Book, Paragraph
1 II, 3 | either as potential or as actual; e.g. the cause of a house
2 II, 3 | itself; and all six either as actual or as potential. The difference
3 III, 1 | capable of being at one time actual, at another not. Take for
4 III, 5 | the infinite cannot be an actual thing and a substance and
5 III, 6 | mean that there will be an actual statue. It is not so with
6 III, 6 | infinite. There will not be an actual infinite. The word "is"
7 III, 6 | distinction between potential and actual existence holds. We say
8 III, 7 | infinite is potential, never actual: the number of parts that
9 III, 7 | science, by disproving the actual existence of the infinite
10 VI, 3 | from future time at the actual point of division. Also
11 VI, 5 | regard, however, to the actual subject of change-that is
12 VI, 5 | which it changes, and the actual subject of change, e.g.
13 VI, 5 | accident is divisible). For of actual subjects of change it will
14 VI, 6 | though it is not always the actual thing that is in process
15 VII, 1 | series: for we shall take as actual that which is theoretically
16 VII, 3 | there is no becoming of the actual use and activity of these
17 VIII, 4| potential becomes at times actual: e.g. the learner becomes
18 VIII, 6| Further it is evident from actual observation that there are
19 VIII, 8| between the potential and the actual. So in the straight line
20 VIII, 8| potential: but this one is actual, and regarded from below
21 VIII, 8| of halves, they are not actual but potential halves. If
22 VIII, 8| If the halves are made actual, we shall get not a continuous
23 VIII, 8| is not. If the units are actual, it is not possible: if
24 VIII, 8| at the last point of the actual time in which it was becoming
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