Part, Question
1 1, 9 | something by its movement, and attains to what it had not ~attained
2 1, 12 | is ~perfect so far as it attains to its principle. Further
3 1, 12 | non-attainment"; for he who attains to anyone is said to ~comprehend
4 1, 12 | comprehend him when he attains to him. And in this sense
5 1, 26 | virtue, so far as anyone attains to beatitude; even as to ~
6 1, 34 | But when the intellect attains to the form of truth, it ~
7 1, 42 | father who begets him, but attains to equality by ~due growth,
8 1, 43 | operation of ~knowledge and love attains to God Himself, according
9 1, 58 | something previously known one attains to ~the knowledge of what
10 1, 62 | its end. Now ~everything attains its last end by its operation.
11 1, 62 | meritorious; and so far as it attains ~the end, is the fruition
12 1, 42 | father who begets him, but attains to equality by ~due growth,
13 1, 43 | operation of ~knowledge and love attains to God Himself, according
14 1, 59 | something previously known one attains to ~the knowledge of what
15 1, 63 | its end. Now ~everything attains its last end by its operation.
16 1, 63 | meritorious; and so far as it attains ~the end, is the fruition
17 1, 78 | which reason seeks. But man attains, ~although imperfectly,
18 1, 87 | For by knowing ~itself, it attains to some knowledge of incorporeal
19 1, 92 | some degree, however small, attains to a representation of the ~
20 1, 102 | done ~by us, as a builder attains his end by building a house;
21 1, 102 | as the buyer of a field ~attains his end when he enters into
22 1, 102 | whether natural or free, attains to its divinely ~appointed
23 2, 2 | his last ~end: since man attains happiness through his soul.
24 2, 3 | is far from him; and he attains it, by grasping it in his
25 2, 3 | to ~understand that which attains to the true notion of happiness;
26 2, 3 | Wherefore the intellect attains ~perfection, in so far as
27 2, 5 | powers?~(6) Whether man attains Happiness through the action
28 2, 5 | their creation: whereas man attains if after a time. But ~the
29 2, 5 | participator, who indeed attains the object of Happiness,
30 2, 5 | man as that by which he attains the last end. Therefore
31 2, 5 | attain perfect good, but attains some imperfect ~good, although
32 2, 5 | attaining ~this good, but attains some imperfect good by its
33 2, 5 | Thes. Para. 1/1~Whether man attains happiness through the action
34 2, 5 | dispositions thereto: whereas he attains the last end ~itself through
35 2, 11 | so that the ~intellect attains this end, as the executive
36 2, 19 | genus. Moreover, everything ~attains to rectitude and goodness,
37 2, 49 | operation, to which one attains by means of operation. Wherefore
38 2, 50 | 4/5~But since no angel attains to the perfection of God,
39 2, 52 | indivisible: for whatever attains to ~that thing, is contained
40 2, 52 | thing in health; for a body attains to the nature of health,
41 2, 66 | human acts, whereby man attains ~happiness. Therefore prudence
42 2, 69 | of heaven, whereby ~man attains to excellence and abundance
43 2, 113 | which the subject moved attains to by its movement. But ~
44 2, 6 | Further, that to which man attains by hearing and seeing, seems ~
45 2, 6 | acquired by him. Now man attains to belief, both by seeing ~
46 2, 6 | hearing." Therefore man ~attains to faith by acquiring it.~
47 2, 8 | of faith, to which man attains by the gift of understanding.~
48 2, 16 | the good is that which attains its proper rule: thus we
49 2, 16 | human act is ~good, which attains reason or God Himself. Now
50 2, 16 | whereof ~we speak now, attains God. For, as we have already
51 2, 16 | Divine assistance, our ~hope attains God Himself, on Whose help
52 2, 16 | make ill use of hope which ~attains God, as neither can he make
53 2, 16 | use of moral virtue which attains ~the reason, because to
54 2, 16 | in so far as ~he already attains his proper rule, viz. God,
55 2, 16 | of which we speak now, ~attains God by leaning on His help
56 2, 16 | virtue from the fact that it attains the supreme rule of human
57 2, 16 | human actions: ~and this it attains both as its first efficient
58 2, 22 | virtue, for, since charity attains God, it unites us to God,
59 2, 22 | place belongs to that which attains God most.~Aquin.: SMT SS
60 2, 22 | of good, whereas charity ~attains God Himself that it may
61 2, 22 | prudence, ~which by itself attains reason, is more excellent
62 2, 27 | Reply OBJ 2: When each one attains to happiness he will reach
63 2, 42 | to man, although no man attains it in ~this life? For one
64 2, 43 | intellectual virtue, since it attains to God more intimately by
65 2, 43 | the gift of wisdom, man ~attains to the sonship of God.~Aquin.:
66 2, 48 | extends to more matters, and attains a higher ~end. Hence prudence
67 2, 107 | true, from the fact that it attains its rule and measure, namely,
68 2, 108 | truth accidentally, and ~attains the specific nature of a
69 2, 121 | except in so ~far as one attains the end."~Aquin.: SMT SS
70 2, 152 | member of the ~human species attains to the perfection of the
71 2, 178 | Hence it is that when man attains to the contemplation of
72 2, 181 | to a ~higher action, he attains thereby both office and
73 2, 182 | perfect in so far as it attains its ~proper end, which is
74 2, 182 | in whatever measure one attains to the perfection of Divine ~
75 2, 182 | this life, whereto a man attains by a kind of spiritual growth, ~
76 2, 182 | to ~nature, wherefore he attains to the state of nature;
77 2, 187 | degree to which another man attains ~throughout his whole life.
78 3, 7 | than that to which fire attains. Now the ~proper measure
79 3, 10 | it has a finite capacity, attains to, but does ~not comprehend,
80 3, 29 | which in some way a thing attains its ~end. Now the form of
81 3, 34 | imperfect being," which attains perfection ~successively,
82 3, 60 | that by means of which one attains to the knowledge of something
83 3, 65 | things ~spiritual. Now a man attains perfection in the corporeal
84 3, 67 | state. ~Now by Baptism a man attains only to the lowest rank
85 3, 73 | within man himself; ~and he attains it by growth: such perfection
86 Suppl, 4 | this life, sometimes ~one attains to a state in which nothing
87 Suppl, 72| perfect, since ~thereby it attains its end. Now the most perfect
88 Suppl, 89| intelligible objects whatever, it attains to the vision ~of a separate
89 Suppl, 89| Hence, when our intellect attains to the supreme abstraction
90 Suppl, 93| the operation of nature attains: moreover it is that to
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