|    Part, Question1   1, 7   |         Whether anything can be infinitude in magnitude?~(4) Whether
 2   1, 7   |  ancient philosophers attribute infinitude to the ~first principle,
 3   1, 7   |         can extend itself to an infinitude of singular things. ~Therefore
 4   1, 7   |         with them, and so on to infinitude; therefore an ~actual infinite
 5   1, 7   |         figures are infinite by infinitude of number. ~Now there are
 6   1, 13  |        otherwise we proceed to ~infinitude. Now there are some univocal
 7   1, 14  |       things, for instance, an ~infinitude of men, or an infinitude
 8   1, 14  |        infinitude of men, or an infinitude in continuous quantity,
 9   1, 14  |     continuous quantity, as an ~infinitude of air, as some of the ancients
10   1, 27  |      yet another, and so on to ~infinitude; which cannot be. Therefore
11   1, 27  |    There is no need to go on to infinitude in the divine ~processions;
12   1, 45  |       properties): and so on to infinitude.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[45] A[
13   1, 48  | addition in sin can be made ~to infinitude, whereby the aptitude of
14   1, 46  |       properties): and so on to infinitude.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[45] A[
15   1, 49  | addition in sin can be made ~to infinitude, whereby the aptitude of
16   2, 1   |      that we ~cannot proceed to infinitude in causes of movement, because
17   3, 6   |         thus on account of the ~infinitude of His power God touches
18   3, 10  |        breadth. ~Hence, because infinitude is not a substance, but
19 Suppl, 81|    which raises it to a certain infinitude above ~the power of nature,
 
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