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Alphabetical [« »] caunian 1 cause 40 caused 9 causes 25 cautious 2 cease 4 ceases 3 | Frequency [« »] 26 poetry 26 try 26 whereas 25 causes 25 desirable 25 enemies 25 find | Aristotle Rethoric IntraText - Concordances causes |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 2 | describe them, to know their causes and the way in which they 2 I, 4 | way they ended; similar causes are likely to have similar 3 I, 6 | these two things which it causes, pleasure and life, are 4 I, 7 | different beginnings or causes, the consequences of the 5 I, 7 | corresponds with that of their causes and beginnings, and conversely 6 I, 7 | conversely the nature of causes and beginnings corresponds 7 I, 10| deliberately intends.) The causes of our deliberately intending 8 I, 10| to one or other of seven causes: chance, nature, compulsion, 9 I, 10| really be due to one of the causes mentioned-either reasoning 10 I, 11| invariable repetition of anything causes the excessive prolongation 11 I, 12| necessity, or to natural causes, or to habit: in fact, to 12 II, 1 | more of the following three causes. Men either form a false 13 II, 2 | deserves. Forgetfulness, too, causes anger, as when our own names 14 II, 4 | felt, since their presence causes no pain. And anger is accompanied 15 II, 5 | Speaking generally, anything causes us to feel fear that when 16 II, 5 | opposite of fear, and what causes it is the opposite of what 17 II, 5 | is the opposite of what causes fear; it is, therefore, 18 II, 5 | or to the absence of what causes alarm. We feel it if we 19 II, 5 | completely.-So much for the causes of fear and confidence.~ 20 II, 11| showing in what follows its causes and objects, and the state 21 II, 23| that is useful for men and causes that have been really or 22 II, 24| form of wording here that causes the illusion mentioned. 23 II, 24| consists in representing as causes things which are not causes, 24 II, 24| causes things which are not causes, on the ground that they 25 III, 4 | civil wars just as one oak causes another oak’s fall. Demosthenes