Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | then to say that the All is composed of indivisible substances?
2 I, 4 | to know things which are composed of them; for it is when
3 I, 7 | form. For "musical man" is composed (in a way) of "man" and "
4 II, 1 | far as they happen to be composed of stone or of earth or
5 III, 5 | elements of which it is composed. Hence the body in question
6 IV, 1 | cannot be an element or composed of elements, whether these
7 IV, 1 | existents (for nothing is composed of it), nor as the form
8 IV, 8 | exceed a point unless it is composed of points! Similarly the
9 V, 4 | for how should a motion composed of alteration and locomotion
10 VI, 1 | that is continuous can be composed "of indivisibles": e.g.
11 VI, 1 | e.g. a line cannot be composed of points, the line being
12 VI, 1 | that which is continuous is composed of points, these points
13 VI, 1 | a way that length can be composed of points or time of moments:
14 VI, 1 | length and time could thus be composed of indivisibles, they could
15 VI, 1 | the parts of which it is composed. But, as we saw, no continuous
16 VI, 1 | either all of these are composed of indivisibles and are
17 VI, 1 | follows. If a magnitude is composed of indivisibles, the motion
18 VI, 1 | over that magnitude must be composed of corresponding indivisible
19 VI, 1 | if the magnitude ABG is composed of the indivisibles A, B,
20 VI, 1 | being-moved will also be composed of indivisibles. So O traversed
21 VI, 1 | possible for motion to be composed of something other than
22 VI, 1 | indivisible, that is to say be composed of indivisible moments:
23 VI, 2 | anything continuous to be composed of indivisible parts, and
24 VI, 3 | nothing continuous can be composed of things having no parts:
25 VI, 7 | for the infinite cannot be composed of finite parts whether
26 VI, 9 | is false, for time is not composed of indivisible moments any
27 VI, 9 | than any other magnitude is composed of indivisibles.~Zeno’s
28 VI, 9 | assumption that time is composed of moments: if this assumption
29 VI, 9 | of bodies, each row being composed of an equal number of bodies
30 VI, 10| viz. that time should be composed of moments, in which case
31 VI, 10| impossible: time is not composed of moments, just as a line
32 VI, 10| moments, just as a line is not composed of points, and motion is
33 VI, 10| points, and motion is not composed of starts: for this theory
34 VI, 10| itself. Thus the line will be composed of points, for the point,
35 VII, 1 | i.e. the motion that is composed of all the individual motions,
36 VIII, 4| of element of which it is composed. And the motion of things
37 VIII, 5| which moves itself must be composed of something that is unmoved
38 VIII, 8| continuous, that which is composed of them both cannot be continuous
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