Book, Paragraph
1 I, 3 | case of coming to be in the full sense but also in the case
2 II, 4 | being a divine thing and full of mystery.~Thus we must
3 III, 1 | of being between what is full real and what is potential.~
4 III, 3 | agency as patiency, in the full sense, though they belong
5 III, 5 | true of what is infinite in full completion: for it must
6 III, 6 | which is infinite in the full sense, evidently there can
7 III, 6 | but it is not true in the full sense of the word. This
8 III, 6 | whole, though not in the full sense. It is divisible both
9 IV, 6 | which is supposed to be "full" when it holds the bulk
10 IV, 6 | of that-as if "void" and "full" and "place" denoted the
11 IV, 6 | all is void (so what is full of air is void). It is not
12 IV, 6 | were no void, since what is full cannot contain anything
13 IV, 7 | described as what is not full of body perceptible to touch;
14 IV, 7 | Melissus; viz. that the full can suffer qualitative change.~
15 IV, 8 | can bear no ratio to the full, and therefore neither can
16 IV, 8 | will bear this ratio to the full. But in a time equal to
17 IV, 8 | equal time whether Z be full or void. But this is impossible.
18 IV, 8 | distance, whether this be full or void, in an equal time;
19 IV, 8 | there is no ratio of void to full.~These are the consequences
20 VIII, 10| shall never arrive at the full AB, whereas I shall always
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