Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
assertion 1
asserts 3
assume 17
assumed 28
assumed-two 1
assumes 11
assumes-he 1
Frequency    [«  »]
29 whole
29 within
28 2
28 assumed
28 demonstrated
28 infinite
28 related
Aristotle
Posterior Analytics

IntraText - Concordances

assumed

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | admission of the fact must be assumed, in others comprehension 2 I, 10| the meaning of the name is assumed. The fact of their existence 3 I, 10| the primary truths must be assumed; but it has to be proved 4 I, 10| meaning of the subjects are assumed by these sciences; but of 5 I, 10| attributes only the meaning is assumed. For example arithmetic 6 I, 10| known and so not expressly assumed. Nevertheless in the nature 7 I, 10| is capable of proof but assumed by the teacher without proof 8 I, 10| opinion, demonstrable, but assumed and used without demonstration.~ 9 I, 16| both C and B, if it be then assumed that no C is and all B is 10 I, 16| but if C be nevertheless assumed to be a universal attribute 11 I, 16| either; and if it be yet assumed that C is universally non-attributable 12 I, 16| If then C is nevertheless assumed to be an attribute of all 13 I, 17| of both A and B, but is assumed to be an attribute of A 14 I, 17| false: or again if C be assumed to be attributable to B 15 I, 21| prosyllogism. But since it is assumed that the series of descending 16 I, 26| If these premisses are assumed, therefore, the negative 17 II, 4 | as our recent argument assumed, impossible.~We might argue 18 II, 4 | assuming B one will have assumed, before drawing the conclusion, 19 II, 6 | definable form is once more assumed in this minor premiss too?~ 20 II, 6 | definable form which we assumed. Hence syllogistic inference 21 II, 6 | because definable form is assumed as a premiss, and as a premiss 22 II, 9 | also what they are must be assumed or revealed in some other 23 II, 12| immediate basic premiss must be assumed. And in the world of fact 24 II, 12| the universal. But we have assumed a connexion which is a general 25 II, 13| if the primary genus is assumed and we then take one of 26 II, 13| differing pair of opposites and assumed that the two sides exhaust 27 II, 13| achieved if the right term is assumed as primary, and this will 28 II, 13| be one such term. Having assumed this we at once proceed


IntraText® (V89) Copyright 1996-2007 EuloTech SRL