Book, Paragraph
1 IV, 1 | it has three dimensions, length, breadth, depth, the dimensions
2 IV, 8 | thinner, in time E (if the length of B is egual to D), in
3 IV, 12| motion, as the cubit does the length by determining an amount
4 VI, 1 | moment in such a way that length can be composed of points
5 VI, 1 | period of time.~Again, if length and time could thus be composed
6 VI, 1 | other than motions.~And if length and motion are thus indivisible,
7 VI, 2 | the slower will divide the length. If, then, this alternation
8 VI, 2 | respect of its extremities, length is also infinite in respect
9 VI, 2 | respect of divisibility, length is also infinite in respect
10 VI, 2 | are two senses in which length and time and generally anything
11 VI, 2 | assumption that infinite length can be traversed in a finite
12 VI, 2 | quicker passes over a greater length, it may happen that it will
13 VI, 2 | that it will pass over a length twice, or one and a half
14 VI, 2 | time been carried over a length one and a half times as
15 VI, 4 | the divisibility of the length, and in fact of everything
16 VI, 10| consist of moments or a length of points.~Again, it may
17 VII, 4 | affection will be equal to a length, which is impossible. But
18 VII, 4 | affection cannot be equal to a length. Therefore there cannot
19 VII, 4 | by one half of a body’s length and a locomotion is accomplished
20 VII, 5 | particular amount or in any length of time: otherwise one man
21 VII, 5 | such part should not in any length of time fail to move the
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