Part, Question
1 1, 58 | comprehend their whole range, by perceiving ~whatever could be reasoned
2 1, 70 | and is most useful for perceiving objects. In reference to
3 1, 59 | comprehend their whole range, by perceiving ~whatever could be reasoned
4 1, 71 | and is most useful for perceiving objects. In reference to
5 1, 92 | though ~we might say that by perceiving its own act, it understands
6 1, 106 | does it prevent an angel perceiving what is ordered to him on
7 2, 31 | in knowing something by ~perceiving it with his sense. Because
8 2, 14 | and if he can ~succeed in perceiving its slightest details: whereas
9 2, 44 | is rendered ~incapable of perceiving Divine things, according
10 2, 121 | to ignorance, through not perceiving the greatness of the danger; ~
11 3, 36 | departure of the ~Magi, "perceiving that He was deluded by them,"
12 3, 39 | stream, in order that, on perceiving the hawk, it may plunge ~
13 3, 81 | the sacramental signs for perceiving its ~truth.~Aquin.: SMT
14 Suppl, 79| them, their attention to perceiving ~sensibles, or to contemplating
15 Suppl, 79| vultures hasten to a corpse on perceiving the odor from a very ~great
16 Suppl, 82| altogether incapable of ~perceiving a light, either this sight
17 Suppl, 95| Therefore the ~damned, perceiving God in His punishment, which
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