Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | Parmenides and Melissus assert, or (ii) in motion, as the
2 I, 4 | i.e. forms).~The second set assert that the contrarieties are
3 I, 4 | Anaximander and also all those who assert that "what is" is one and
4 I, 4 | smallness of their bulk. So they assert that everything has been
5 II, 1 | essence. Consequently some assert earth, others fire or air
6 II, 4 | yet at the same time they assert that the heavenly sphere
7 III, 1 | it is impossible, as we assert, to find anything common
8 III, 4 | separable from these), and assert that what is outside the
9 III, 4 | and to steer all, as those assert who do not recognize, alongside
10 IV, 8 | Further, the truth of what we assert is plain from the following
11 IV, 10 | have worked through.~Some assert that it is (1) the movement
12 VIII, 1 | in process of perishing, assert that there is always motion (
13 VIII, 1 | who like like Anaxagoras, assert a single principle (of motion)
14 VIII, 1 | theory ought not only to assert the fact: he ought to explain
15 VIII, 3 | case, as certain persons assert, that the existent is infinite
16 VIII, 8 | that those physicists who assert that all sensible things
17 VIII, 8 | argument has enabled us to assert the fact, applying universally
18 VIII, 9 | separates". Similarly those who assert no cause of this kind but
19 VIII, 10| 10~We have now to assert that the first movent must
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