Part, Question
1 1, 96 | fulness of ~beatitude, there redounds to the body a fulness of
2 1, 112 | the loss of the guarded redounds to the negligence of ~the
3 2, 19 | goodness in the intention redounds upon the act ~of the will;
4 2, 19 | intensity of the ~intention redounds upon the interior act and
5 2, 19 | intending health ~intensely, redounds, as a formal principle,
6 2, 19 | intention, as stated above, redounds, so to speak, upon the goodness ~
7 2, 21 | the member of a ~society, redounds on the whole society: thus,
8 2, 21 | himself by his ~action, redounds to the community, as stated
9 2, 47 | or another; which injury redounds to God, ~inasmuch as the
10 2, 73 | inflicted on ~such a person redounds on to God according to Zach.
11 2, 73 | because such an injury redounds to the harm of many.~Aquin.:
12 2, 87 | the punishment of ~kindred redounds somewhat upon those who
13 2, 101 | person as the image of God ~redounds somewhat to God: and yet
14 2, 103 | likeness, because disobedience redounds to the contempt of God just
15 2, 125 | armed men']." But no ~vice redounds to a man's praise. Therefore
16 Suppl, 3 | sensible hurt, than that which redounds into the ~sensitive part
17 Suppl, 3 | and likewise, that which redounds from ~the reason when it
18 Suppl, 3 | greater than that ~which redounds from the reason in considering
19 Suppl, 5 | OBJ 2: Just as inward joy redounds into the outward parts of
20 Suppl, 91| deformity in the ~visible object redounds to the imperfection of the
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