Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 Appen, Intro | undefinable (primordial) Gas1 in the state of chaos;
2 Appen, Intro | things originated in the Gas.~(Some)2 Buddhists, (however),
3 Appen, Intro (1)| substance is not exactly 'gas,' but we may conceive it
4 Appen, 1 | naturally to the primordial Gas, and that Gas produced Heaven
5 Appen, 1 | primordial Gas, and that Gas produced Heaven and Earth,
6 Appen, 1 | were made of the primordial Gas (which has no feeling nor
7 Appen, 1 | infant, just born of the Gas, who had never learned to
8 Appen, 1 | it being formed of the Gas, and suddenly goes to naught (
9 Appen, 1 | to naught (at death), the Gas being dispersed. What, then,
10 Appen, 1 | sudden by the formation of a Gas. Again, there are some historical
11 Appen, 1 | by the dispersion of the Gas. Therefore (matters concerning)
12 Appen, 1 | was born of (primordial) Gas which gave rise to Heaven
13 Appen, 1 | also formed of the same Gas unconscious? Again, if, (
14 Appen, 2, 2 | Taoist calls the undefinable Gas in the state of Chaos. Therefore
15 Appen, 2 (1) | the Chaos, the primordial Gas, and the rest, naming them
16 Appen, 4 | endowed with the (so-called) Gas, or material (for body).3
17 Appen, 4 | material (for body).3 The Gas first consists of four elements4
18 Appen, 4 (3) | the outside opinion that Gas is the origin.'~
19 Appen, 4 | nothing but one primordial Gas in its undeveloped state.
20 Appen, 4 | and even the Primordial Gas is also a mode of it, for
21 Appen, 4 (2) | The so-called primordial Gas seems to be the first idea
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