|    Part, Question1   2, 30|   alms should be given out of ill-gotten goods?~(8) Who can give
 2   2, 30|      one may give alms out of ill-gotten goods?~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
 3   2, 30|      one may give alms out of ill-gotten goods. For ~it is written (
 4   2, 30| friends by giving alms out of ill-gotten riches. ~Aquin.: SMT SS
 5   2, 30|      filthy lucre seems to be ill-gotten. But the profits ~from whoredom
 6   2, 30|      from games of chance are ill-gotten, for, as the Philosopher
 7   2, 30|      the profits from simony ~ill-gotten, since thereby the Holy
 8   2, 30|     one may give alms out of ~ill-gotten goods.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
 9   2, 30|     is lawful to give alms of ill-gotten ~goods.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
10   2, 30|   answer that, A thing may be ill-gotten in three ways. In the first ~
11   2, 30|       first ~place a thing is ill-gotten if it be due to the person
12   2, 30|      2/3~Secondly, a thing is ill-gotten, when he that has it may
13   2, 30|       3/3~Thirdly, a thing is ill-gotten, not because the taking
14   2, 76|     is bound to restore other ill-gotten goods, so is he bound to
15   2, 85|   oblations of that which is ~ill-gotten, as stated above (Q[86],
16   2, 85|      should tithes be paid on ill-gotten goods.~Aquin.: SMT SS Q[
17   2, 85|       Reply OBJ 2: Things are ill-gotten in two ways. First, because
18   2, 85| certain things are said to be ill-gotten, because they are gotten
 
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