Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | to be an attribute of the not-white or of the black? No, "white"
2 I, 5 | No, "white" comes from "not-white"-and not from any "not-white",
3 I, 5 | not-white"-and not from any "not-white", but from black or some
4 I, 5 | concomitant attribute), but into "not-white"-and not into any chance
5 V, 1 | instance, a change from not-white to white is a coming to
6 V, 1 | although that which is "not-white" or "not-good" may nevertheless
7 V, 1 | for example that which is "not-white" might be a man), yet that
8 VI, 9 | a thing is changing from not-white, say, to white, and is in
9 VI, 9 | will be neither white nor not-white: for the fact that it is
10 VI, 9 | from calling it white or not-white. We call a thing white or
11 VI, 9 | We call a thing white or not-white not necessarily because
12 VIII, 8| white in the time A and not-white in the time B. Then D is
13 VIII, 8| at the moment G white and not-white: for if we were right in
14 VIII, 8| at any moment of A, and not-white in B, and G is in both A
15 VIII, 8| and if in the whole of A not-white was in process of becoming
16 VIII, 8| simultaneously a perishing of not-white and a becoming of white.
17 VIII, 8| simultaneously a perishing of not-white, a becoming of white, and
18 VIII, 8| white, and a becoming of not-white: for the time of the three
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