1-500 | 501-1000 | 1001-1197
Part, Question
1 1, 1 | conclusion: that the earth, for instance, is ~round: the astronomer
2 1, 3 | a certain parallel. For ~instance the act of the eye is to
3 1, 3 | of any of the parts; for instance, if the whole volume of ~
4 1, 6 | else as the end. Thus, for instance, the first perfection of
5 1, 6 | the separate ideas; for instance, that Socrates is called
6 1, 7 | species of ~it; thus, for instance, it is against the nature
7 1, 7 | its mode of ~being; for instance, a day is reduced to act
8 1, 10 | necessary things; as, for instance, all principles of demonstration
9 1, 10 | part of the ~other; for instance two days or two hours cannot
10 1, 11 | form of the whole; as, for instance, every part of water ~is
11 1, 11 | belonging to the whole; as, for instance, no part of a house ~is
12 1, 11 | be predicated of God; for instance, that He is incorporeal
13 1, 12 | not ~comprehended; as, for instance, if anyone knows by scientific ~
14 1, 12 | know infinitely; thus, for instance, a person can have a ~probable
15 1, 12 | reason cannot reach, ~as, for instance, that God is Three and One.~
16 1, 13 | whereby a thing is; as, for instance, whiteness signifies that ~
17 1, 13 | intended to signify, as ~for instance, this name "stone" [lapis]
18 1, 13 | belongs to creatures; for ~instance, wisdom in creatures is
19 1, 13 | other ~perfections; as, for instance, by the term "wise" applied
20 1, 13 | the ~whole species, as for instance the sun is the cause of
21 1, 13 | to that first. Thus, for ~instance, "healthy" applied to animals
22 1, 13 | not also essentially, for instance as "healthy" ~is applied
23 1, 13 | relative from relation; for instance ~lord from lordship, as
24 1, 13 | both ~extremes, as when for instance a habitude exists between
25 1, 13 | related to them. ~Likewise for instance, "on the right" is not applied
26 1, 13 | no change in Him, as for instance when we say, "Lord, Thou
27 1, 13 | stone from its act, as for ~instance that it hurts the foot [
28 1, 13 | signification of the name. For instance ~this name "lion" is properly
29 1, 13 | nature of a lion, as for instance by courage, or ~strength,
30 1, 13 | way of ~similitude; as for instance a person can be called "
31 1, 13 | incommunicable; as, for instance, perhaps ~the Tetragrammaton
32 1, 13 | in other senses; as, for instance, "being" which is ~applied
33 1, 13 | signify different things; for instance, if one meant to signify
34 1, 14 | it ~is knowable; as, for instance, a demonstrable proposition
35 1, 14 | forward some examples, as, for instance, that if the centre knew
36 1, 14 | some one thing; if, for instance, we understand the parts
37 1, 14 | measure of them; as, for instance, ~a house is midway between
38 1, 14 | infinite number of things, for instance, an ~infinitude of men,
39 1, 14 | of certain knowledge, for instance to the sense of sight, as
40 1, 14 | distinction does not hold, for instance, if I said, "A black crow
41 1, 14 | manner of knowing - as, for ~instance, if a builder consider a
42 1, 16 | wherein good is not, as, for instance, in mathematics. ~Therefore
43 1, 17 | of the ~agent. Hence, for instance, it happens that on account
44 1, 17 | being as of not-being, for instance ~not-seeing or not-sitting.
45 1, 19 | and principal object, for instance the sight to ~color, since
46 1, 20 | that regard evil; thus, for instance, ~joy is prior to sorrow,
47 1, 21 | ultimate end. We may say, for ~instance, that to possess hands is
48 1, 22 | regard to oneself - as for instance, a ~man is said to be prudent,
49 1, 22 | particular cause; as, for instance, wood may be prevented from
50 1, 22 | be ~foreseen. Thus, for instance, the meeting of two servants,
51 1, 23 | of that other thing. For instance, a ~builder thinks out the
52 1, 24 | inscribed in a book; ~as, for instance, soldiers, or counsellors,
53 1, 25 | greater its ~power to act. For instance, the hotter a thing is,
54 1, 25 | with the subject, as, for instance, ~that a man is a donkey.~
55 1, 25 | active power is founded; for instance, the power of giving ~warmth
56 1, 25 | is impossible - as, for instance, if ~we were to say that
57 1, 25 | past thing itself, as, for instance, the ~running of Socrates;
58 1, 25 | actually ~takes place - as, for instance, from the seed of man, a
59 1, 25 | essence of it - thus, for instance, to be rational pertains
60 1, 27 | exterior effect, as, for ~instance, like heat from the agent
61 1, 28 | logical relation only; as, for instance, when reason compares man
62 1, 28 | real and logical; as, for ~instance, a tunic and a garment;
63 1, 29 | thing of nature"; as, for instance, this particular man is
64 1, 30 | undivided reality: thus, for instance, "one" ~applied to man signifies
65 1, 31 | given "suppositum"; as, for ~instance, "white" to man, as when
66 1, 31 | the ~predicate, as, for instance, "The Trinity is God Who
67 1, 31 | contained in that term: for ~instance, from the premiss, "Man
68 1, 32 | predicated of the notions: for instance, we do ~not say that paternity
69 1, 32 | something against faith; as for instance if ~anyone said that Samuel
70 1, 33 | reason only of a trace, for ~instance of irrational creatures,
71 1, 33 | notified by negations; as, for instance, a point is defined as what
72 1, 33 | nature to have it; ~as, for instance, if a stone be called a
73 1, 33 | members of its genus; as for instance when a mole is called blind.
74 1, 36 | by their matter; as for instance ~one smith produces many
75 1, 36 | cause when we say, for instance, that the artisan works
76 1, 36 | the thing ~done; as, for instance, when we say, the artisan
77 1, 36 | whereby it acts; as, for instance, ~fire heats through heat.
78 1, 37 | effect; so we can say, for instance, that a tree flowers by
79 1, 39 | regards the meaning; for instance, "I and the Father ~are
80 1, 39 | determination of the ~form, as, for instance, when we say, "Peter is
81 1, 39 | the force of two, as, for ~instance, "he is a man of blood" -
82 1, 39 | designate the essence; as, for instance, the Father is a person
83 1, 39 | this ~proposition, for instance, "God begotten does not
84 1, 39 | to the ~persons; as, for instance, if we were to say, "the
85 1, 39 | this word, "God," as, for instance, we can say "God is ~begotten"
86 1, 39 | explain them: thus, for instance, abstract ~names should
87 1, 39 | so that we can say for instance, "God is three ~persons";
88 1, 39 | proceeds from power; for instance, we say that ~the strong
89 1, 39 | taken personally; as, for instance, were we to say, "The Son
90 1, 40 | the intellect; ~as, for instance, if we abstract the form
91 1, 40 | persons remains; as, for instance, if the fact of the Father'
92 1, 41 | natural necessity - as, for instance, death, ~old age, and like
93 1, 42 | a certain time; as, for instance, a man is not able to generate ~
94 1, 42 | nature. In creatures, ~for instance, we see that the more perfect
95 1, 44 | regards certain accidents, for instance, in relation to ~rarefaction
96 1, 44 | accidental changes, as for instance, affinity, ~discord, intellect,
97 1, 44 | determinate mode of being; for instance, man ~by whiteness. Each
98 1, 44 | self-existing species, as for ~instance, a "per se" man, and a "
99 1, 45 | first ~principles; as, for instance, that God could make the
100 1, 46 | for a certain effect; for instance, that a stone be ~moved
101 1, 46 | regards efficient ~causes; for instance, if all the causes thus
102 1, 47 | the agent. Democritus, for instance, and all the ancient natural ~
103 1, 47 | case of an animal, for instance, its goodness would be taken
104 1, 48 | belonging to something else; for instance, a man would be evil ~who
105 1, 48 | sense, is an evil; as, for ~instance, the privation of sight
106 1, 48 | ever same proportion ~(for instance, half of half, or a third
107 1, 49 | of ~another form; as, for instance, when on the form of fire
108 1, 49 | effect of the fire - as, for instance, ~that it fails to heat -
109 1, 49 | another by accident: for ~instance, the exterior surrounding
110 1, 49 | thing was evil; as, for instance, if one should ~say that
111 1, 50 | of diverse degrees; for instance, if we say that fire ~is
112 1, 51 | that nature; thus, for instance, to have wings, because
113 1, 53 | some (disposition), for ~instance, in whiteness, is to be
114 1, 60 | safeguard the whole; as, for ~instance, the hand is without deliberation
115 1, 63 | will of his superior; for instance, the soldier's will, according
116 1, 65 | respects, such as place, for instance, the heavenly bodies; or ~
117 1, 66 | opinion. Augustine for ~instance (Gen. ad lit. i, 15), believes
118 1, 67 | enduring; as when, for instance, water is converted into
119 1, 70 | question. Anaxagoras, ~for instance, as Augustine mentions (
120 1, 72 | The life ~of plants, for instance, is very imperfect and difficult
121 1, 74 | superfluous. Light, for instance, stands to the luminaries
122 1, 74 | important part, the day. And ~instance of this is found in the
123 1, 75 | gives ~what it has not; for instance, what is not hot does not
124 1, 75 | particular man, Socrates, ~for instance, is not a soul, but composed
125 1, 75 | its nature absolutely: for instance, ~it knows a stone absolutely
126 1, 76 | is to be ~attributed: for instance, that whereby a body is
127 1, 76 | virtue of its whole self, for instance, as ~a physician heals;
128 1, 76 | intellects ~and one sense - for instance, if two men had one eye -
129 1, 76 | absolutely one; as, for instance, "a ~white man." If, therefore,
130 1, 76 | some actual ~being - for instance, fire or air, or something
131 1, 76 | of the mixed body; for instance, the form of a stone, or
132 1, 76 | subtle body, to fire, for instance, and ~not to a mixed body,
133 1, 76 | provided with a ~covering, for instance, with hair instead of clothes,
134 1, 76 | disposition. ~The artisan, for instance, for the form of the saw
135 1, 76 | parts of an animal, for instance, the eye, hand, flesh, ~
136 1, 77 | substantial form of the agent (for instance, heat compared to the form
137 1, 77 | to a passive quality, for instance, to something ~colored,
138 1, 37 | effect; so we can say, for instance, that a tree flowers by
139 1, 39 | regards the meaning; for instance, "I and the Father ~are
140 1, 39 | determination of the ~form, as, for instance, when we say, "Peter is
141 1, 39 | the force of two, as, for ~instance, "he is a man of blood" -
142 1, 39 | designate the essence; as, for instance, the Father is a person
143 1, 39 | this ~proposition, for instance, "God begotten does not
144 1, 39 | to the ~persons; as, for instance, if we were to say, "the
145 1, 39 | this word, "God," as, for instance, we can say "God is ~begotten"
146 1, 39 | explain them: thus, for instance, abstract ~names should
147 1, 39 | so that we can say for instance, "God is three ~persons";
148 1, 39 | proceeds from power; for instance, we say that ~the strong
149 1, 39 | taken personally; as, for instance, were we to say, "The Son
150 1, 40 | the intellect; ~as, for instance, if we abstract the form
151 1, 40 | persons remains; as, for instance, if the fact of the Father'
152 1, 41 | natural necessity - as, for instance, death, ~old age, and like
153 1, 42 | a certain time; as, for instance, a man is not able to generate ~
154 1, 42 | nature. In creatures, ~for instance, we see that the more perfect
155 1, 45 | regards certain accidents, for instance, in relation to ~rarefaction
156 1, 45 | accidental changes, as for instance, affinity, ~discord, intellect,
157 1, 45 | determinate mode of being; for instance, man ~by whiteness. Each
158 1, 45 | self-existing species, as for ~instance, a "per se" man, and a "
159 1, 46 | first ~principles; as, for instance, that God could make the
160 1, 47 | for a certain effect; for instance, that a stone be ~moved
161 1, 47 | regards efficient ~causes; for instance, if all the causes thus
162 1, 48 | the agent. Democritus, for instance, and all the ancient natural ~
163 1, 48 | case of an animal, for instance, its goodness would be taken
164 1, 49 | belonging to something else; for instance, a man would be evil ~who
165 1, 49 | sense, is an evil; as, for ~instance, the privation of sight
166 1, 49 | ever same proportion ~(for instance, half of half, or a third
167 1, 50 | of ~another form; as, for instance, when on the form of fire
168 1, 50 | effect of the fire - as, for instance, ~that it fails to heat -
169 1, 50 | another by accident: for ~instance, the exterior surrounding
170 1, 50 | thing was evil; as, for instance, if one should ~say that
171 1, 51 | of diverse degrees; for instance, if we say that fire ~is
172 1, 52 | that nature; thus, for instance, to have wings, because
173 1, 54 | some (disposition), for ~instance, in whiteness, is to be
174 1, 61 | safeguard the whole; as, for ~instance, the hand is without deliberation
175 1, 64 | will of his superior; for instance, the soldier's will, according
176 1, 66 | respects, such as place, for instance, the heavenly bodies; or ~
177 1, 67 | opinion. Augustine for ~instance (Gen. ad lit. i, 15), believes
178 1, 68 | enduring; as when, for instance, water is converted into
179 1, 71 | question. Anaxagoras, ~for instance, as Augustine mentions (
180 1, 71 | The life ~of plants, for instance, is very imperfect and difficult
181 1, 73 | superfluous. Light, for instance, stands to the luminaries
182 1, 73 | important part, the day. And ~instance of this is found in the
183 1, 74 | gives ~what it has not; for instance, what is not hot does not
184 1, 74 | particular man, Socrates, ~for instance, is not a soul, but composed
185 1, 74 | its nature absolutely: for instance, ~it knows a stone absolutely
186 1, 75 | is to be ~attributed: for instance, that whereby a body is
187 1, 75 | virtue of its whole self, for instance, as ~a physician heals;
188 1, 75 | intellects ~and one sense - for instance, if two men had one eye -
189 1, 75 | absolutely one; as, for instance, "a ~white man." If, therefore,
190 1, 75 | some actual ~being - for instance, fire or air, or something
191 1, 75 | of the mixed body; for instance, the form of a stone, or
192 1, 75 | subtle body, to fire, for instance, and ~not to a mixed body,
193 1, 75 | provided with a ~covering, for instance, with hair instead of clothes,
194 1, 75 | disposition. ~The artisan, for instance, for the form of the saw
195 1, 75 | parts of an animal, for instance, the eye, hand, flesh, ~
196 1, 76 | substantial form of the agent (for instance, heat compared to the form
197 1, 76 | to a passive quality, for instance, to something ~colored,
198 1, 77 | some ~such intention, for instance, that something is harmful
199 1, 77 | under the same sense; for ~instance, by discerning white from
200 1, 78 | object to a power, as, for instance, of the visible ~in act
201 1, 80 | taken from its act; for instance, sight from seeing. ~Now
202 1, 80 | and terminate in them; for instance, anger rises from sadness, ~
203 1, 80 | the estimative power; for instance, a sheep, esteeming ~the
204 1, 80 | irascible appetites: for instance, ~the sheep, fearing the
205 1, 81 | or so well ~attained: for instance, food is said to be necessary
206 1, 81 | the intellect. Thus, for instance, I might say that hearing ~
207 1, 81 | First, as an end; ~for instance, when we say that the end
208 1, 81 | that common notion. For instance, ~because sight regards
209 1, 82 | have natural habits - for instance, ~to assent to first principles:
210 1, 83 | sensible than in another: ~for instance, whiteness may be of great
211 1, 83 | themselves immovable; for ~instance, though Socrates be not
212 1, 83 | individual result, ~for instance, of bone, flesh, and the
213 1, 83 | devoid of knowledge; why, for instance, if by fire the ~soul knows
214 1, 83 | is to that ~action: for instance, if upward motion is from
215 1, 83 | knows naturally; that, ~for instance, the whole is larger than
216 1, 83 | sense is ~wanting also: for instance, a man who is born blind
217 1, 83 | is such essentially; for instance, that which is on fire ~
218 1, 83 | themselves without matter; for instance, the ~form of a man which
219 1, 83 | the corporeal organ, for instance ~in a case of frenzy; or
220 1, 83 | from corporeal matter: for ~instance, it belongs to the nature
221 1, 84 | judgment will be true: for instance, if ~taste perceived only
222 1, 84 | remains ~in the agent; for instance, to see and to understand;
223 1, 84 | an external object; for instance, to heat and to cut; and ~
224 1, 84 | the nature itself - for ~instance, animality or humanity as
225 1, 84 | intention of nature: for instance, ~act considered absolutely
226 1, 84 | the same subject, as, for instance, ~color and smell are in
227 1, 84 | the definition, when, for instance, the definition ~of a thing
228 1, 84 | things incompatible; as, for instance, to ~describe anything as "
229 1, 86 | of the same order, for ~instance, of the same kind of cause;
230 1, 87 | intelligible objects, as, for instance, we ~understand conclusions
231 1, 89 | their ~composition. For instance, a man and a horse differ
232 1, 89 | it ~called a being; for instance, whiteness is called a being,
233 1, 90 | contraries - thus, for ~instance, the pupil of the eye is
234 1, 90 | angels' power, as, for instance, raising the dead, or giving
235 1, 90 | artist cares not: thus, for instance, when man makes himself
236 1, 92 | something else; ~wherefore, for instance, an egg, however much like
237 1, 92 | the image of another. For instance, a ~worm, though from man
238 1, 92 | indirectly and mediately; as, for instance, when anyone ~sees a man
239 1, 93 | clearly is God seen in it; for instance, a man is ~seen more clearly
240 1, 93 | individual facts, as for instance the ~number of pebbles in
241 1, 94 | but not as to the act; for instance, penance, which is sorrow
242 1, 95 | not be done by man; for instance, the rapid ~gathering together
243 1, 102 | their ~being governed; for instance, if we enter a well-ordered
244 1, 104 | everything wrought; for instance, that it is not ~fire that
245 1, 104 | is the thing wrought, for instance a chest or a bed; and ~applies
246 1, 104 | Him, ~when He chooses, for instance by producing the effects
247 1, 104 | substance of the deed, for instance, if two bodies occupy the
248 1, 105 | more perfect body - for instance, the less hot is made ~hotter
249 1, 105 | out the object, as, for instance, one who proves something
250 1, 105 | perfect knowledge." For instance, we might say ~that corporeal
251 1, 106 | something else, as, for instance, either to the performing
252 1, 106 | but is only a speech; for ~instance, when one says to another: "
253 1, 107 | if several angels (for instance, three or four), are ~of
254 1, 107 | adequate thereto; as, for instance, ~when we wish properly
255 1, 109 | result from the forms; for instance, the ebb and flow of the
256 1, 109 | call it a miracle, as, for instance, when anyone is cured of
257 1, 111 | are ~in attendance - for instance, those who are placed at
258 1, 112 | genera" of things, for ~instance, the "Powers" to coerce
259 1, 112 | consistent with childhood; for instance to ward off the demons, ~
260 1, 112 | in some particular, ~for instance by not preventing him from
261 1, 113 | knowledge; a good end, when, for instance, one desires to ~know of
262 1, 113 | cause of that effect: for instance, we might say that he who ~
263 1, 113 | operation of the demons; for instance, that the human body be
264 1, 114 | by ~universal causes, for instance in this plant, and in that
265 1, 114 | would in no way suffice: for instance, that a man in a ~state
266 1, 114 | follows of necessity. For instance, that some terrestrial body
267 1, 115 | is directly intended. For instance, if two servants are sent
268 1, 115 | so can it effect ~it; for instance, someone who knows a place
269 1, 116 | nothing therefrom: for ~instance, if one were to speak Greek
270 1, 116 | acquisition ~of science: for instance, he may put before him certain
271 1, 117 | from these elements - for instance by putrefaction. But in
272 1, 117 | scope its action has: for ~instance, the hotter a body, the
273 1, 118 | species in matter" - for instance, wood or ~stone - "so in
274 2, 1 | of what he is doing; for instance when one moves one's ~foot
275 2, 1 | elicited by the will, for ~instance the very act of willing.
276 2, 1 | directed or led by another, for instance, when he acts at ~another'
277 2, 2 | are necessary to him; for instance, wisdom, bodily health,
278 2, 2 | surpassed by many animals; for instance, by the ~elephant in longevity,
279 2, 3 | is often interrupted; for instance, by sleep, or some other ~
280 2, 3 | genus of its terminus, for ~instance, "alteration" to the genus "
281 2, 3 | Metaphysics (i, 2). For instance, if a ~man, knowing the
282 2, 4 | already gained; as a ship, for instance, after ~arrival in port.
283 2, 4 | promised the saints; for instance, food ~and drink, wealth
284 2, 5 | either by forgetfulness, for instance, when ~knowledge is lost
285 2, 5 | action on something else: for instance a hot ~thing heats through
286 2, 6 | as this other acts; for ~instance, heating from heat. Secondly,
287 2, 6 | with an interior act; for instance, when one wills not ~to
288 2, 6 | proceed from the will: for instance, when a man with a ~heavy
289 2, 6 | in regard to action, for instance, when ~one wishes to be
290 2, 6 | whatever be ~added to them; for instance, a cold thing, or a white
291 2, 6 | but without sadness: for instance, a man may kill a foe, whom
292 2, 6 | that ~circumstance; for instance, a man, after taking proper
293 2, 7 | means of the other; for instance, a body receives color ~
294 2, 7 | special circumstance; for instance, that a man ~walk fast or
295 2, 8 | power regards opposites; for instance, sight regards white and
296 2, 8 | are on an equality; for instance, sound and color are different ~
297 2, 8 | referred to the same power; for instance, the power of ~sight perceives
298 2, 9 | not to will something; for instance, ~when the body is chilled,
299 2, 10 | be natural to them, for instance, that ~the dead should rise
300 2, 12 | which may be intended. ~For instance, the acquiring of wine and
301 2, 13 | conditionally; as, for ~instance, "If he runs, he is in motion."~
302 2, 14 | through the senses - for instance, that this is ~bread or
303 2, 14 | through practical science; for instance, that adultery is ~forbidden
304 2, 15 | some passion; desire, for instance, or anger. But irrational ~
305 2, 16 | their members to action; for instance, their ~feet, to walk; their
306 2, 18 | is said to be ~evil: for instance if it lacks the quantity
307 2, 18 | good in its genus"; for ~instance, "to make use of what is
308 2, 18 | its ~specific form (for instance, if instead of a man, something
309 2, 18 | is from ~the object, for instance, "to take what belongs to
310 2, 18 | disaccord with reason, for instance, to appropriate another'
311 2, 18 | some particular end; for instance, to give alms from ~vainglory.
312 2, 18 | contained under its genus; for instance, when a man commits a ~theft
313 2, 18 | infinite number of ends: for instance, theft can be ordained to
314 2, 18 | according to its species; for instance, to give alms to a person
315 2, 18 | according to its species; for instance, to ~steal, which is to
316 2, 18 | the ~order of reason; for instance, to pick up a straw from
317 2, 18 | disaccord with reason: for instance, reason forbids damage to
318 2, 18 | malice or goodness; for instance, if what is ~taken belongs
319 2, 19 | the act of the will: for instance, if a man will, ~when he
320 2, 19 | a higher authority: for ~instance, if a provincial governor
321 2, 19 | some species of malice. For instance, if a man's reason err in
322 2, 19 | indifferent in ~itself, for instance to raise a straw from the
323 2, 19 | apprehending it as such. ~For instance, to refrain from fornication
324 2, 19 | some species of evil; for instance, as being something contrary ~
325 2, 19 | reason, from being evil. For instance, if erring reason tell a
326 2, 19 | referred to an evil end, for instance, to vainglory ~or covetousness,
327 2, 19 | of ~the thing willed: for instance, when a man wills to fast
328 2, 19 | preceding act of the will; for instance, a man may will to do ~something,
329 2, 19 | proportionate to that end; for instance, if a man ~were to give
330 2, 19 | are unable to remove: for instance, a man intends to go to ~
331 2, 19 | materially speaking: for instance, ~when a man does not will
332 2, 19 | contrary ~to filial piety: for instance, when God wills the death
333 2, 20 | point of number; if, for instance, a man ~wishes to do something
334 2, 20 | of extension: when, for instance, a man wishes to do something
335 2, 20 | was good, to be evil. For instance, if a man ~give an alms
336 2, 20 | both good and bad: for ~instance, a man may go to church
337 2, 21 | proper to the ~art; for instance, if an artist produce a
338 2, 22 | diseases (Tusc. iv. 5)] for instance, ~disturbances; by some,
339 2, 22 | natural disposition; for instance, when they become hot or ~
340 2, 22 | sensitive apprehension; for instance, if the ~eye be wearied
341 2, 22 | change of the ~organ; for instance, "anger is" said to be "
342 2, 23 | differ in species; for ~instance, to see, and to hear. But
343 2, 23 | concupiscible power; for instance, joy, ~sorrow, love, hatred,
344 2, 23 | good and evil; take, for instance, love and hatred, ~joy and
345 2, 27 | is gained; ~pleasure, for instance, or money, or such like.~
346 2, 27 | without ~being known, for instance, the sciences; for since "
347 2, 27 | knowledge of them: for ~instance, they know that rhetoric
348 2, 27 | he loves ~in himself: for instance, if a good singer love a
349 2, 28 | first is ~real union; for instance, when the beloved is present
350 2, 29 | of another ~man: as, for instance, when a man wishes to remain
351 2, 29 | hostile to the ~animal - for instance, a wolf in regard to a sheep.
352 2, 30 | successively; so that, for instance, after getting food, a man ~
353 2, 31 | in the very actions, for instance in sensitive ~and in intellectual
354 2, 31 | respect of his reason: ~for instance, it is natural to man to
355 2, 32 | principle is the motive: for instance when a man is moved by one ~
356 2, 32 | a cause of sadness; for ~instance when it is excessive.~Aquin.:
357 2, 32 | pleasurable simply; for instance one man in ~respect of another,
358 2, 32 | wonderful is pleasing, for instance things that are scarce.
359 2, 33 | pleasure, but distaste: for instance, the ~memory of food in
360 2, 33 | they are not opposed, "for instance that the three angles of
361 2, 34 | agrees with its nature, for instance, when a heavy ~body rests
362 2, 34 | becoming" of knowledge, for instance, when one learns or wonders,
363 2, 35 | are also disparate; for ~instance, sorrow at the death of
364 2, 35 | fittingness and affinity: for instance to rejoice ~in good and
365 2, 36 | not always pleasant; for instance, when a man has eaten ~to
366 2, 37 | regard to its contrary; for instance, hot water is more ~accessible
367 2, 37 | proper to the sorrowful; for instance, to mourn. Now a thing is
368 2, 39 | of the virtuous good; for instance, when ~a man gives an alms
369 2, 39 | being ~contrary to good; for instance, sin. Wherefore sorrow for
370 2, 40 | concupiscible ~passions, for instance between love and hatred.
371 2, 41 | natural ~inclination: for instance, despair flies from good
372 2, 42 | all evils ~are feared, for instance that someone be unjust or
373 2, 42 | some evil is ~hidden; for instance if the foe hides himself
374 2, 43 | love; in so far as, for ~instance, through fear of God's punishments,
375 2, 43 | wishes to hurt another; for ~instance, by reason of injustice,
376 2, 45 | threatening causes of fear; ~for instance, by the fact that a man
377 2, 46 | angry ~with himself; for instance, a penitent, on account
378 2, 46 | or a whole community: for instance, when the state injures ~
379 2, 47 | other causes of ~anger, for instance, "being forgotten by others;
380 2, 47 | when they are grieved, for instance, the sick, ~the poor, and
381 2, 47 | slighted in that matter; for instance, ~a wealthy man in his riches,
382 2, 48 | unwonted treatment; for instance, honorable men, if they
383 2, 49 | various predicaments; as, for instance, ~opposition, priority,
384 2, 49 | that which is had: as, for ~instance, there is no medium between
385 2, 49 | only a relation: as, ~for instance, a man is said to have a
386 2, 49 | action or passion: thus, ~for instance, something adorns or covers,
387 2, 51 | extrinsic principle. For instance, when a man is healed by
388 2, 51 | principles thereof, as, for instance, the principles ~of common
389 2, 51 | to the power itself. For instance, with ~regard to the angels,
390 2, 51 | principle ~of its act: for instance in fire there is only the
391 2, 51 | great power: sometimes, for instance, a strong dose of medicine
392 2, 52 | little" ~or "great": for instance great or little health or
393 2, 52 | be "more" or "less": for instance ~more or less white or healthy.
394 2, 52 | the subject: that, for instance, justice is not more or
395 2, 52 | susceptible of more and less, for instance, the arts; and that ~some
396 2, 52 | habit itself: thus, for instance, we speak of ~greater or
397 2, 52 | term of its subject; for instance, a term giving the subject
398 2, 52 | the passive subject: for instance, that ~which heats, causes
399 2, 52 | whence they ~proceed, for instance if they be done carelessly.
400 2, 53 | with bodily habits - for ~instance, health and sickness. But
401 2, 53 | Secondly, ~indirectly; for instance, that which removes an obstacle.
402 2, 54 | about one same ~object; for instance, intemperance and insensibility
403 2, 54 | several good habits; for ~instance, human virtue and heroic
404 2, 54 | science, ~to geometry, for instance, or to arithmetic. Therefore
405 2, 54 | are related to ~one, for instance, to some specific objective
406 2, 55 | determinate to their ~acts; for instance, the active natural powers.
407 2, 55 | object, or to its act: for ~instance, we give the name Faith,
408 2, 55 | said to ~be its virtue; for instance, if a man can carry a hundredweight
409 2, 55 | sometimes to ~evil; for instance, opinion is referred both
410 2, 55 | virtue objectively, for instance ~by having evil thoughts
411 2, 56 | aptness to a ~good act; for instance, by the habit of grammar
412 2, 56 | use of that aptness: ~for instance, justice not only gives
413 2, 56 | good, and to be good; for instance, because he is just, or
414 2, 56 | simply, but relatively; for instance, a good ~grammarian or a
415 2, 56 | good use ~of his body: "For instance, if my coachman, through
416 2, 56 | disposed to the act: for instance, the act of a craftsman ~
417 2, 57 | perfect than another; for instance, the rational soul is more
418 2, 60 | influx of the agent: for instance, we see that owing to the
419 2, 60 | difference of virtues - for instance the difference between that ~
420 2, 61 | the virtues: ~so that, for instance, any virtue that causes
421 2, 61 | often admonishes us - for instance: "Be ye . . . perfect, as ~
422 2, 61 | relate to human affairs; for instance, justice, about buying and ~
423 2, 63 | from within, by those, for instance, who upheld ~the theory
424 2, 63 | from without, those, for ~instance, who thought that corporeal
425 2, 63 | according to Divine rule. For instance, in the consumption ~of
426 2, 64 | tend ~to a maximum: for instance, magnanimity to very great
427 2, 64 | vice by deficiency: for ~instance, in those who break their
428 2, 64 | virtue is the real mean, for instance, in ~justice. On the other
429 2, 65 | moral virtue, temperance for instance, or ~fortitude, is nothing
430 2, 65 | properties ~of the virtues: for instance, by saying that discretion
431 2, 65 | in regard to another, for instance, by ~behaving well in matters
432 2, 65 | character of virtue. For instance, if a man do what ~is just,
433 2, 67 | man after this life; for ~instance, the knowledge of what one
434 2, 68 | there are some, fear, for ~instance, that are not reckoned virtues.~
435 2, 71 | whole body is infected," for instance, with fever or the like; ~
436 2, 71 | body without sickness, for ~instance, when a man has a hidden
437 2, 72 | sins in such matters, for instance, by ~heresy, sacrilege,
438 2, 72 | diversifies their species; for instance, when sin is ~divided into "
439 2, 72 | mortal and venial sins; for instance, in the species "adultery" ~
440 2, 72 | different ~objects: for instance one may be illiberal [*Cf.
441 2, 72 | from different motives: for instance that a man eat hastily,
442 2, 73 | single ~circumstance; for instance, by doing something when
443 2, 73 | foreseen, but not intended; for instance, when a man takes a short
444 2, 73 | species of that ~sin: for instance, if a man is a notorious
445 2, 73 | gravity of the sin: for instance, if a man in ~running to
446 2, 73 | dominion of his will, for instance his ~possessions, is less
447 2, 73 | the person sinning: for ~instance, if a prince were to violate
448 2, 74 | presentient to them, for instance by turning his ~thoughts
449 2, 74 | unlawful ~passions; for instance, when a man deliberately
450 2, 74 | movement of a passion; for instance, when a man, having ~deliberately
451 2, 74 | action itself as a ~good: for instance, when a man thinks and delights
452 2, 74 | purpose in thinking of it; for instance, he may wish to preach or
453 2, 74 | on the ~matter; as, for instance, when a man suddenly apprehends
454 2, 75 | natural sometimes, as, for instance, when anyone sins through ~
455 2, 75 | an internal cause; for ~instance, the birth of a monster
456 2, 76 | is the cause of sin: for ~instance, when a man knows that what
457 2, 76 | that the act is sinful; for instance, if a man strike someone, ~
458 2, 77 | mere lack of attention: for instance, a ~man who knows geometry,
459 2, 77 | healthy member, the eye, for instance, when it cannot see clearly,
460 2, 77 | voluntary but natural, for ~instance, if anyone through sickness
461 2, 78 | removal of some obstacle: ~for instance, if a man be prevented from
462 2, 81 | many of his books [*For instance, Retract. i, 9; De Pecc.
463 2, 81 | the body, of the hand for ~instance, is voluntary not by the
464 2, 82 | equal cause in all; for instance if a fever be caused by ~
465 2, 84 | through ~any of these: as, for instance, when one sins through ignorance,
466 2, 85 | entirely destroyed, for instance if from any finite ~length
467 2, 85 | on indefinitely, as, for instance, if a quantity be ~halved,
468 2, 85 | principle of nature, for instance in some heavenly body; or ~
469 2, 86 | disposition or habit; ~for instance, in a man who after committing
470 2, 87 | virtue of that principle. For instance, if the ~principle of sight
471 2, 87 | to the last end: as, for instance, when a man is too fond
472 2, 87 | punishments, fevers, for instance, diabolical possession, ~
473 2, 88 | generically venial, for instance, if a man be angry with
474 2, 88 | perhaps accidentally; for instance, if it were to give rise
475 2, 88 | creature less than ~God; for instance, if anyone being ignorant
476 2, 90 | act of reason ~ceases, for instance, while we are asleep. Therefore
477 2, 90 | measure of that genus: for instance, unity in the genus of numbers,
478 2, 90 | and ~the work done, for instance the work of building and
479 2, 93 | to Divine providence: for instance, the ~stability of incorporeal
480 2, 93 | to ~human government; for instance, that he should have a soul,
481 2, 94 | is not self-evident. For ~instance, this proposition, "Man
482 2, 94 | to the natural law; for instance, to shun ~ignorance, to
483 2, 94 | goods held in trust; for instance, if they are claimed for
484 2, 95 | in his necessities, for instance, in food and ~clothing.
485 2, 95 | in ~the same passage: for instance, "concerning something that
486 2, 96 | should not be ~observed. For instance, suppose that in a besieged
487 2, 97 | grants a ~dispensation: for instance, that a loan should not
488 2, 100 | are self-evident; as, for ~instance, that one should do evil
489 2, 100 | men in this precept: ~for instance, when according to the prescription
490 2, 100 | therefore are indispensable. For instance, if in ~some community a
491 2, 100 | intention of the ~lawgiver. For instance if, for the safeguarding
492 2, 100 | individual actions - for instance, that ~this or that be murder,
493 2, 100 | the other virtues, for instance, fortitude, sobriety, and
494 2, 101 | the ~"observances," for instance, in matters of food, clothing,
495 2, 102 | of ~the thing done: for instance that a garment should not
496 2, 102 | reasonable ~causes: as for instance, "Thou shalt not kill, Thou
497 2, 102 | one way or in another: for instance, the number ~of animals
498 2, 102 | said ~to be polluted, for instance, by idolatry, murder, adultery,
499 2, 102 | some are most harmful, for ~instance, those that are poisonous.
500 2, 102 | forbidden to the ~Jews: for instance (Lev. 19:19): "Thou shalt
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