Part, Question
1 1, 84 | tongue being vitiated by ill humors. Sense, however, may be
2 1, 101 | the consumption of the ~humors, and by old age, as above
3 1, 110 | movement of animal spirits and humors. Hence Aristotle says (De ~
4 1, 110 | commotion of the spirits ~and humors may be so great that such
5 1, 110 | natural disturbance of the humors, and sometimes also by the ~
6 1, 110 | movement of the spirits and humors, as above explained.~Aquin.:
7 1, 110 | changed when the spirits and humors are ~disturbed; as for example,
8 1, 110 | can move the spirits and ~humors from within, as above remarked,
9 1, 110 | movement of the spirits and humors an angel ~can do something
10 2, 46 | temperament; and of all the humors, the bile moves quickest;
11 2, 54 | habits. Thus, if we take the humors as being parts of the human
12 2, 72 | disorder in the bodily ~humors; and then there is sickness.
13 2, 72 | exhaustion of the digestive humors; and that he desire too
14 2, 73 | due commensuration ~of the humors, yet so that something remains
15 2, 73 | the due commensuration of humors or ~members. The same applies
16 2, 73 | certain ~commensuration of the humors, in keeping with an animal'
17 2, 73 | causes the disorder in the humors, the ~graver is the sickness:
18 2, 77 | body's parts, so that the humors and ~members of the human
19 2, 80 | of the vital spirits or ~humors can be procured by the demons,
20 2, 82 | positive, viz. the very humors that are inordinately disposed, ~
21 2, 102 | arises from corruption of the humors, which break out ~externally
22 2, 102 | dry, engenders ~corrupt humors in the human body. Hence
23 2, 102 | because in such ~animals the humors are well absorbed, and their
24 2, 6 | the due equilibrium of the humors is essential to the ~species
25 2, 6 | of a disturbance in ~the humors: though we can assign as
26 2, 93 | there is ~abundance of cold humors dreams that he is in the
27 2, 145 | is in the air, lest the humors be parched ~within. Hence,
28 3, 15 | nor those of the bodily humors, nor those of the vegetative
29 3, 54 | blood is one of the four humors. Consequently, if Christ ~
30 3, 54 | reason He also had the other humors, from which ~corruption
31 3, 54 | the bile, "with which four humors the ~body is tempered, as
32 3, 66 | was ~composed of the four humors.~Aquin.: SMT TP Q[66] A[
33 3, 74 | be composed of the four humors, as Pope Innocent III says
34 Suppl, 43| and ~fluctuation of the humors is calmed, man reaches the
35 Suppl, 62| exceeded, for in ~women the humors are more abundant, wherefore
36 Suppl, 77| nails will?~(3) Whether the humors will?~(4) Whether whatever
37 Suppl, 77| superfluities but with ~goodly humors.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[80] A[
38 Suppl, 77| Thes. Para. 1/1~Whether the humors will rise again in the body?~
39 Suppl, 77| It would seem that the humors will not rise again in the
40 Suppl, 77| Para. 1/1~OBJ 2: Further, humors are intended to make up
41 Suppl, 77| will not rise ~again with humors.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[80] A[
42 Suppl, 77| the rational soul. Now the humors are still in ~process of
43 Suppl, 77| rational soul. Therefore the humors will not rise again.~Aquin.:
44 Suppl, 77| Now this applies to the humors, as appears from ~the statement
45 Suppl, 77| the homogeneous parts of humors." Therefore the humors will
46 Suppl, 77| of humors." Therefore the humors will rise again in ~the
47 Suppl, 77| in like manner the ~other humors.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[80] A[
48 Suppl, 77| the blood and the other humors which nature has directed
49 Suppl, 77| now by them, so will the humors be in the body not ~to make
50 Suppl, 77| mixed body, so too are the humors in ~relation to the members.
51 Suppl, 77| the universe, so too the humors ~belong to the perfection
52 Suppl, 77| to its mode, so too the humors are in ~some way perfected
53 Suppl, 77| humor to the first radical humors ~results in the whole mixture
54 Suppl, 78| of a ~child, wherein the humors have not yet reached their
55 Suppl, 79| human body the blood and humors will rise again, ~as stated
56 Suppl, 79| through the antipathy of the humors. Therefore the ~bodies of
57 Suppl, 79| remove passibility from the humors while leaving their ~nature
58 Suppl, 82| 3m] than the bones, the humors than the flesh or nerves.
59 Suppl, 93| capable of transforming ~the humors of the soil into its own
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