Book, Paragraph
1 II, 9 | For this too is itself a starting-point, but of the reasoning, not
2 II, 9 | while in mathematics the starting-point is the starting-point of
3 II, 9 | the starting-point is the starting-point of the reasoning only, as
4 III, 4 | work of thinking from some starting-point. So necessarily all things
5 IV, 11| We must take this as our starting-point and try to discover-since
6 V, 1 | motion. I do not include the starting-point of motion: for it is the
7 V, 1 | the goal rather than the starting-point of motion that gives its
8 V, 1 | An intermediate may be a starting-point of change, since for the
9 V, 5 | from the goal than from the starting-point of change, e.g. motion to
10 V, 5 | becoming white", where no starting-point is specified, is a change
11 V, 5 | takes the place of black as starting-point, in a motion from white
12 V, 6 | motion, part of it is at the starting-point while part is at the goal
13 VI, 4 | all its parts are at the starting-point of its change it is not
14 VI, 4 | changing must be at the starting-point and part at the goal: for
15 VI, 7 | by taking the time as our starting-point.~Since, then, it is established
16 VIII, 8| follows: we have three points, starting-point, middle-point, and finishing-point,
17 VIII, 8| the other two is both a starting-point and a finishing-point, and
18 VIII, 8| middle-point becomes both a starting-point and a goal, the starting-point
19 VIII, 8| starting-point and a goal, the starting-point of the latter part and the
20 VIII, 8| finishing-point and as a starting-point for its motion, A must come
21 VIII, 8| the point A is the real starting-point at which the moving body
22 VIII, 8| as finishing-point and as starting-point for it, one point thus serving
23 VIII, 8| regarded from above it is a starting-point, so that it stands in these
24 VIII, 8| two, since we make it a starting-point and a finishing-point: and
25 VIII, 8| of the one half and the starting-point of the other, if we reckon
26 VIII, 8| finishing-point of the one and the starting-point of the other: but so far
27 VIII, 8| that in these motions the starting-point and the termination do not
28 VIII, 9| motion we have a definite starting-point, finishing-point, middle-point,
29 VIII, 9| its course, whether at the starting-point or at the finishing-point,
30 VIII, 9| much as any other is alike starting-point, middle-point, and finishing-point,
31 VIII, 9| that they never are at a starting-point and at a finishing-point (
32 VIII, 9| say, the centre is alike starting-point, middle-point, and finishing-point
33 VIII, 9| of things in leaving the starting-point is not uniform with their
34 VIII, 9| naturally such that it has no starting-point or finishing-point in itself
|