Part, Question
1 1, 12 | subsisting ~natures, not residing in matter at all, which,
2 1, 12 | things which have a form residing in ~matter, still it resolves
3 1, 16 | on account of ~any truth residing in the enunciation, as though
4 1, 16 | in virtue of the truth ~residing in an intellect. Hence the
5 1, 27 | by the ~object understood residing according to its own likeness
6 1, 32 | account of some perfection residing in the number three. In
7 1, 60 | the ~natural inclination residing in the will of an intellectual
8 1, 61 | the ~natural inclination residing in the will of an intellectual
9 1, 87 | matter, anything material residing in that abstracted ~quiddity
10 1, 110| namely, by the passion residing in the sensitive appetite: ~
11 2, 53 | the intelligible species ~residing in the intellect: since
12 2, 53 | some habits which, while residing chiefly in an incorruptible ~
13 2, 53 | an intelligible species residing in the "possible" intellect,
14 2, 53 | them are intellectual, ~residing in reason itself, as stated
15 2, 4 | be perfected by a habit residing in each of them. Again,
16 2, 23 | should be described as ~residing in the will rather than
17 2, 153| the contrary, Every virtue residing in a certain power removes
18 2, 153| that, Every virtue while residing in a subject, makes that ~
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