Book, Paragraph
1 I, 7| statue coming to be from bronze", not of the "bronze becoming
2 I, 7| from bronze", not of the "bronze becoming a statue". The
3 I, 7| the "opposite", and the bronze or stone or gold the "subject".~
4 I, 7| be unformed" from "to be bronze".~We have now stated the
5 I, 7| by an analogy. For as the bronze is to the statue, the wood
6 II, 1| nature" of the bed, and the bronze the "nature" of the statue.~
7 II, 1| relation to something else, say bronze (or gold) to water, bones (
8 II, 2| know sinew or the smith bronze (i.e. until he understands
9 II, 3| called "cause", e.g. the bronze of the statue, the silver
10 II, 3| the genera of which the bronze and the silver are species.~
11 II, 3| of the sculptor and the bronze are causes of the statue.
12 II, 3| image" generally, of "this bronze" or of "bronze" or of "material"
13 II, 3| of "this bronze" or of "bronze" or of "material" generally.
14 III, 1| I mean by "as" is this: Bronze is potentially a statue.
15 III, 1| is not the fulfilment of bronze as bronze which is motion.
16 III, 1| fulfilment of bronze as bronze which is motion. For "to
17 III, 1| which is motion. For "to be bronze" and "to be a certain potentiality"
18 III, 1| definition, the fulfilment of bronze as bronze would have been
19 III, 1| fulfilment of bronze as bronze would have been motion.
20 III, 6| part of the whole, as the bronze is of the bronze statue.)
21 III, 6| as the bronze is of the bronze statue.) If it contains
22 VII, 3| do not call the statue "bronze" or the pyramid "wax" or
23 VII, 3| expression and call them "of bronze", "waxen", and "wooden"
24 VII, 3| name: thus we speak of the bronze or the wax being dry or
25 VII, 3| or hot substance as being bronze, giving the material the
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