Book, Paragraph
1 III, 6 | and so on, we shall not traverse the given magnitude. But
2 III, 6 | the same amount, we shall traverse the magnitude, for every
3 IV, 8 | twice as thin, the body will traverse B in twice the time that
4 IV, 8 | and to D. Then if A is to traverse and move through it in a
5 IV, 8 | time equal to H, A will traverse the part O of A. And it
6 IV, 8 | And it will surely also traverse in that time any substance
7 IV, 8 | it moves through Z, will traverse it in a time inverse to
8 IV, 8 | is no body in Z, A will traverse Z still more quickly. But
9 IV, 8 | But we supposed that its traverse of Z when Z was void occupied
10 IV, 8 | time H. So that it will traverse Z in an equal time whether
11 IV, 8 | follow: it will be found to traverse a certain distance, whether
12 VI, 2 | follows that the quicker will traverse an equal magnitude in less
13 VI, 2 | clear that the quicker will traverse the same magnitude in less
14 VI, 3 | will in the same present traverse a distance less than AB,
15 VI, 7 | neither can a finite magnitude traverse an infinite magnitude in
16 VI, 7 | part of the time it will traverse a finite magnitude and in
17 VI, 7 | in the whole time it will traverse a finite magnitude.~And
18 VI, 7 | finite magnitude will not traverse an infinite in a finite
19 VI, 7 | neither will an infinite traverse a finite in a finite time.
20 VI, 7 | For if the infinite could traverse the finite, the finite could
21 VI, 7 | finite, the finite could traverse the infinite; for it makes
22 VI, 7 | impossible, the infinite cannot traverse the finite.~Nor again will
23 VI, 7 | again will the infinite traverse the infinite in a finite
24 VI, 7 | Otherwise it would also traverse the finite, for the infinite
25 VI, 7 | neither will the finite traverse the infinite, nor the infinite
26 VI, 10| which is in motion can never traverse a space greater than itself
27 VI, 10| the point also must first traverse a space equal to or less
28 VI, 10| less than itself for it to traverse first: so it will have to
29 VI, 10| first: so it will have to traverse a distance equal to itself.
30 VI, 10| for in less time it must traverse less distance, and thus
31 VI, 10| distance, for it cannot traverse such a distance.~It is evident,
32 VII, 4 | velocity in an equal time they traverse the same magnitude: and
33 VII, 5 | fraction of it cause B to traverse a part of G the ratio between
34 VII, 5 | they all cause the ship to traverse are divisible into as many
35 VIII, 8| that it is impossible to traverse distances infinite in number-or
36 VIII, 8| possible in a finite time to traverse or reckon an infinite number
37 VIII, 8| possible in a finite time to traverse an infinite number of distances,
38 VIII, 9| and it is impossible to traverse an infinite distance. On
|