Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | then, whether substance exists or not, an absurdity results,
2 I, 8 | nothing else comes to be or exists apart from Being itself,
3 II, 1 | been stated. That nature exists, it would be absurd to try
4 II, 1 | fulfilment than when it exists potentially. Again man is
5 II, 4 | its present order all that exists. This statement might well
6 II, 8 | away with "nature" and what exists "by nature". For those things
7 III, 1 | distinguishing (1) what exists in a state of fulfilment
8 III, 1 | fulfilment only, (2) what exists as potential, (3) what exists
9 III, 1 | exists as potential, (3) what exists as potential and also in
10 III, 1 | The fulfilment of what exists potentially, in so far as
11 III, 1 | potentially, in so far as it exists potentially, is motion-namely,
12 III, 4 | exist or not to exist. If it exists, we have still to ask how
13 III, 4 | have still to ask how it exists; as a substance or as the
14 III, 5 | who say that the infinite exists, nor that in which we are
15 III, 5 | through". But if the infinite exists as an attribute, it would
16 III, 6 | sense in which the infinite exists and another in which it
17 III, 6 | small.~The infinite, then, exists in no other way, but in
18 III, 6 | potentially and by reduction. It exists fully in the sense in which
19 III, 6 | and potentially as matter exists, not independently as what
20 III, 8 | the view that the infinite exists not only potentially but
21 III, 8 | way in which the infinite exists, and of the way in which
22 IV, 1 | the theory that the void exists involves the existence of
23 IV, 1 | for if everything that exists has a place, place too will
24 IV, 3 | for the sake of which" it exists.~(8) In the strictest sense
25 IV, 6 | physicist-namely whether it exists or not, and how it exists
26 IV, 6 | exists or not, and how it exists or what it is-just as about
27 IV, 6 | those who hold that the void exists regard it as a sort of place
28 IV, 6 | by those who say that it exists, then the account of those
29 IV, 6 | those who say that the void exists.~(1) They argue, for one
30 IV, 6 | too, (4) held that void exists and that it enters the heaven
31 IV, 7 | is that people take what exists to be body, and hold that
32 IV, 7 | place, and void must, if it exists, be place deprived of body,
33 IV, 7 | both in what sense place exists and in what sense it does
34 IV, 9 | Since we deny that a void exists, but for the rest the problem
35 IV, 9 | contrarieties, and that what exists actually is produced from
36 IV, 9 | of the sense in which it exists and the sense in which it
37 IV, 10| necessary that, when it exists, all or some of its parts
38 IV, 12| 1) to exist when time exists, (2) as we say of some things
39 IV, 13| Surely not, if motion always exists. Is time then always different
40 IV, 13| stated, then, that time exists and what it is, and in how
41 IV, 14| distinction of faster and slower exists in reference to all change,
42 VII, 3 | and defects. Each of them exists in virtue of a particular
43 VII, 5 | itself: for no part even exists otherwise than potentially.~
44 VIII, 1| where such a state of things exists, as he points to the fact
45 VIII, 5| a time when nothing that exists is in motion, since the
46 VIII, 8| Further, if anything that exists after having been previously
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