Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | in each of his infinite bodies there would be already present
2 I, 4 | less real than the infinite bodies, and each infinite: which
3 I, 4 | coming to be of homogeneous bodies. It is true there is a sense
4 II, 1 | the plants and the simple bodies (earth, fire, air, water)-
5 II, 2 | physicist. Obviously physical bodies contain surfaces and volumes,
6 II, 2 | as the attributes of such bodies. That is why he separates
7 II, 3 | products, fire, &c., of bodies, the parts of the whole,
8 III, 5 | infinite. If one of the bodies falls in any degree short
9 IV, 1 | be different from all the bodies which come to be in it and
10 IV, 1 | something distinct from bodies, and that every sensible
11 IV, 1 | were there would be two bodies in the same place.~(2) Further,
12 IV, 1 | the elements of sensible bodies are bodies, while nothing
13 IV, 1 | elements of sensible bodies are bodies, while nothing that has
14 IV, 2 | common and in which all bodies are, and the special place
15 IV, 2 | and similarly with other bodies. Hence the place of a thing
16 IV, 4 | and down, and each of the bodies is naturally carried to
17 IV, 4 | such extension. One of the bodies which change places and
18 IV, 4 | which is other than the bodies which are moved. The air,
19 IV, 5 | place,~(3) Nor that two bodies should be in the same place,~(
20 IV, 5 | compulsion) is akin, and bodies which are united do not
21 IV, 6 | interval, different from the bodies, either separable or actual-an
22 IV, 6 | could, and there were two bodies in the same place, it would
23 IV, 6 | true that any number of bodies could be together; for it
24 IV, 6 | mickle": thus if many equal bodies can be together, so also
25 IV, 6 | so also can many unequal bodies.~Melissus, indeed, infers
26 IV, 6 | it is impossible for two bodies to be together. A proof
27 IV, 7 | something over and above the bodies that come to occupy it,
28 IV, 7 | place involves a void; for bodies may simultaneously make
29 IV, 7 | separate and apart from the bodies that are in movement. And
30 IV, 7 | the body is increased, or bodies may be increased otherwise
31 IV, 7 | body, or there may be two bodies in the same place (in which
32 IV, 8 | maintain. If each of the simple bodies has a natural locomotion,
33 IV, 8 | that if each of the natural bodies has not a natural movement,
34 IV, 8 | over another. We see that bodies which have a greater impulse
35 IV, 8 | attribute possessed by all other bodies also. Therefore if this
36 IV, 8 | need we assume a place for bodies over and above the volume
37 V, 4 | states and affections in bodies severally one in essence
38 VI, 9 | concerning the two rows of bodies, each row being composed
39 VI, 9 | composed of an equal number of bodies of equal size, passing each
40 VI, 9 | A, A...be the stationary bodies of equal size, B, B...the
41 VI, 9 | of equal size, B, B...the bodies, equal in number and in
42 VII, 2 | characteristics in which bodies differ from one another
43 VIII, 3| that earth and all other bodies should remain in their proper
44 VIII, 4| knowing. In regard to natural bodies also the case is similar.
45 VIII, 6| first principles of heavenly bodies, of all those, that is to
|