| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] asserting 4 assertion 1 asserts 3 assume 17 assumed 28 assumed-two 1 assumes 11 | Frequency [« »] 18 peculiar 18 proves 18 wider 17 assume 17 belonging 17 connexions 17 demonstrative | Aristotle Posterior Analytics IntraText - Concordances assume |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | are essential. Thus, we assume that every predicate can 2 I, 10| the attributes. Thus we assume the meaning alike of unity, 3 I, 10| regards unity and magnitude we assume also the fact of their existence, 4 I, 10| number); or we might omit to assume expressly the meaning of 5 I, 16| in fact it is false to assume that that which is an attribute 6 I, 19| hypotheses of syllogism. Assume them as they have been stated, 7 I, 21| negative demonstration. Let us assume that we cannot proceed to 8 I, 22| predicate and subject.~We shall assume, then, that the predicate 9 I, 22| place or at some time.~I assume first that predication implies 10 I, 22| predicated of one another. We assume this because such predicates 11 I, 25| shown as follows.~(1) We may assume the superiority ceteris 12 I, 26| inhere in B, we have to assume that it does inhere, and 13 I, 33| animal, that is, we may assume, may be other than animal.~ 14 II, 3 | demonstrations evidently posit and assume the essential nature-mathematical 15 II, 5 | if all the attributes we assume are constituents of the 16 II, 13| use at all, but rather to assume everything at the start 17 II, 13| constituted, then the elements we assume have necessarily been reached