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| Alphabetical [« »] names 9 narrower 3 natural 16 naturally 37 nature 35 nay 2 near 2 | Frequency [« »] 39 walking 38 quality 37 everything 37 naturally 37 objection 37 propositions 36 capable | Aristotle Topics IntraText - Concordances naturally |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 4 | Similarly too in other cases. Naturally, then, problems and propositions 2 I, 6 | branch to which it most naturally belongs, speaking of them 3 I, 7 | same as a man, and what naturally travels upward the same 4 I, 15| is clear, since animals naturally possess each kind of "sense", 5 IV, 2 | see whether the species is naturally prior and abolishes the 6 IV, 5 | See, also, whether both naturally come to be anywhere in the 7 IV, 5 | seeing that they do not naturally come to be in the same faculty 8 V, 1 | show both that a man is not naturally a biped, and that he is 9 V, 1 | viz. that the former is naturally produced in more than one 10 V, 2 | element wherein the soul is naturally found", has introduced a 11 V, 2 | element in which the soul is naturally found" could not be correctly 12 V, 2 | use one’s sensation, being naturally sentient’ could not be a 13 V, 2 | used in a single sense, "naturally civilized animal" would 14 V, 3 | property of man to be a "naturally civilized animal" has rendered 15 V, 4 | who has stated that to be "naturally sentient" is a property 16 V, 4 | convertibly with it; and so to be "naturally sentient" would be a property 17 V, 5 | render an attribute that naturally belongs, he states it in 18 V, 5 | render the attribute that naturally belongs, but his expression 19 V, 5 | render the property that naturally belongs, and indicates it 20 V, 5 | that belongs to it either naturally, as "biped" belongs to " 21 V, 5 | failed to add the word "naturally", because what belongs naturally 22 V, 5 | naturally", because what belongs naturally may fail to belong to the 23 V, 5 | to the thing to which it naturally belongs, as (e.g.) it belongs 24 V, 5 | earth everywhere that it naturally falls downwards, it is a 25 V, 5 | be a property of "earth" "naturally to fall downwards".~ 26 V, 6 | got the sight we should naturally have.~Next, look from the 27 V, 8 | e.g.) inasmuch as "to be naturally civilized" is less likely 28 V, 8 | a property of man to be naturally civilized, it would be a 29 V, 8 | property would in who states "a naturally civilized animal" as a this 30 VI, 6 | every affection is formed naturally in that of which it is an 31 VI, 6 | disruption of parts that are naturally conjoined". For sleep is 32 VI, 6 | reasonings, nor pain of parts naturally conjoined: for then inanimate 33 VI, 6 | the disruption of parts naturally conjoined is not pain, but 34 VI, 9 | in which the privation is naturally formed, or else that in 35 VI, 9 | else that in which it is naturally formed primarily, e.g. whether 36 VI, 9 | failed to add in what it is naturally formed, or, though he has 37 VI, 14| seeing that both alike are naturally liable to occur in it? Such