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| Alphabetical [« »] inquiry 4 inscribed 1 insight 1 instance 39 instance-he 1 instance-what 1 instances 8 | Frequency [« »] 41 though 41 was 40 again 39 instance 39 predicate 39 series 39 us | Aristotle Posterior Analytics IntraText - Concordances instance |
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1 I, 1 | recognize this as true in the instance before him that he came 2 I, 1 | applicable to any and every instance of the thing. On the other 3 I, 4 | attribute "true in every instance of its subject", an "essential" 4 I, 4 | attribute. I call "true in every instance" what is truly predicable 5 I, 4 | truly predicable of every instance of man, then if it be true 6 I, 4 | holds if point is in every instance predicable as contained 7 I, 4 | put to us as true in every instance is either an instance in 8 I, 4 | every instance is either an instance in which, or an occasion 9 I, 4 | which is "true in every instance" and the "essential" attribute.~ 10 I, 4 | attribute which belongs to every instance of its subject, and to every 11 I, 4 | its subject, and to every instance essentially and as such; 12 I, 4 | to belong to any random instance of that subject and when 13 I, 4 | attribute, in any random instance of itself and primarily-that 14 I, 5 | part and will hold in every instance of it, yet the demonstration 15 I, 5 | parallel is true of every instance of them. But it is not so, 16 I, 5 | angles qua isosceles. An instance of (2) would be the law 17 I, 7 | another. We cannot, for instance, prove geometrical truths 18 I, 10| existence were obvious (for instance, the existence of hot and 19 I, 12| will not be true in every instance, which, since the syllogism 20 I, 12| major and minor terms. An instance of this is Caeneus’ proof 21 I, 24| the real world; that, for instance, of triangle or of figure 22 I, 31| same time see it in each instance and intuit that it must 23 I, 32| once only-I mean if A for instance, is truly predicable of 24 I, 32| transferable; units, for instance, which are without position, 25 I, 32| the latter-number, for instance, and magnitude-are peculiar.~ 26 II, 1 | its nature, asking, for instance, "what, then, is God?" or " 27 II, 8 | the following as our first instance of being aware of an element 28 II, 11| through two causes-as for instance if thunder be a hiss and 29 II, 11| opposition to it; as, for instance, by necessity a stone is 30 II, 12| the circular process is an instance of this. In actual fact 31 II, 12| only as a general rule: for instance, not every man can grow 32 II, 12| predicated always and in every instance of C, since to hold in every 33 II, 12| since to hold in every instance and always is of the nature 34 II, 16| is present; whether, for instance, if a plant sheds its leaves 35 II, 16| universal and commensurate. For instance, deciduous character will 36 II, 17| be not identical in every instance of the effect but different? 37 II, 17| taken collectively (in this instance with all figures whose external 38 II, 17| specifically identical. For instance, the cause of longevity 39 II, 19| admit of error-opinion, for instance, and calculation, whereas