Chapter

1      IV|    are bodies perceptible by reason, admitting no vacuity, unbegotten,
2      IV|     therefore perceptible by reason. Empedocles of Agrigentum,
3       V|     say to him, "What is the reason, Aristotle, why you give
4      VI| parts, having the faculty of reason, of affection, and of appetite.
5      VI|  corruptible parts, but only reason. And Plato loudly maintains
6       X|    her son; and for the same reason was thought worthy of great
7      XX|   matter. For, for this very reason did he say that matter was
8    XXII|     reflection combined with reason, always exists in the same
9    XXII|     of the senses unaided by reason, since it never really is,
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