Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
anim 21
anima 435
animae 4
animal 597
animale 1
animalem 3
animalibus 1
Frequency    [«  »]
602 26
600 fitting
598 caused
597 animal
597 material
597 required
596 gifts
St. Thomas Aquinas
Summa Theologica

IntraText - Concordances

animal

1-500 | 501-597

    Part, Question
501 3, 31 | as stated in De Gener. Animal. i. ~Hence He is said to 502 3, 31 | Philosopher says (De Gener. Animal. i): wherefore ~there was 503 3, 32 | Philosopher ~(De Gener. Animal. i): "The Father is the 504 3, 33 | the Philosopher (De Gener. Animal. ii) ~in the generation 505 3, 33 | thing, and afterwards, an animal, and after ~that, a man. 506 3, 34 | soul, as is said, De Gener. Animal. ii, 3,4. ~Wherefore, since 507 3, 36 | fitting that a rational animal [*Cf. FP, Q[51], A[1], ad 508 3, 37 | and because it is a chaste animal, it signifies ~chastity; 509 3, 37 | chastity; and being a solitary animal, it signifies contemplation. 510 3, 37 | pigeon is a gentle and simple animal, and therefore signifies 511 3, 37 | It is also a gregarious animal; wherefore it signifies ~ 512 3, 39 | Whether that dove was a real animal?~(8) Of the voice of the 513 3, 39 | Aristotle, ~De Partib. Animal.). Since, therefore, Christ 514 3, 39 | deceitful." For the dove is an animal of a ~simple character, 515 3, 39 | signified the nature of the real animal, and not the effect of the 516 3, 50 | is a higher species than animal and man, ~because an animal 517 3, 50 | animal and man, ~because an animal is a sensible animated substance. 518 3, 50 | truth of the death of man or animal that ~by death the subject 519 3, 50 | subject ceases to be man or animal; because the death of the ~ 520 3, 50 | the death of the ~man or animal results from the separation 521 3, 50 | complement of the man or animal. Consequently, to say that 522 3, 54 | a glorified body is not animal, but spiritual, as is ~clear 523 3, 54 | body seems to ~have been animal, since He ate and drank 524 3, 54 | it follow that His was an animal body that stands in need 525 3, 54 | corruption is caused in animal bodies. It would follow, 526 3, 60 | from health which is in an ~animal, not only is the animal 527 3, 60 | animal, not only is the animal said to be healthy through 528 3, 62 | equivocal to use the ~term "animal" in its generic sense, and 529 3, 64 | various natures, not as an animal is enticed by food, but 530 3, 65 | man is by nature a ~social animal. With regard to himself 531 3, 66 | neither can the blood ~of an animal, or wine, or any liquid 532 3, 66 | which the ~principle of animal life is made manifest.~Aquin.: 533 3, 74 | 17:14: "The life of the animal [Vulg.: 'of all flesh'] ~ 534 3, 77 | he can be an irrational animal. ~For it would follow that 535 3, 80 | them." But an irrational animal, such as a mouse ~or a dog, 536 3, 80 | said that the irrational animal eats the body of Christ 537 3, 80 | Philosopher ~(De Gener. Animal. i). But occasionally it 538 3, 83 | we may be stripped of our animal sense; 'acceptable,' i.e. 539 3, 83 | sacrament, if a mouse or other animal consume it, must do forty 540 3, 89 | above (A[4]). But a dead animal cannot be revived. ~Therefore 541 3, 89 | them. On the other hand, an animal dies in ~itself, through 542 3, 90 | the ~entire power of an animal, as such, is assured to 543 3, 90 | such, is assured to each animal species, ~all of which species 544 3, 90 | which species divide the animal genus at the same time and ~ 545 3, 90 | power, as the ~parts of an animal, the first of which is the 546 Suppl, 41| 12) says that "man is an animal ~more inclined by nature 547 Suppl, 41| political and gregarious animal," as the same author asserts ~( 548 Suppl, 44| and not in another; thus animal is named from soul [anima], ~ 549 Suppl, 44| body, which is the genus of animal; yet ~animation is not found 550 Suppl, 52| misbegotten male" (De Gener. Animal. ii, ~3). I say then in 551 Suppl, 52| mother ~the matter (De Gener. Animal. ii, 4). Therefore the child 552 Suppl, 54| parents: yet to no kind of animal save man has ~she instilled 553 Suppl, 54| Philosopher attests (De Animal. ix, 47) concerning the 554 Suppl, 55| reason of its genus: thus ~animal is divided into rational 555 Suppl, 58| the age of fourteen (De Animal. vii). Therefore, etc.~Aquin.: 556 Suppl, 58| sooner ~than man does (De Animal. ix); hence there is no 557 Suppl, 65| the Philosopher (De Gener. Animal. i, 20), ~in the begetting 558 Suppl, 65| man inasmuch as he is an animal: the second, inasmuch as 559 Suppl, 65| nature's dictate to every animal ~according to the mode befitting 560 Suppl, 65| as stated in De ~Gener. Animal. vii. 4), is nevertheless 561 Suppl, 72| perfection. Hence the heart of an animal is ~more conformed to an 562 Suppl, 75| flesh of a lion or other animal. Since then in ~the other 563 Suppl, 76| into the body of some other animal to whose manner of ~living 564 Suppl, 76| into the soul of a ~brute animal, especially when the human 565 Suppl, 76| wherefore if it is ~not the same animal it is not the same identical 566 Suppl, 76| same, there is not the same animal, since animal is defined 567 Suppl, 76| not the same animal, since animal is defined from ~the primary 568 Suppl, 76| not be the same identical animal, ~and consequently he will 569 Suppl, 76| consequently ~neither the same animal nor the same man.~Aquin.: 570 Suppl, 76| this ~question, because animal is defined from sense, i.e. 571 Suppl, 76| the identity of the ~whole animal, not even of the animal' 572 Suppl, 76| animal, not even of the animal's parts: nor are powers 573 Suppl, 77| or the operations of the animal life. Or we may say ~with 574 Suppl, 77| Philosopher proves (De ~Gen. Animal. i). Therefore what belongs 575 Suppl, 78| they will rise again to the animal life?~Aquin.: SMT XP Q[81] 576 Suppl, 78| Anima xvi, i.e. De Generat. Animal. ii) that "the ~female is 577 Suppl, 78| Whether all will rise again to animal life so as to exercise the ~ 578 Suppl, 78| they will rise again to the animal life, or in ~other words 579 Suppl, 78| that such acts belonging to animal life ~will be in the blessed, 580 Suppl, 78| are the ~actions of the animal life in man, the action 581 Suppl, 78| beget, pertain to ~the animal life, being directed to 582 Suppl, 78| although they lack their animal operations.~Aquin.: SMT 583 Suppl, 79| will be "a mortal rational animal," for such is the ~definition 584 Suppl, 79| the heat of fire in an ~animal's body is directed in the 585 Suppl, 79| by the alteration of an animal body by some external body ~ 586 Suppl, 79| those which ~constitute the animal body. Wherefore the body 587 Suppl, 79| Wherefore the body of an animal has, through ~its tangible 588 Suppl, 81| OBJ 3: Further, of all the animal operations sense surpasses 589 Suppl, 82| knows no other ~dog than the animal. Hence we must say that 590 Suppl, 83| by the fire: because an animal is not distressed by bodily 591 Suppl, 83| De Prop. Element.), "no ~animal can live in fire." Galen 592 Suppl, 88| and after sin man had an animal life, which needs the movement 593 Suppl, 88| Therefore when man's animal life ceases, animals and 594 Suppl, 88| But after this renewal animal life will cease in man. 595 Suppl, 89| to know a man only as an animal is to know him ~only in 596 Suppl, 94| the day of judgment, no animal or mixed body will ~remain 597 Suppl, 94| heart is in the middle of an animal, so is hell supposed to


1-500 | 501-597

Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License