Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | For he supposes that the assumption "what has come into being
2 I, 3 | beginning" justifies the assumption "what has not come into
3 I, 3 | that does not follow". His assumption that one is used in a single
4 III, 5 | else contains it-on the assumption that wherever anything is,
5 IV, 4 | poured from a vessel)-the assumption being that the extension
6 IV, 9 | statement is based on the assumption that there is a single matter
7 V, 1 | then, in the way of the assumption that that which "is not"
8 VI, 1 | being in motion: for on this assumption it has completed its passage
9 VI, 1 | ever walking: for on this assumption it has completed a walk
10 VI, 2 | s argument makes a false assumption in asserting that it is
11 VI, 2 | show the falsity of the assumption that infinite length can
12 VI, 2 | consideration that the opposite assumption implies the divisibility
13 VI, 3 | divisible. Thus on this assumption the present is divisible.
14 VI, 3 | rest: this being so, the assumption that there can be motion
15 VI, 5 | in the whole AG: but our assumption was that AG contains only
16 VI, 7 | consequence of the same assumption. And if I go on taking parts
17 VI, 9 | result follows from the assumption that time is composed of
18 VI, 9 | composed of moments: if this assumption is not granted, the conclusion
19 VI, 9 | the reasoning lies in the assumption that a body occupies an
20 VI, 9 | the aforesaid fallacious assumption.~Nor in reference to contradictory
21 VI, 10| the change, whereas the assumption is that the change is in
22 VII, 1 | impossibility results only from the assumption of a particular case is
23 VII, 1 | theoretically possible, and the assumption of a theoretically possible
24 VII, 2 | alteration are adjacent. For our assumption is that things that are
25 VIII, 1| should not make any mere assumption or lay down any gratuitous
26 VIII, 1| certain cases comes the assumption that it occurs also in the
27 VIII, 1| time. But it is a wrong assumption to suppose universally that
28 VIII, 3| for it is a fundamental assumption with him that motion is
29 VIII, 5| For if we adopt the first assumption we have to make it apply
30 VIII, 5| manner. Or if we reject this assumption we must say that one kind
31 VIII, 6| the consequences of either assumption are the same, we should
32 VIII, 7| same time the truth of the assumption we have made both now and
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