|    Part, Question1   1, 76  |         action, as when the smith strikes ~with one hammer, there
 2   1, 75  |         action, as when the smith strikes ~with one hammer, there
 3   2, 46  |          away his pen, or a rider strikes his ~horse. Therefore anger
 4   2, 60  |            through anger, one man strikes another, justice is destroyed
 5   2, 47  |         of it, since the unwonted strikes us more, and so ~makes a
 6   2, 56  |        say properly that the hand strikes, but a man with his hand, ~
 7   2, 56  |          in justice: ~for one who strikes a prince does not receive
 8   2, 56  |       same punishment as one ~who strikes a private individual. Therefore
 9   2, 59  |      punishments; ~thus a man who strikes a prince is punished more
10   2, 59  |        punished more than one who strikes a ~private individual. Therefore
11   2, 59  |        undergo, wherefore he that strikes a prince, is not only struck ~
12   2, 60  | possession. For just as a man who strikes another, ~though he gain
13   2, 62  |          1/1~Reply OBJ 2: He that strikes a woman with child does
14   2, 63  |        power over the one whom he strikes. And since the child is
15   2, 121 |         the blow that is foreseen strikes with less force, ~and we
16   2, 152 |         sins more grievously ~who strikes his father than one who
17   2, 152 |           his father than one who strikes a stranger. Now according
18 Suppl, 24|           in which the person who strikes a cleric ~does not incur
19 Suppl, 96|    against, so that a person ~who strikes one in authority receives
20 Suppl, 96|          punishment than one who ~strikes anyone else. Now whoever
 
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