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Alphabetical    [«  »]
national 6
nationality 1
nations 1
natural 31
naturally 14
naturally-how 1
naturalness 1
Frequency    [«  »]
31 felt
31 generally
31 justice
31 natural
31 old
31 point
31 speaking
Aristotle
Rethoric

IntraText - Concordances

natural

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | that men have a sufficient natural instinct for what is true, 2 I, 1 | things that are just have a natural tendency to prevail over 3 I, 2 | questions of right conduct, natural science, politics, and many 4 I, 2 | subjects-right conduct, natural science, or anything else 5 I, 2 | there are propositions about natural science on which it is impossible 6 I, 2 | nothing can be based about natural science. The same principle 7 I, 7 | places, times, or one’s natural powers. When a man accomplishes 8 I, 7 | accomplishes something beyond his natural power, or beyond his years, 9 I, 7 | had risen. Again, what is natural is better than what is acquired, 10 I, 9 | themselves great. It is only natural that methods of "heightening 11 I, 11| a rule to move towards a natural state of being, particularly 12 I, 11| being, particularly when a natural process has achieved the 13 I, 11| complete recovery of that natural state. Habits also are pleasant; 14 I, 11| habitual, it is virtually natural; habit is a thing not unlike 15 I, 11| to what happens always, natural events happening always, 16 I, 11| kind are those known as "natural"; for instance, those originating 17 I, 11| one is brought into one’s natural condition. Conferring and 18 I, 11| wonderful.~And since what is natural is pleasant, and things 19 I, 11| akin to each other seem natural to each other, therefore 20 I, 12| or to necessity, or to natural causes, or to habit: in 21 I, 13| to some extent divines, a natural justice and injustice that 22 II, 7 | person to give the help. Natural cravings constitute such 23 II, 16| own. It is indeed quite natural that they should be affected 24 II, 19| which the love or desire is natural; for no one, as a rule, 25 III, 1 | Dramatic ability is a natural gift, and can hardly be 26 III, 5 | arrangement of them in the natural sequence which some of them 27 III, 9 | mean the kind that has no natural stopping-places, and comes 28 III, 10| invention can only come through natural talent or long practice; 29 III, 19| untruthfulness of your opponent, the natural thing is to commend yourself, 30 III, 19| having been proved, the natural thing to do next is to magnify 31 III, 19| point, or by following the natural order of the arguments as


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