Book, Paragraph
1 I, 6 | assume a third principle as a substratum may be added. (1) We do
2 I, 6 | a third somewhat as the substratum of the contraries, such
3 I, 6 | be untenable.~For the one substratum is sufficient to be acted
4 I, 7 | qualification, come to be from some substratum, will appear on examination.
5 I, 7 | cases of coming to be from a substratum.~Thus, clearly, from what
6 I, 7 | solved by the fact that the substratum is different from the contraries,
7 I, 7 | clear that there must be a substratum for the contraries, and
8 I, 7 | principles, and later that a substratum was indispensable, and that
9 I, 7 | principles, and the nature of the substratum. Whether the form or the
10 I, 7 | Whether the form or the substratum is the essential nature
11 I, 8 | something must be present as a substratum). So too they exaggerated
12 I, 9 | they think that if the substratum is one numerically, it must
13 I, 9 | have existed as a primary substratum from which it should come
14 I, 9 | is just this-the primary substratum of each thing, from which
15 II, 1 | is the immediate material substratum of things which have in
16 II, 3 | are causes in the sense of substratum, e.g. the parts, the other
17 IV, 11| in motion is identical in substratum with motion yet differs
18 IV, 11| supposed to mean), but its substratum is an identity: for motion,
19 IV, 11| it. This is an identical substratum (whether a point or a stone
20 IV, 11| these also the "now" as substratum remains the same (for it
21 V, 2 | three kinds of motion, the substratum and the goal of motion must
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