|    Part, Question1   1, 14  |      sitting, and false when he rises up. Therefore, ~it must
 2   1, 16  |         opinion. When Socrates ~rises, the first truth remains,
 3   1, 70  |         is at its perfection it rises in the evening ~and sets
 4   1, 76  |   nobler a form is, the more it rises above ~corporeal matter,
 5   1, 77  |     soul?~(7) Whether one power rises from another?~(8) Whether
 6   1, 71  |         is at its perfection it rises in the evening ~and sets
 7   1, 75  |   nobler a form is, the more it rises above ~corporeal matter,
 8   1, 76  |     soul?~(7) Whether one power rises from another?~(8) Whether
 9   1, 78  |         Orth. ii) that "opinion rises ~from the imagination: then
10   1, 80  |      the concupiscible ~when it rises up against what hinders
11   1, 80  |       them; for instance, anger rises from sadness, ~and having
12   1, 83  |    natures of visible things it rises to a certain ~knowledge
13   2, 68  |   virtues with it, fear ~itself rises up to the doing of no good
14   2, 87  |        that ~whenever one thing rises up against another, it suffers
15   2, 87  |          Consequently, whatever rises up against an order, is
16   2, 40  |      when one part of the state rises in tumult against another
17   3, 53  |         OBJ 2: Further, whoever rises again is promoted to a higher
18   3, 53  |    advances the more the light ~rises, the more are the remaining
19   3, 53  |        it is not the ~soul that rises again, but the body, which
20   3, 66  |     hidden below, and thence he rises again renewed."~Aquin.:
21   3, 66  |    hidden below, and ~thence he rises again renewed." Therefore
22   3, 80  |      today for thee, and Christ rises again every day in thee, ~
23   3, 83  | spiritual birth, whereby Christ rises "as the day-star in ~our [
24   3, 89  |     Whether, after Penance, man rises again to equal virtue?~Aquin.:
25   3, 89  |        that, after Penance, man rises again to equal ~virtue.
26   3, 89  |    seems that a ~penitent never rises again to lesser virtue.~
27   3, 89  |  evening light. Therefore a man rises to greater grace or charity ~
28   3, 89  |        proficient charity, and ~rises again to incipient charity.
29   3, 89  |   charity. Therefore man always rises again to ~less virtue.~Aquin.:
30 Suppl, 72|      our sight . ~. . and again rises anew, as it were, and is
31 Suppl, 76|     rising, and the same thing ~rises that falls: wherefore resurrection
32 Suppl, 76|        human ~nature of one who rises again is distinct from that
33 Suppl, 76|           Therefore the man who rises again will not be the same
34 Suppl, 76|         to maintain that he who rises again is not the selfsame ~
35 Suppl, 77|  Therefore since the human body rises not again except because
36 Suppl, 77|     asserts that the same thing rises again in man as the ~second
37 Suppl, 77|        the form of bovine flesh rises again in man under the form
38 Suppl, 77|         that the flesh of an ox rises again, but the ~flesh of
39 Suppl, 77|     either the body of ~one who rises again will be very dense,
40 Suppl, 79|        the body of the man that rises again, they would be less
 
 |