Part, Question
1 1, 33 | essence of a generator to generate what is like ~itself in
2 1, 39 | when we say, "God does not generate," there is ~no adjunct to
3 1, 41 | generated. So if the Father generate the Son from His ~own essence
4 1, 42 | instance, a man is not able to generate ~from the very first. Considered
5 1, 62 | give forth heat, and to generate fire; whereas to generate ~
6 1, 62 | generate fire; whereas to generate ~flesh is beyond the natural
7 1, 76 | fact ~that "man and the sun generate man from matter." It is
8 1, 39 | when we say, "God does not generate," there is ~no adjunct to
9 1, 41 | generated. So if the Father generate the Son from His ~own essence
10 1, 42 | instance, a man is not able to generate ~from the very first. Considered
11 1, 63 | give forth heat, and to generate fire; whereas to generate ~
12 1, 63 | generate fire; whereas to generate ~flesh is beyond the natural
13 1, 75 | fact ~that "man and the sun generate man from matter." It is
14 1, 77 | another; for a ~thing cannot generate itself. Therefore the generative
15 1, 78 | for the sun alone does not generate man; but in man is the power ~
16 1, 79 | inclined to rise, and to ~generate its like. Now, the form
17 1, 98 | fitting that all ~should generate, and not only the first
18 1, 114| that "man and ~the sun generate man."~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[115]
19 1, 117| in ~the order of nature, generate their like, not through
20 1, 117| more powerful, act so as to generate their like, both without
21 1, 117| said that "man and the sun ~generate man." Moreover, elemental
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