|    Part, Question1   1, 57  |         On the contrary, No one learns what he knows already. Yet
 2   1, 59  |    comes to know what intellect learns without it, ~namely, the
 3   1, 58  |         On the contrary, No one learns what he knows already. Yet
 4   1, 60  |    comes to know what intellect learns without it, ~namely, the
 5   1, 83  | previously, but because he thus learns for the first time. For ~
 6   1, 105 |       better than the pupil who learns from him.~Aquin.: SMT FP
 7   1, 106 |    beings communicates what ~he learns to the others." Therefore
 8   1, 116 |          as is clear in one who learns (by instruction). For ~in
 9   2, 32  |         so ~far as the wonderer learns something new, i.e. that
10   2, 34  |          for instance, when one learns or wonders, as ~stated above (
11   2, 52  |     addition; thus when anyone ~learns several conclusions of geometry,
12   2, 2   |       nature: and every one who learns thus must ~needs believe,
13   2, 25  |        with, because ~"the soul learns, from those things it knows,
14   2, 26  |       In ~Evang. xi): "The soul learns from the things it knows,
15   2, 26  |        things it knows the soul learns to love what it ~knows not,
16   2, 43  |        things, for he ~not only learns, but is patient of, Divine
17   3, 12  |        1/1~Reply OBJ 2: Whoever learns from man does not receive
18   3, 20  |       be God or the Son of God, learns ~that no man, however holy,
19 Suppl, 3 |         in learning a science, ~learns the better, and, in like
20 Suppl, 89|       aspects, and that the one learns these aspects from the other.
 
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