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Aristotle (Oxford trans. ed. Ross & Smith) · 1908

1. Classification of movements and changes.
224^b 35. Classification of changes per se.
2. Classification of movements per se.
226^b 10. The unmovable.
3. The meaning of ‘together’, ‘apart’, ‘touch’, ‘intermediate’, ‘successive’, ‘contiguous’, ‘continuous’.
4. The unity and diversity of movements.
5. Contrariety of movement.
6. Contrariety of movement and rest.
230^a 18. Contrariety of natural and unnatural movement or rest.
1, 2. Every continuum consists of continuous and divisible parts.
3. A moment is indivisible and nothing is moved, or rests, in a moment.
4. Whatever is moved is divisible.
234^b 21. Classification of movement.
235^a 13. The time, the movement, the being-in-motion, the moving body, and the sphere of movement, are all similarly divided.
5. Whatever has changed is, as soon as it has changed, in that to which it has changed.
235^b 32. That in which (directly) it has changed is indivisible.
236^a 7. In change there is a last but no first element.
6. In whatever time a thing changes (directly), it changes in any part of that time.
236^b 32. Whatever changes has changed before, and whatever has changed, before was changing.
7. The finitude or infinity of movement, of extension, and of the moved.
8. Of coming to rest, and of rest.
239^a 23. A thing that is moved in any time directly is in no part of that time in a part of the space through which it moves.
9. Refutation of the arguments against the possibility of movement.
10. That which has not parts cannot move.
241^a 26. Can change be infinite?
1. Whatever is moved is moved by something.
242^a 19. There is a first movent which is not moved by anything else.
2. The movent and the moved are together.
3. All alteration pertains to sensible qualities.
4. Comparison of movements.
5. Proportion of movements.