Part, Question 
 1   1, 9  |  Further, to approach and to recede signify movement. But these ~
 2   1, 9  |     to approach to us, or to recede from ~us, when we receive
 3   1, 10 |   eternity. ~Now some things recede from permanence of being,
 4   1, 10 |      corruptible. But others recede less from permanence of
 5   1, 18 |    it, for in so far as they recede from such movement, so far ~
 6   1, 18 |    movement, so far ~do they recede from their natural disposition.
 7   1, 88 |       in ~proportion as they recede from the intellectual power
 8   1, 118| nothing in man which may not recede or be repaired: for what
 9   1, 118|   man from his food can both recede and be repaired. If therefore
10   2, 35 |    certain likeness, e.g. to recede from ~something white, and
11   2, 44 |      fear, the vital spirits recede from outer to the inner
12   2, 69 |    the motives for which men recede from them. For there ~are
13   2, 69 |      For there ~are some who recede from acts of justice, and
14   2, 69 |     their fill. Some, again, recede from works of mercy, lest ~
15   2, 35 | another's will from which we recede, and in this ~respect it
16   2, 121| strongly impelled to fall or recede. Now man is ~impelled to
17   2, 121|      Now man is ~impelled to recede from that which is in accordance
18   2, 121|   greatest power to make man recede from the good of ~reason:
 
  |