| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] dyad 1 dyad-and 1 e 49 e.g. 62 each 43 earliest 1 early 1 | Frequency [« »] 66 basic 64 any 64 d 62 e.g. 62 every 62 truths 61 attributes | Aristotle Posterior Analytics IntraText - Concordances e.g. |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | be known-we cannot know, e.g. that the diagonal of a square 2 I, 2 | firmly than that attribute; e.g. the cause of our loving 3 I, 4 | this or that time only; e.g. if animal is truly predicable 4 I, 4 | in its essential nature (e.g. line thus belongs to triangle, 5 I, 4 | accidents or "coincidents"; e.g. musical or white is a "coincident" 6 I, 4 | subject other than itself: e.g. "the walking [thing]" walks 7 I, 4 | predication is essential; e.g. if a beast dies when its 8 I, 4 | must inhere in the subject; e.g. in line must be either straightness 9 I, 4 | privative or its contradictory; e.g. within number what is not 10 I, 4 | as such, are identical. E.g. point and straight belong 11 I, 4 | be shown to belong. Thus, e.g. (1) the equality of its 12 I, 7 | subordinate to superior (e.g. as optical theorems to geometry 13 I, 9 | subject-unless we know, e.g. the property of possessing 14 I, 10| question.~Peculiar truths are, e.g. the definitions of line 15 I, 10| of which it investigates, e.g. in arithmetic units, in 16 I, 10| some of these elements; e.g. we might not expressly posit 17 I, 12| premisses from another science; e.g. in a geometrical controversy 18 I, 12| ambiguity may escape detection. E.g. "Is every circle a figure?" 19 I, 12| of fresh extreme terms. E.g. A is predicated of B, B 20 I, 12| expansion may be lateral: e.g. one major A, may be proved 21 I, 13| causes the inherence of y; e.g. if the disproportion of 22 I, 13| bear almost the same name; e.g. mathematical and nautical 23 I, 13| enter into it at points; e.g. medicine and geometry: it 24 I, 14| have a universal character: e.g. man is not two-footed animal 25 I, 16| both premisses are false; e.g. supposing A atomically connected 26 I, 16| may be true and A-C false; e.g. if both C and A contain 27 I, 16| premisses being partially false; e.g. if actually some A is C 28 I, 17| another series of predication; e.g. suppose D to be not only 29 I, 17| posited both become false: e.g. suppose that actually all 30 I, 17| no D, whereas all B is D, e.g. no science is animal, all 31 I, 22| accidental or coincidental; e.g. white is a coincident of 32 I, 22| form an infinite series; e.g. neither the series, man 33 I, 23| inherence is in question; e.g. to prove through a middle 34 I, 24| through something else; e.g. we know Coriscus the musician 35 I, 24| that something else is x—e.g. in attempting to prove that 36 I, 29| immediately cohering term e.g. by taking C, D, and F severally 37 I, 32| another and cannot coexist, e.g. "justice is injustice", 38 I, 32| another sense, and it is said, e.g. "these and no other are 39 I, 33| is the apprehension of, e.g. the attribute "animal" as 40 I, 33| simultaneously apprehending, e.g. (1) that man is essentially 41 II, 1 | otherwise qualified-whether, e.g. the sun suffers eclipse 42 II, 1 | opposed to "is or is not [e.g.] white".) On the other hand, 43 II, 2 | qualification I mean the subject, e.g. moon or earth or sun or 44 II, 2 | sense) I mean a property, e.g. eclipse, equality or inequality, 45 II, 2 | not a "middle" causing, e.g. an eclipse. On the other 46 II, 3 | some are not universal; e.g. all in the second figure 47 II, 3 | first figure are definable, e.g. "every triangle has its 48 II, 3 | predicated of another; we do not, e.g. predicate animal of biped 49 II, 10| in this sense tells you, e.g. the meaning of the phrase " 50 II, 11| cause is the final cause. E.g. why does one take a walk 51 II, 12| form an immediate premiss; e.g. we argue that, since C has 52 II, 13| first infimae species-number e.g. into triad and dyad-and 53 II, 13| whole into this division: e.g. it is not all animal which 54 II, 13| subaltern genus of animal; e.g. the primary differentiation 55 II, 13| pointing out that animal, e.g. is divisible exhaustively 56 II, 13| such, they have in common; e.g. if Alcibiades was proud, 57 II, 13| which we have established e.g. the definition of similarity 58 II, 14| subjects of investigation-if e.g. they are animals, we lay 59 II, 14| character the subgenera-man, e.g. or horse-possess their properties. 60 II, 15| possess an identical "middle" e.g. a whole group might be proved 61 II, 17| wider than the subject (e.g. the possession of external 62 II, 19| universals, are established: e.g. such and such a species