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Alphabetical    [«  »]
soundness 1
source 22
sources 1
space 30
spaces 1
spark 2
spatial 2
Frequency    [«  »]
30 measure
30 most
30 see
30 space
29 beginning
29 clearly
29 given
Aristotle
Physics

IntraText - Concordances

space

   Book, Paragraph
1 III, 5 | there would be an empty space or a body whose nature it 2 IV, 1 | that clearly the place or space into which and out of which 3 IV, 1 | that things need to have space first, because he thought, 4 IV, 1 | if body has a place and space, clearly so too have surface 5 IV, 1 | ask: of what in things is space the cause? None of the four 6 IV, 2 | Timaeus says that matter and space are the same; for the "participant" 7 IV, 2 | for the "participant" and space are identical. (It is true, 8 IV, 2 | he did identify place and space.) I mention Plato because, 9 IV, 2 | statement of the reasons why space must be something, and again 10 IV, 8 | move faster over an equal space, and in the ratio which 11 IV, 9 | contracted into a smaller space does not acquire a new part 12 V, 1 | which is in motion is in space, that which "is not" is 13 V, 1 | which "is not" is not in space: for then it would be somewhere.~ 14 VI, 6 | by any particular part of space or time which the changing 15 VI, 7 | for all locomotion is in space.~ 16 VI, 8 | parts-occupies the same space for a definite period of 17 VI, 8 | parts, occupies the same space. So if this is being at 18 VI, 8 | parts, occupies the same space. If this is not so and the 19 VI, 9 | when it occupies an equal space is at rest, and if that 20 VI, 9 | always occupying such a space at any moment, the flying 21 VI, 9 | in both a division of the space in a certain way leads to 22 VI, 9 | originally occupying the space between the goal and the 23 VI, 9 | motion is confined within the space that it occupies, it is 24 VI, 9 | motion is confined within the space that it occupies.~ 25 VI, 10| motion can never traverse a space greater than itself without 26 VI, 10| without first traversing a space equal to or less than itself. 27 VI, 10| also must first traverse a space equal to or less than itself. 28 VI, 10| indivisible, there can be no space less than itself for it 29 VIII, 4| extends itself over a certain space unless something prevents 30 VIII, 9| and finishing-point of the space traversed; consequently


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