|    Part, Question1   2, 19  |       as a man wills or acts ~intensely; and this is more on the
 2   2, 19  |     fact of intending health ~intensely, redounds, as a formal principle,
 3   2, 19  |   when a man ~intends to will intensely, or to do something intensely.
 4   2, 19  | intensely, or to do something intensely. And yet it does ~not follow
 5   2, 19  |  follow that he wills or acts intensely; because the quantity of ~
 6   2, 20  |      is evident that the more intensely ~the will tends to good
 7   2, 24  |  heart is moved more or ~less intensely by contraction and dilatation;
 8   2, 24  |   higher part of the soul ~is intensely moved to anything, the lower
 9   2, 27  |     since we do not desire so intensely that which we ~have no hope
10   2, 28  |      is evident that the more intensely a power tends to ~anything,
11   2, 28  |     he who desires ~something intensely, is moved against all that
12   2, 32  |     inclined by desire to act intensely in things that are new,"
13   2, 77  |       to be moved to anything intensely, without a ~passion being
14   2, 25  |      man loves ~his wife more intensely, but his parents with greater
15   2, 166 |       according as he is more intensely occupied with works of reason. ~
16 Suppl, 3 |      displeasure, is the more intensely displeased. But it may well
17 Suppl, 79|     act when another power is intensely ~engaged is because one
18 Suppl, 79|      will be able to ~operate intensely without thereby hindering
19 Suppl, 93| strenuous in itself, and more intensely painful; while the ~conflict
 
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