Book, Paragraph
1 I, 6 | be added. (1) We do not find that the contraries constitute
2 I, 7 | appear on examination. For we find in every case something
3 II, 4 | possible, they maintain, to find something which is the cause;
4 II, 8 | Again, in plants too we find the relation of means to
5 III, 1 | impossible, as we assert, to find anything common to these
6 IV, 2 | should naturally expect to find difficulty in determining
7 IV, 3 | matter inductively we do not find anything to be "in" itself
8 IV, 6 | together. A proof of this they find also in what happens to
9 V, 6 | natural motion, just as we find a similar contrariety in
10 VI, 2 | also infinite: and so we find that the time occupied by
11 VI, 9 | contradictory change shall we find anything unanswerable in
12 VII, 1 | what is conceivable, we find that whether they are equal
13 VII, 2 | induction: for in every case we find that the respective extremities
14 VII, 4 | equal time. Are we, then, to find the commensurability in
15 VII, 4 | like conditions. So we must find out how many species there
16 VIII, 1| more unreasonable, we shall find, on further consideration.
17 VIII, 8| a circular line we shall find singleness and continuity:
18 VIII, 8| either: for in all of them we find that there is the same ground
19 VIII, 8| one: for in either case we find that there is still the
|