Book, Paragraph
1 III, 1 | alteration and of being altered. Hence, too, what effects
2 IV, 14| away, and grow, and are altered in time, and are moved locally;
3 V, 2 | locomotion will have to be altered or to be locally moved.~
4 VII, 2 | undergoing alteration are altered in virtue of their being
5 VII, 2 | of a certain quality is altered in so far as it is sensible,
6 VII, 2 | Thus we say that a thing is altered by becoming hot or sweet
7 VII, 3 | undergoes alteration is altered by sensible causes, and
8 VII, 3 | thing has been affected and altered in any way we still call
9 VII, 3 | existence as having been altered. Though it may be true that
10 VII, 3 | result of something’s being altered, the result, e.g. of the
11 VII, 3 | into existence that are altered, and their becoming is not
12 VII, 3 | or its tiling a house is altered and not perfected), the
13 VII, 3 | of the soul, and this is altered by sensible objects: for
14 VII, 3 | that alteration and being altered occur in sensible things
15 VII, 4 | affections, or in the things altered, to see e.g. whether a certain
16 VII, 4 | according as the things altered are equal or unequal.~And
17 VII, 5 | half of the object will be altered: or again, in the same amount
18 VII, 5 | amount of time it will be altered twice as much.~On the other
19 VIII, 1| capable of alteration that is altered, and that which is capable
20 VIII, 5| increase is in process of being altered by something else, and that
21 VIII, 7| the fact that a thing is altered requires that there should
22 VIII, 7| farther from that which is altered: and we cannot have this
23 VIII, 7| quality when a thing is altered and a change in quantity
|