Part, Question
1 1, 2 | causes; all of which is plainly false. Therefore it is necessary
2 1, 12 | him mouth to mouth, ~and plainly, and not by riddles and
3 1, 13 | not really Lord, which is plainly false.~Aquin.: SMT FP Q[
4 1, 13 | only an idea. But this is plainly seen to be false from the ~
5 1, 14 | this appears still more plainly if we add that the every ~
6 1, 17 | translation it is ~said more plainly, "Sense, about its proper
7 1, 43 | flame forth." Thus Augustine plainly says (De ~Trin. iv, 20): "
8 1, 45 | nothing and being; which is plainly ~false. This false imagination
9 1, 43 | flame forth." Thus Augustine plainly says (De ~Trin. iv, 20): "
10 1, 46 | nothing and being; which is plainly ~false. This false imagination
11 1, 105| Hier. vii): "Theologians plainly show that the ~orders of
12 1, 107| them, this ordering is plainly shown at once in the name
13 2, 13 | instinct." ~We see this plainly, in wonderful cases of sagacity
14 2, 41 | Already indeed ~there is plainly a fault among you, that
15 2, 172| 12:8) that he saw God "plainly and not by riddles." Secondly,
16 3, 2 | anathema." Therefore it is plainly a heresy ~condemned long
17 3, 7 | whom it is ~subjoined that "plainly and not by riddles and figures
18 3, 7 | and Moses, who saw God plainly and not by riddles, ~and
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