordances

sake

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2| position maintained for the sake of argument (such as the 2 II, 2| senses.~Again, "that for the sake of which", or the end, belongs 3 II, 2| the end or "that for the sake of which". For if a thing 4 II, 2| the end or "that for the sake of which". (That is why 5 II, 2| he has the end for the sake of which he was born". For 6 II, 2| if it was there for our sake. (We also are in a sense 7 II, 2| sense an end. "That for the sake of which" has two senses: 8 II, 3| of end or "that for the sake of which" a thing is done, 9 II, 3| these things are "for the sake of" the end, though they 10 II, 3| rest; for "that for the sake of which" means what is 11 II, 5| some events are for the sake of something, others not. 12 II, 5| things which are for the sake of something. Hence it is 13 II, 5| withwhich the phrase "for the sake of something" is applicable. ( 14 II, 5| Events that are for the sake of something include whatever 15 II, 5| events which are for the sake of something, it is said 16 II, 5| sphere of things done for the sake of something.)~Example: 17 II, 5| deliberate purpose and for the sake of this-if he always or 18 II, 5| of those actions for the sake of something which involve 19 II, 5| he did not come for the sake of that) are innumerable. 20 II, 5| might come to pass for the sake of something.~ 21 II, 6| he did not come for the sake of safety. Again, the tripod 22 II, 6| it did not fall for the sake of that.~Hence it is clear 23 II, 6| may come to pass for the sake of something, (2) do not 24 II, 6| not come to pass for the sake of what actually results, 25 II, 6| when A which is for the sake of B, does not result in 26 II, 6| taking a walk is for the sake of evacuation of the bowels; 27 II, 7| we are inquiring "for the sake of what?"- "that they may 28 II, 7| the mover, "that for the sake of which". The last three 29 II, 7| what" and "that for the sake of which" are one, while 30 II, 7| the end or "that for the sake of which". Hence since nature 31 II, 7| since nature is for the sake of something, we must know 32 II, 8| causes which act for the sake of something; (2) about 33 II, 8| nature work, not for the sake of something, nor because 34 II, 8| rain did not fall for the sake of this-in order that the 35 II, 8| preceding steps are for the sake of that. Now surely as in 36 II, 8| intelligent action is for the sake of an end; therefore the 37 II, 8| in the series is for the sake of the next; and generally 38 II, 8| artificial products are for the sake of an end, so clearly also 39 II, 8| plants grow leaves for the sake of the fruit and send their 40 II, 8| roots down (not up) for the sake of nourishment, it is plain 41 II, 8| all the rest is for the sake of the end, the form must 42 II, 8| the sense of "that for the sake of which".~Now mistakes 43 II, 9| it comes to be for the sake of sheltering and guarding 44 II, 9| effect so-and-so and for the sake of so-and-so. This end, 45 II, 9| matter, while "that for the sake of which" is in the definition.~ 46 II, 9| the end or "that for the sake of which" will not exist. 47 II, 9| the end is "that for the sake of which", and the beginning 48 IV, 3| end, i.e. in "that for the sake of which" it exists.~(8) 49 VII, 2| supplies not "that for the sake of which" but the source


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