|    Part, Question1   1, 7   |     And so assuming from these premises ~that no creature is infinite
 2   1, 12  | comprehension. Hence Dionysius premises immediately before the words ~
 3   1, 46  |       De Coelo i, text 101, he premises some opinions, as ~those
 4   1, 47  |       De Coelo i, text 101, he premises some opinions, as ~those
 5   1, 88  |        says this in doubt; and premises, "Let every one ~take, as
 6   2, 13  |        of the necessity of the premises. Therefore ~it seems that
 7   2, 95  |    first, as a conclusion from premises, secondly, by way of ~determination
 8   2, 95  |    nature, as conclusions from premises, e.g. just buyings and sellings, ~
 9   2, 95  |      not very remote from its ~premises. Wherefore men easily agreed
10   2, 28  |     cause. For this reason ~he premises that "peace is tranquillity
11   2, 46  |       opinion through probable premises, and this belongs to ~"dialectics."
12   2, 46  |      sometimes from necessary ~premises, sometimes from probabilities,
13   2, 53  |     reason proceeds from false premises, that appear to ~be true,
14   2, 96  |        thus in a syllogism the premises are more weighty than ~the
15   2, 96  |       OBJ 2: In syllogisms the premises are of greater weight, since ~
16   2, 169 |       as the conclusion to the premises in a syllogism, and a ~syllogism
17   2, 169 |         and a ~syllogism whose premises are necessary always leads
18   2, 172 |    based on indirect [*"Quia"] premises or than opinion, ~because
19   2, 178 |      by a process from several premises. Accordingly, then, the ~
20   3, 78  |       This is what the Apostle premises when he says (Rm. 9:15): ~"
21 Suppl, 54| Objection proceeds from ~false premises.~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[54] A[
 
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