Book, Paragraph
1 VIII, 5| being moved by that which imparts motion by its own agency:
2 VIII, 5| the other hand, if a thing imparts motion by its own agency,
3 VIII, 5| anything else with which it imparts motion, whereas if there
4 VIII, 5| different thing with which it imparts motion, there must be something
5 VIII, 5| there must be something that imparts motion not with something
6 VIII, 5| by something else which imparts motion with itself. Therefore,
7 VIII, 5| may distinguish that which imparts motion without itself being
8 VIII, 5| distinguish in it that which imparts the motion and that which
9 VIII, 5| A. And since that which imparts motion may be either a thing
10 VIII, 5| may be either a thing that imparts motion to something else
11 VIII, 5| something that is unmoved but imparts motion and also of something
12 VIII, 5| let A be something that imparts motion but is unmoved, B
13 VIII, 5| itself apart from A: for B imparts motion only through being
14 VIII, 5| comprise something that imparts motion but is unmoved and
15 VIII, 5| other. If, then, that which imparts motion is a continuous substance-that
16 VIII, 5| through containing a part that imparts motion and a part that is
17 VIII, 5| whole: it is A alone that imparts motion and B alone that
18 VIII, 5| supposing that that which imparts motion but is unmoved is
19 VIII, 5| that that which primarily imparts motion is unmoved: for,
20 VIII, 5| motion that which primarily imparts motion is unmoved.~
21 VIII, 6| a plurality, that first imparts motion, and this first movent
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