Part, Question
1 1, 30 | does not ~signify the mere exclusion of blackness.~Aquin.: SMT
2 1, 30 | called it a community of ~exclusion, forasmuch as the definition
3 1, 30 | person" is not a name of ~exclusion nor of intention, but the
4 1, 31 | in the strict sense the exclusion ~affects the predicate.
5 1, 66 | by formlessness, ~not the exclusion of all form, but the absence
6 1, 67 | by formlessness, ~not the exclusion of all form, but the absence
7 2, 13 | were reasoning by way of ~exclusion, arguing that the stag must
8 2, 45 | to fear, but ~merely the exclusion of fear: for he is said
9 2, 102 | offered, to denote ~the exclusion of corruption. Perhaps too,
10 2, 102 | The literal reason was the exclusion of ~idolatry. For the Gentiles
11 2, 102 | introduced in the Law to the ~exclusion of idolatry: because all
12 2, 102 | and in ~the court, to the exclusion of idolatrous worship: for
13 2, 61 | honor in the Church, to the exclusion of a poor ~man more learned
14 2, 109 | deserves the anger of God and exclusion from ~seeing God, save on
15 2, 162 | it would seem ~that the exclusion of man from paradise was
16 3, 52 | of the body as ~well as exclusion from glory, as is evident
17 3, 52 | penalty of original sin as to ~exclusion from glory, yet still remain
18 3, 52 | the individual; whereas ~exclusion from God's glory was a general
19 Suppl, 37| person ordained has to the exclusion of other ~persons. But in
20 Suppl, 85| acquisition of the kingdom or exclusion from the kingdom ~(Mt. 25:
21 Suppl, 86| bestowed on men to the exclusion of the angels, as in the
22 Suppl, 87| to the kingdom, and the exclusion of others therefrom, it
|