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text:physics_books_1-4 [2013/09/07 13:37] – created fredmondtext:physics_books_1-4 [2020/12/03 07:15] (current) – old revision restored (2017/12/08 14:58) 35.239.58.193
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 The Works of Aristotle, Translated into English under the Editorship of J.A. Smith and W.D. Ross (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1922). Physics, translated by R.P. Hardie and R.K. Gaye. The Works of Aristotle, Translated into English under the Editorship of J.A. Smith and W.D. Ross (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1922). Physics, translated by R.P. Hardie and R.K. Gaye.
  
-====== Aristotle: Physics ======+====== Aristotle: Physics Books 1-4 ======
  
  
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 Now we say that (a) the continuous is one or that (b) the indivisible Now we say that (a) the continuous is one or that (b) the indivisible
-is one, or (c) things are said to be 'one', when their essence is+is one, or (c ) things are said to be 'one', when their essence is
 one and the same, as 'liquor' and 'drink' one and the same, as 'liquor' and 'drink'
  
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 the limit is indivisible, the limited is not.  the limit is indivisible, the limited is not. 
  
-But if (c) all things are one in the sense of having the same definition,+But if (c ) all things are one in the sense of having the same definition,
 like 'raiment' and 'dress', then it turns out that they are maintaining like 'raiment' and 'dress', then it turns out that they are maintaining
 the Heraclitean doctrine, for it will be the same thing 'to be good' the Heraclitean doctrine, for it will be the same thing 'to be good'
text/physics_books_1-4.1378579075.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/01/15 11:14 (external edit)