Book, Paragraph
1 I, 7 | animals and plants from seed.~Generally things which come to be,
2 I, 8 | passing away and change generally. If they had come in sight
3 II, 3 | the relation of 2:1, and generally number), and the parts in
4 II, 3 | cause of the child, and generally what makes of what is made
5 II, 3 | doctor and the adviser, and generally the maker, are all sources
6 II, 3 | the cause of a statue or, generally, "a living creature". An
7 II, 3 | of "statue" or of "image" generally, of "this bronze" or of "
8 II, 3 | bronze" or of "material" generally. So too with the incidental
9 II, 3 | cause then is prior: and so generally.~Further, generic effects
10 II, 4 | the same or different, and generally what chance and spontaneity
11 II, 6 | fortune and of moral action generally. Therefore necessarily chance
12 II, 8 | the sake of the next; and generally art partly completes what
13 II, 9 | there already or exist, or generally the matter relative to the
14 III, 1 | 2) agent and patient and generally what can move and what can
15 III, 3 | is, has been stated both generally and particularly. It is
16 III, 3 | can be acted on, as such)-generally and again in each particular
17 III, 5 | elements be infinite. For generally, and apart from the question
18 III, 6 | division of magnitudes. For generally the infinite has this mode
19 IV, 2 | 2~We may distinguish generally between predicating B of
20 IV, 3 | finger is "in" the hand and generally the part "in" the whole.~(
21 IV, 3 | As man is "in" animal and generally species "in" genus.~(4)
22 IV, 3 | is "in" the species and generally the part of the specific
23 IV, 3 | the hot and the cold and generally the form "in" the matter.~(
24 IV, 3 | centre "in" the king, and generally events centre "in" their
25 IV, 3 | centres "in its good and generally "in" its end, i.e. in "that
26 IV, 3 | thing is "in" a vessel, and generally "in" place.~One might raise
27 IV, 12| commensurate with the side.~Generally, if time is directly the
28 V, 4 | viz. is health one? and generally are the states and affections
29 V, 5 | what kinds of processes are generally recognized as contrary:
30 V, 6 | coming to a standstill" is generally recognized to be identical
31 VI, 2 | which length and time and generally anything continuous are
32 VI, 10| process of being cut, and generally that that which cannot come
33 VIII, 3| motion, it would seem, is generally thought to be a sort of
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