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| Alphabetical [« »] astonishment 6 at 176 attached 3 attack 18 attacking 5 attained 2 attempt 3 | Frequency [« »] 19 your 18 ambiguous 18 applies 18 attack 18 failed 18 falls 18 four | Aristotle Topics IntraText - Concordances attack |
Book, Paragraph
1 I, 5 | of argument with lines of attack upon their definitions as 2 II, 2 | instance will be a ground of attack upon the assertion. This 3 II, 4 | thesis becomes easier to attack. This commonplace rule also 4 II, 4 | For it will be easier to attack people when committed to 5 II, 4 | to a definition: for an attack is always more easily made 6 II, 6 | you may devise a line of attack by reinterpreting a term 7 II, 6 | gives an opportunity for attack. For if a necessary event 8 V, 5 | property in this way one should attack it; for oneself, one should 9 VI, 1 | difficulty. Accordingly the attack becomes easier in the latter 10 VI, 8 | term. One should always attack deficiency. For a movement 11 VI, 14| Also, even when one cannot attack the definition as a whole 12 VI, 14| with the whole, one should attack some part of it, if one 13 VI, 14| clear and get a handle for attack, and then proceed to examine 14 VI, 14| better supplied with lines of attack.~As to definitions, then, 15 VII, 5 | greatest number of points for attack, and the more plentiful 16 VII, 5 | use one set as a basis of attack upon the other except in 17 VIII, 1 | which he should make his attack; secondly, he must frame 18 VIII, 11| sometimes becomes necessary to attack the speaker and not his