Book, Paragraph
1 V, 2 | perishing, except that in these processes we have a change to a particular
2 V, 2 | substrate underlying all processes of becoming and changing.
3 V, 5 | also show what kinds of processes are generally recognized
4 V, 5 | recovering one’s health, these processes having contrary goals, and
5 VI, 10| are the extreme points of processes of increase and decrease:
6 VII, 2 | same is true of the other processes of combination and separation (
7 VII, 2 | such as are involved in the processes of becoming and perishing. (
8 VII, 3 | acquired states and in the processes of acquiring and losing
9 VII, 3 | that neither states nor the processes of losing and acquiring
10 VII, 3 | alterations, nor can the processes of losing and acquiring
11 VIII, 1| becoming and perishing, which processes could not come about without
12 VIII, 1| always motion (for these processes of becoming and perishing
13 VIII, 7| combination and separation, processes in accordance with which
14 VIII, 7| cannot be any one of these processes without the existence of
15 VIII, 7| then no one of the other processes of change is so either.~
16 VIII, 7| an opposite: thus for the processes of becoming and perishing
17 VIII, 7| intervene between the opposite processes. The question whether these
18 VIII, 7| impossibility of the two processes being present to a thing
19 VIII, 8| repeatedly and two contrary processes of change must occur. The
20 VIII, 9| substances are so subject: the processes of increase and decrease
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