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| Alphabetical [« »] secondly 10 secret 2 secretly 1 secure 30 secured 17 secures 1 securing 4 | Frequency [« »] 30 excess 30 faculty 30 makes 30 secure 30 ways 29 1 29 bad | Aristotle Topics IntraText - Concordances secure |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 18| for a discussion, we shall secure a preliminary admission 2 II, 3 | a statement we ought to secure a preliminary admission 3 II, 8 | establishing a view, and you should secure them by means of induction-such 4 II, 8 | are establishing a view: secure arguments of this kind as 5 III, 1 | which is more lasting or secure is more desirable than that 6 III, 2 | life and sets to work to secure as well other noble acquisitions. 7 VI, 10| of the term, one should secure a preliminary admission 8 VII, 5 | see for oneself, and to secure from those whom one is questioning, 9 VIII, 1 | possibly be even anxious to secure axioms as familiar and as 10 VIII, 1 | serve either inductively to secure the universal premiss being 11 VIII, 1 | Thus if one desires to secure an admission that the knowledge 12 VIII, 1 | he does not, one should secure the admission by induction, 13 VIII, 1 | contraries. For one must secure the necessary premisses 14 VIII, 1 | useful rule, too, not to secure the admissions claimed as 15 VIII, 1 | also, wherever possible, secure the universal premiss by 16 VIII, 1 | be, supposing one had to secure the admission that the angry 17 VIII, 1 | apparent slight, and were to secure this, that "anger" is a 18 VIII, 1 | doubtful whether he wishes to secure an admission of his proposition 19 VIII, 1 | think.~Moreover, try to secure admissions by means of likeness: 20 VIII, 1 | proposition you need to secure, but rather something from 21 VIII, 1 | which they are most eager to secure. On the other hand, in dealing 22 VIII, 2 | case, when people need to secure the universal, they use 23 VIII, 3 | many steps if one wishes to secure a continuous proof from 24 VIII, 8 | put: for as a rule people secure their universal by means 25 VIII, 10| e.g. suppose some one to secure the premisses, "He who sits, 26 VIII, 11| same: for sometimes people secure more premisses than are 27 VIII, 13| the latter view, to try to secure universally the contradictory 28 VIII, 14| 14~The best way to secure training and practice in 29 VIII, 14| statements to the one you wish to secure. Moreover, as contributing 30 VIII, 14| should try, moreover, to secure from those skilled in deduction