Book, Paragraph
1 I, 8| in the same sense as "a doctor does something or has something
2 I, 8| becomes something from being a doctor." These expressions may
3 I, 8| acts or is acted on". A doctor builds a house, not qua
4 I, 8| builds a house, not qua doctor, but qua housebuilder, and
5 I, 8| and turns gray, not qua doctor, but qua dark-haired. On
6 I, 8| hand he doctors or fails to doctor qua doctor. But we are using
7 I, 8| doctors or fails to doctor qua doctor. But we are using words
8 I, 8| appropriately when we say that a doctor does something or undergoes
9 I, 8| becomes something from being a doctor, if he does, undergoes,
10 I, 8| undergoes, or becomes qua doctor. Clearly then also "to come
11 II, 1| instance) a man who is a doctor might cure himself. Nevertheless
12 II, 1| happened that the same man is doctor and patient-and that is
13 II, 2| up to a point (e.g. the doctor has a knowledge of health
14 II, 2| a point, perhaps, as the doctor must know sinew or the smith
15 II, 3| form. But the seed and the doctor and the adviser, and generally
16 II, 3| prior to another (e.g. the doctor and the expert are causes
17 II, 8| mistake in writing and the doctor pours out the wrong dose.
18 II, 8| The best illustration is a doctor doctoring himself: nature
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