Part, Question
1 1, 53 | Let there be ~a body of a palm's length, and let there
2 1, 53 | starts is that of the one palm; and the place wherein the ~
3 1, 53 | ends is that of the other palm. Now it is clear that when
4 1, 53 | gradually quits the first palm and enters the second. ~
5 1, 53 | as the magnitude of the palm is divided, even so are
6 1, 53 | magnitude of the first palm is the beginning of a place,
7 1, 53 | the magnitude of the other palm is the limit of the same. ~
8 1, 54 | Let there be ~a body of a palm's length, and let there
9 1, 54 | starts is that of the one palm; and the place wherein the ~
10 1, 54 | ends is that of the other palm. Now it is clear that when
11 1, 54 | gradually quits the first palm and enters the second. ~
12 1, 54 | as the magnitude of the palm is divided, even so are
13 1, 54 | magnitude of the first palm is the beginning of a place,
14 1, 54 | the magnitude of the other palm is the limit of the same. ~
15 2, 77 | deserves the life and the palm." But any part ~of a virtue
16 2, 77 | deserves the life and the palm. Therefore to decline from ~
17 2, 77 | this does not ~deserve the palm, but only avoids the punishment.
18 2, 122| acquisition of the martyr's palm. Hence ~Augustine says in
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