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Alphabetical    [«  »]
efficient 5
either 72
element 19
elements 30
elicited 2
eliminate 2
elimination 2
Frequency    [«  »]
31 different
31 hand
30 demonstrable
30 elements
30 example
30 i.e.
30 inheres
Aristotle
Posterior Analytics

IntraText - Concordances

elements

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | belong to their subject as elements in its essential nature ( 2 I, 4 | line is composed of these elements, which are contained in 3 I, 6 | essential attributes are either elements in the essential nature 4 I, 6 | contain their subjects as elements in their own essential nature. ( 5 I, 7 | arithmetic. For there are three elements in demonstration: (1) what 6 I, 10| demonstrative science has three elements: (1) that which it posits, 7 I, 10| pass over some of these elements; e.g. we might not expressly 8 I, 10| of the case the essential elements of demonstration are three: 9 I, 11| In virtue of the common elements of demonstration-I mean 10 I, 13| disproportion of the hot and cold elements is the cause of ill health, 11 I, 22| many as the constitutive elements of each individual substance, 12 I, 22| contained those constitutive elements with their coincidents-both 13 I, 22| either because they are elements in the essential nature 14 I, 22| because their subjects are elements in their essential nature. 15 I, 22| the indivisible, which are elements in the definition of number. 16 I, 22| Attributes which are essential elements in the nature of their subjects 17 I, 23| middle term. Further, the "elements" of such a conclusion are 18 I, 23| as are universal-are the "elements". If, on the other hand, 19 I, 23| are, moreover, as many "elements" of the demonstrated conclusion 20 I, 27| constituted of fewer basic elements, is more exact than and 21 I, 27| which requires additional elements. What I mean by "additional 22 I, 27| What I mean by "additional elements" is this: a unit is substance 23 II, 13| be adopted in tracing the elements predicated as constituting 24 II, 13| subject is the predication of elements in its essential nature 25 II, 13| definable thing consists of two elements and "animal-tame" forms 26 II, 13| is constituted, then the elements we assume have necessarily 27 II, 13| 1) the admission only of elements in the definable form, ( 28 II, 13| the omission of no such elements. The first is feasible because 29 II, 13| procedure makes it clear that no elements in the definable form have 30 II, 13| terms we have selected are elements in the definable form; and


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