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| Alphabetical [« »] self-identical 1 self-moving 3 semicircle 5 sense 50 sense-impression 2 sense-impressions 1 sense-must 1 | Frequency [« »] 51 primary 51 subjects 50 animal 50 sense 49 e 49 form 49 necessary | Aristotle Posterior Analytics IntraText - Concordances sense |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | did not in an unqualified sense of the term know the existence 2 I, 1 | qualification but only in the sense that he knows universally. 3 I, 1 | to prevent a man in one sense knowing what he is learning, 4 I, 1 | would be, not if in some sense he knew what he was learning, 5 I, 1 | know it in that precise sense and manner in which he was 6 I, 2 | mean that objects nearer to sense are prior and better known 7 I, 2 | known are those further from sense. Now the most universal 8 I, 2 | causes are furthest from sense and particular causes are 9 I, 2 | particular causes are nearest to sense, and they are thus exactly 10 I, 3 | possible in the unqualified sense of "demonstration", but 11 I, 3 | demonstration in the unqualified sense of the term.~The advocates 12 I, 4 | whereas substance, in the sense of whatever signifies a " 13 I, 4 | coincidental".~In another sense again (b) a thing consequentially 14 I, 4 | known in the unqualified sense of that term, all attributes 15 I, 4 | essential either in the sense that their subjects are 16 I, 4 | contained in them, or in the sense that they are contained 17 I, 4 | simply or in the qualified sense that one or other of a pair 18 I, 4 | demonstration, in the essential sense, of any predicate is the 19 I, 4 | secondary and unessential sense. Nor again (2) is equality 20 I, 5 | commensurately universal in the sense in which we think we prove 21 I, 6 | connexions essential in the sense explained: for all attributes 22 I, 6 | since an accident, in the sense in which I here speak of 23 I, 10| but common only in the sense of analogous, being of use 24 I, 10| though only in a limited sense hypothesis-that is, relatively 25 I, 12| parallels meet is in one sense geometrical, being ungeometrical 26 I, 14| animal in any qualified sense, but universally. Finally, 27 I, 19| coincidentally-not, that is, in the sense in which we say "That white ( 28 I, 22| they are mere sound without sense; and even if there are such 29 I, 23| premiss in the unqualified sense of "single". And as in other 30 I, 32| identity is used in another sense, and it is said, e.g. "these 31 I, 32| with everything in that sense of identity. Nor again can 32 I, 33| object of knowledge.~In what sense, then, can the same thing 33 I, 33| identical; it is only in a sense identical, just as the object 34 I, 33| and false opinion is in a sense identical. The sense in 35 I, 33| in a sense identical. The sense in which some maintain that 36 I, 33| identical", and in one sense the object of true and false 37 I, 33| different people in the sense we have explained, but not 38 II, 2 | subject is (in the partial sense) I mean a property, e.g. 39 II, 4 | self-moving number in the sense of being identical with 40 II, 7 | essential nature by an appeal to sense perception or by pointing 41 II, 7 | definition, if it in no sense proves essential nature, 42 II, 8 | essential nature is in any sense demonstrable and definable 43 II, 8 | nature is determined by the sense in which we are aware that 44 II, 10| formula. A definition in this sense tells you, e.g. the meaning 45 II, 10| therefore made plain (1) in what sense and of what things the essential 46 II, 10| demonstrable, and in what sense and of what things it is 47 II, 10| definition, and in what sense and of what things it proves 48 II, 10| essential nature, and in what sense and of what things it does 49 II, 13| a demonstration, and the sense in which it is or is not 50 II, 13| former and also the latter sense of the term: for these attributes