Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4| which bricks come "from" a house and again a house "from"
2 I, 4| from" a house and again a house "from" bricks; and it is
3 I, 5| equally to the production of a house, a statue, or any other
4 I, 5| or any other complex. A house comes from certain things
5 I, 7| by putting together, as a house; (5) by alteration, as things
6 I, 8| acted on". A doctor builds a house, not qua doctor, but qua
7 II, 2| both of the form of the house and of the matter, namely
8 II, 3| actual; e.g. the cause of a house being built is either "house-builder"
9 II, 3| man with that being-built house; but this is not always
10 II, 3| of potential causes—the house and the housebuilder do
11 II, 5| of itself the cause of a house, whereas the pale or the
12 II, 5| housebuilder is the cause of a house; incidentally, a fluteplayer
13 II, 8| things also is so. Thus if a house, e.g. had been a thing made
14 II, 9| suppose that the wall of a house necessarily comes to be
15 II, 9| If then there is to be a house, such-and-such things must
16 II, 9| bricks and stones if it is a house. But the end is not due
17 II, 9| at all, neither will the house, or the saw-the former in
18 II, 9| artificial products, since a house is of such-and-such a kind,
19 III, 1| must be either this or the house. But when there is a house,
20 III, 1| house. But when there is a house, the buildable is no longer
21 V, 3| units if it is a unit, a house if it is a house (there
22 V, 3| unit, a house if it is a house (there is nothing to prevent
23 VI, 6| the foundation-stone of a house. So, too, in the case of
24 VII, 3| that is to say, of a man or house or anything else that has
25 VII, 3| So as when speaking of a house we do not call its arrival
26 VII, 3| its coping or its tiling a house is altered and not perfected),
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