Part, Question
1 1, 13 | moreover, He cannot be felt, ~so as to be pointed out;
2 1, 85 | slight internal movements are felt ~more than in wakefulness,
3 1, 87 | most ~sensible are not most felt by us, comes from sense
4 1, 94 | their nakedness, for they felt the impulse of disobedience
5 2, 25 | passions, concupiscence is felt most; and for this ~reason
6 2, 28 | that ~it seems as though he felt the good or suffered the
7 2, 29 | because hatred is more keenly felt than love. For, since ~the
8 2, 29 | been received it is not felt so keenly as in the ~moment
9 2, 29 | greater, ~is nevertheless not felt so much as the heat of tertian
10 2, 29 | For ~this reason, love is felt more keenly in the absence
11 2, 29 | Trin. x, 12) that "love is felt more keenly when ~we lack
12 2, 29 | that which is hated is felt more keenly than the becomingness
13 2, 31 | griefs ~of this kind, are felt the more, and consequently
14 2, 32 | good, in ~so far as it is felt, or perceived in any way.
15 2, 35 | De Trin. x, 12), "love is felt ~more keenly, when we lack
16 2, 35 | love is the more keenly felt on account of that which
17 2, 35 | thing is the more it is felt. And then ~too, accidentally,
18 2, 36 | Therefore pain or sorrow is felt for the loss of good ~rather
19 2, 38 | the body, so far as it is felt, ~is itself a cause of pleasure,
20 2, 46 | anger, that "hatred may be felt towards a class, as we ~
21 2, 48 | hindrance to anger. But pleasure felt in taking ~vengeance follows
22 2, 48 | OBJ 1: "Love itself is not felt so keenly as in the absence
23 2, 48 | love and makes it to be felt more.~Aquin.: SMT FS Q[48]
24 2, 48 | greater when it is first ~felt; and our estimate thereof
25 2, 82 | impetuous in moving, and is felt ~most, as stated above (
26 2, 102 | is ~first diagnosed and felt. In this rite, moreover,
27 2, 95 | bodily ~medicine, or else she felt herself suddenly cured by
28 2, 121 | burning coal, said that he felt ~as though he were walking
29 2, 162 | and thus death cannot be felt, since it is the ~privation
30 3, 12 | heavenly bodies, for ~He felt the heat in summer and the
31 3, 27 | which ~he (the Apostle) felt the "sting of the flesh."
32 3, 37 | called 'holy,' because He felt no contagion of earthly
33 3, 46 | purified: ~and the earth felt a like benefit, for it was
34 3, 46 | suffering, it would have felt less pain ~than Christ's
35 3, 50 | to suppose that Christ so felt ~death that He lost His
36 3, 77 | bodies, they could ~not be felt; for a thing is felt from
37 3, 77 | be felt; for a thing is felt from the senses being changed
38 Suppl, 3 | some hurts are ~more keenly felt than the hurt of sin, e.g.
39 Suppl, 3 | sometimes not so keenly felt as the effect of ~the past
40 Suppl, 71| be so little as not to be felt, and thus would ~no longer
41 Appen1, 2| than any pain that can be felt, seen or ~conceived in this
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