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Alphabetical    [«  »]
sensible 32
sensitive 3
separable 20
separate 28
separated 14
separately 13
separates 3
Frequency    [«  »]
28 qua
28 respectively
28 seem
28 separate
28 sphere
28 unnatural
28 velocity
Aristotle
Physics

IntraText - Concordances

separate

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | he is supposed to wish to separate them, and it is impossible 2 II, 2 | not aware of it; for they separate the objects of physics, 3 III, 8 | only potentially but as a separate thing. Some have no cogency; 4 IV, 2 | form and the matter are not separate from the thing, whereas 5 IV, 4 | surrounds, then, is not separate from the thing, but is in 6 IV, 4 | whole. But when the thing is separate and in contact, it is immediately " 7 IV, 4 | is moved in that if it is separate. It makes no difference 8 IV, 4 | not.~Again, when it is not separate it is described as a part 9 IV, 4 | in the body: when it is separate, as the water in the cask 10 IV, 4 | because what is contained and separate may often be changed while 11 IV, 4 | what is at rest and is thus separate but in continuity. For just 12 IV, 7 | though there is no interval separate and apart from the bodies 13 IV, 8 | that place is something separate, into which things are carried; 14 IV, 8 | a place conceived of as separate and permanent; for a part 15 IV, 8 | in the whole. Further, if separate place does not exist, neither 16 IV, 8 | as to say that place is a separate cavity; and this has already 17 IV, 8 | considerations that there is no separate void.~ 18 IV, 9 | that if void cannot exist separate any more than a place can 19 IV, 9 | void does not exist either separate (either absolutely separate 20 IV, 9 | separate (either absolutely separate or as a separate element 21 IV, 9 | absolutely separate or as a separate element in the rare) or 22 IV, 14 | movements are different and separate, the time is everywhere 23 VI, 1 | this way, i.e. spatially separate.~Nor, again, can a point 24 VII, 2 | than the motion that would separate from one another the two 25 VIII, 1 | unite, of the latter to separate. If he is to go on to explain 26 VIII, 4 | that which causes motion is separate from that which suffers 27 VIII, 4 | case the movent must be separate from the moved, as we see 28 VIII, 10| a consecutive series of separate motions), and that if the


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