|    Part, Question1   2, 2   |         But we should take our estimation of human goods not ~from
 2   2, 9   |  imagination of a form without estimation of ~fitness or harmfulness,
 3   2, 10  |       by means of a particular estimation, as stated in De ~Anima
 4   2, 10  |   reason is to the particular ~estimation, so is the will to the sensitive
 5   2, 19  |       speaks of good as in the estimation of God, Who ~considers principally
 6   2, 40  |        are steady in their own estimation, for they think that ~they
 7   2, 40  |    reality: but, in ~their own estimation, they are capable, for they
 8   2, 41  |        account is great in our estimation: ~and then there is "stupor,"
 9   2, 45  |      an evil to which, in the ~estimation of the daring man, the good
10   2, 78  | principle, ~for he has a false estimation of the end, which is the
11   2, 102 |        he ~presumes in his own estimation that he is clothed in the
12   2, 28  |       part of their respective estimation of another's evils, for
13   2, 111 |      to be most foolish in the estimation of men, ~because, to wit,
14   2, 130 |      is something great in his estimation, ~and he tends thereto in
15   2, 130 |       nothing is great in his ~estimation.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[132] A[
16   3, 30  |        St. Augustine]) a ~true estimation of the Blessed Virgin excludes
17   3, 84  |  according to the measure ~and estimation of the sin, and the priest
18   3, 84  |  Secondly, they erred in their estimation of the gravity of sin. For
19 Suppl, 33|      people who seem, in man's estimation, to be nigh to death. Now ~
 
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