Book, Paragraph
1 I, 7 | We will now give our own account, approaching the question
2 II, 1 | number.~This then is one account of "nature", namely that
3 II, 1 | motion or change.~Another account is that "nature" is the
4 II, 3 | This must suffice for our account of the number of causes
5 II, 4 | generation and decay took account of chance; whence it would
6 III, 1 | of motion, and the same account will apply to the other
7 III, 5 | Anaxagoras gives an absurd account of why the infinite is at
8 III, 7 | divisible into magnitudes.)~Our account does not rob the mathematicians
9 III, 8 | thought.~This concludes my account of the way in which the
10 IV, 1 | to have given a correct account of it when he made chaos
11 IV, 2 | is true, indeed, that the account he gives there of the "participant"
12 IV, 4 | investigation such as will render an account of place, and will not only
13 IV, 5 | actually one.~This concludes my account of place-both of its existence
14 IV, 6 | inquiry by putting down the account given by those who say that
15 IV, 6 | that it exists, then the account of those who say that it
16 V, 1 | change we may leave out of account: for it is to be found in
17 V, 2 | decided to leave out of account.~Since, then, motion can
18 V, 6 | this sense; and the same account may be given of becoming
19 VII, 4 | may leave the time out of account, since that is one and the
20 VIII, 1| intermediate periods of time-his account being as follows:~"Since
21 VIII, 3| conditions. This last is the account of the matter that we must
22 VIII, 4| trying to answer-how can we account for the motion of light
23 VIII, 8| units), nevertheless as an account of the fact and explanation
24 VIII, 8| distance to be left out of account and the question asked to
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