Book, Paragraph
1 II, 6 | This implies that what is naturally the means to an end is "
2 II, 9 | because what is heavy is naturally carried downwards and what
3 III, 4 | being gone through.~(3) What naturally admits of being gone through,
4 IV, 2 | of these facts we should naturally expect to find difficulty
5 IV, 4 | and each of the bodies is naturally carried to its appropriate
6 IV, 4 | which change places and are naturally capable of being in contact
7 IV, 4 | since the light is what is naturally carried up, and the heavy
8 IV, 5 | that each should remain naturally in its proper place. For
9 IV, 10 | made up of these. One would naturally suppose that what is made
10 V, 2 | third place to that which is naturally designed for and capable
11 V, 2 | motion when, where, and as it naturally would be so. This last is
12 V, 3 | circumstances each of these terms is naturally applicable.~Things are said
13 V, 3 | continuously in a natural manner, naturally reaches before it reaches
14 V, 3 | continuity belongs to things that naturally in virtue of their mutual
15 V, 3 | contact if they are to be naturally joined: but things that
16 V, 3 | are in contact are not all naturally joined, while there is no
17 V, 6 | natural, e.g. patients alter naturally or unnaturally according
18 V, 6 | upward locomotion belongs naturally to fire and downward to
19 V, 6 | And again, fire moves up naturally and down unnaturally: and
20 V, 6 | unnaturally, this motion naturally. So the unnatural remaining
21 VI, 3 | can be at rest which is naturally designed to be in motion
22 VI, 3 | when, where, or as it would naturally be so: since, therefore,
23 VI, 3 | since, therefore, nothing is naturally designed to be in motion
24 VI, 3 | part of it in which it is naturally designed to be in motion
25 VII, 3 | defect or excellence is naturally subject to alteration: thus
26 VIII, 1 | of life as it were to all naturally constituted things?~Now
27 VIII, 1 | is of a certain character naturally, it either is so invariably
28 VIII, 1 | fire, which travels upwards naturally, does not sometimes do so
29 VIII, 4 | as a whole moves itself naturally: but the body of the animal
30 VIII, 4 | motion unnaturally as well as naturally: it depends upon the kind
31 VIII, 4 | in ships and things not naturally organized, that which causes
32 VIII, 4 | anything of continuous and naturally connected substance move
33 VIII, 4 | themselves (for they are of naturally connected substance), nor
34 VIII, 4 | unnaturally (e.g. the lever is not naturally capable of moving the weight),
35 VIII, 4 | moving the weight), others naturally (e.g. what is actually hot
36 VIII, 4 | what is actually hot is naturally capable of moving what is
37 VIII, 4 | quantity in a certain place is naturally movable when it contains
38 VIII, 9 | only motion whose course is naturally such that it has no starting-point
39 VIII, 10| something else of the kind, naturally adapted for imparting and
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