Book, Paragraph
1 IV, 10| change is always faster or slower, whereas time is not: for "
2 IV, 14| distinction of faster and slower exists in reference to all
3 VI, 2 | arrived at D, B being the slower has arrived, let us say,
4 VI, 2 | magnitude in less time than the slower. For since it passes over
5 VI, 2 | magnitude in less time than the slower, and (regarded by itself)
6 VI, 2 | the time PCh in which the slower passes over LX, the time
7 VI, 2 | magnitude in less time than the slower. Again, since the motion
8 VI, 2 | since, whereas a thing is slower if its motion occupies more
9 VI, 2 | neither of equal velocity nor slower, it follows that the motion
10 VI, 2 | greater) in less time than the slower.~And since every motion
11 VI, 2 | may be either quicker or slower, both quicker motion and
12 VI, 2 | both quicker motion and slower motion may occupy any time:
13 VI, 2 | magnitude in less time than the slower, suppose that A is quicker
14 VI, 2 | that A is quicker and B slower, and that the slower has
15 VI, 2 | and B slower, and that the slower has traversed the magnitude
16 VI, 2 | whole D in the time ZO, the slower will in the same time pass
17 VI, 2 | than GD. And since B, the slower, has passed over GK in the
18 VI, 2 | process for ever, taking the slower after the quicker and the
19 VI, 2 | and the quicker after the slower alternately, and using what
20 VI, 2 | divide the time and the slower will divide the length.
21 VI, 2 | distinction of quicker and slower may apply to motions occupying
22 VI, 2 | that passed over by the slower: for their respective velocities
23 VI, 2 | as that traversed by the slower, and that the respective
24 VI, 2 | indivisibles, and that of the slower into the two indivisibles
25 VI, 2 | since in the same time the slower has been carried over EZ,
26 VI, 3 | can be both quicker and slower motion in the present. Suppose
27 VI, 3 | distance AB. That being so, the slower will in the same present
28 VI, 3 | AB, say AG. But since the slower will have occupied the whole
29 VI, 8 | the terms "quicker" and "slower" are used only of that which
30 VI, 8 | stand may be quicker or slower, the same conclusion follows.~
31 VI, 9 | pursued started, so that the slower must always hold a lead.
32 VI, 9 | the argument is that the slower is not overtaken: but it
33 VII, 4 | inevitably be quicker or slower than the other: for then
34 VII, 4 | the distance B’ and the slower (G) passes over the distance
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