Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | else which is denser than fire and rarer than air then
2 I, 5 | principles under the names of fire and earth) and those too
3 I, 6 | All as one nature-water or fire or what is intermediate
4 I, 6 | intermediate seems preferable; for fire, earth, air, and water are
5 II, 1 | the simple bodies (earth, fire, air, water)-for we say
6 II, 1 | instance the property of fire to be carried upwards-which
7 II, 1 | some assert earth, others fire or air or water or some
8 II, 3 | of artificial products, fire, &c., of bodies, the parts
9 II, 4 | recognized-love, strife, mind, fire, or the like. This is strange,
10 III, 5 | other in potency-suppose fire is finite in amount while
11 III, 5 | and a given quantity of fire exceeds in power the same
12 III, 5 | other-air is cold, water moist, fire hot; if one were infinite,
13 III, 5 | here, alongside air and fire and earth and water: but
14 III, 5 | is observed.~(b) Nor can fire or any other of the elements
15 III, 5 | some time all things become fire. (The same argument applies
16 III, 5 | for a single clod, and for fire and for a spark.~Suppose (
17 III, 5 | the others were not, e.g. fire or water will be infinite.
18 III, 5 | none of the physicists made fire or earth the one infinite
19 III, 5 | is the lower region; of fire as a whole and of a spark,
20 IV, 1 | elementary natural bodies-namely, fire, earth, and the like-show
21 IV, 1 | which is "up", but where fire and what is light are carried;
22 IV, 8 | natural locomotion, e.g. fire upward and earth downward
23 IV, 8 | of earth, or up, if it is fire, or in both directions-whatever
24 IV, 9 | the reason why they say fire is rare); second, the void
25 IV, 9 | contracted; and as any part of fire that one takes will be hot;
26 V, 4 | distinguish earth from itself or fire from itself. Irregular motion,
27 V, 6 | locomotion belongs naturally to fire and downward to earth, i.e.
28 V, 6 | to each other. And again, fire moves up naturally and down
29 V, 6 | an unnatural motion, e.g. fire has a natural upward motion
30 V, 6 | inasmuch as the motion of fire is also natural, whereas
31 V, 6 | whereas the upward motion of fire as being natural is contrary
32 V, 6 | to the downward motion of fire as being unnatural. The
33 VII, 2 | way: that wood, e.g. pulls fire in a manner different from
34 VIII, 1| two contrary motions: thus fire causes heating but not cooling,
35 VIII, 1| another character (e.g. fire, which travels upwards naturally,
36 VIII, 4| things and downward motion of fire are unnatural. Moreover
37 VIII, 4| since on this supposition fire itself possesses the power
38 VIII, 4| property of the other). So when fire or earth is moved by something
39 VIII, 4| as the upward motion of fire and the downward motion
40 VIII, 4| change takes place and it is fire, and it burns, unless something
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