Book, Paragraph
1 IV, 5 | conjoined with them, as the soul and the heaven. The latter
2 IV, 11| distinguish any change, but the soul seems to stay in one indivisible
3 IV, 14| time can be related to the soul; and why time is thought
4 IV, 14| of actuality?~Whether if soul did not exist time would
5 IV, 14| counted. But if nothing but soul, or in soul reason, is qualified
6 IV, 14| nothing but soul, or in soul reason, is qualified to
7 IV, 14| be time unless there were soul, but only that of which
8 IV, 14| movement can exist without soul, and the before and after
9 V, 2 | is either the body or the soul that undergoes alteration:
10 VII, 3 | whether of the body or of the soul, are not alterations. For
11 VII, 3 | regard to the states of the soul, all of which (like those
12 VII, 3 | the sensitive part of the soul, and this is altered by
13 VII, 3 | intellectual part of the soul are not alterations, nor
14 VII, 3 | knowledge is produced by the soul’s settling down out of the
15 VII, 3 | Nature itself causes the soul to settle down and come
16 VII, 3 | the sensitive part of the soul, and, except accidentally,
17 VIII, 9| we may add those who make Soul the cause of motion: for
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