Book, Paragraph
1 I, 6 | Love, but both act on a third thing different from both.
2 I, 6 | not necessary to assume a third principle as a substratum
3 I, 6 | preserve both, assume a third somewhat as the substratum
4 II, 5 | part. But as there is a third class of events besides
5 II, 5 | whereas chance belongs to a third type of event. Hence, to
6 II, 7 | but indestructible, the third of destructible things.~
7 III, 1 | this", another "so much", a third "such", and similarly in
8 IV, 6 | that it does not exist, and third the current view on these
9 IV, 11| different, and that some third thing is intermediate to
10 V, 1 | motion proceeds, and the third is that from which it proceeds.
11 V, 2 | hard to move; and in the third place to that which is naturally
12 VI, 9 | two of his arguments.~The third is that already given above,
13 VIII, 2| rest always in motion?~The third objection may be thought
14 VIII, 3| rest; or there is yet a third possibility remaining-it
15 VIII, 5| consider the matter in yet a third wa Ly we shall get this
16 VIII, 5| suppose the existence of the third term also, that which causes
17 VIII, 5| an unmoved movent. In the third place, there is no necessity
|