Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | is so, and if "biped" is supposed to be an attribute of "man",
2 I, 4 | the impossible, if he is supposed to wish to separate them,
3 I, 6 | would be a principle of the supposed principle: for the subject
4 II, 1 | whatever any one of them supposed to have this character-whether
5 II, 2 | the physicist should be supposed to know the nature of sun
6 II, 4 | is strange, whether they supposed that there is no such thing
7 II, 5 | and that is why chance is supposed to belong to the class of
8 III, 1 | involved in it. Now motion is supposed to belong to the class of
9 III, 4 | is outside the heaven are supposed to be infinite because they
10 III, 5 | would be infinite, if it is supposed to be a substance and principle.)
11 III, 5 | in the case of the earth, supposed to be infinite, it is at
12 III, 6 | in number, because it is supposed to be possible to exceed
13 III, 8 | the arguments which are supposed to support the view that
14 IV, 2 | separable from it. For place is supposed to be something like a vessel-the
15 IV, 4 | characteristics which are supposed correctly to belong to it
16 IV, 4 | show that the attributes supposed to belong to it do really
17 IV, 4 | to the thing-which it is supposed to be, and which the primary
18 IV, 4 | cannot be:~(1) The shape is supposed to be place because it surrounds,
19 IV, 6 | place or vessel which is supposed to be "full" when it holds
20 IV, 8 | still more quickly. But we supposed that its traverse of Z when
21 IV, 10 | as time is most usually supposed to be (3) motion and a kind
22 IV, 11 | just what its being was supposed to mean), but its substratum
23 VIII, 10| affected to some extent by our supposed finite magnitude possessing
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