Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 1 (1)| the five instruments of knowledge stand still together with
2 1, 1 (5)| action; (5) Vijñana, or knowledge.~
3 1, 2, 2 | Canon. As his scriptural knowledge increased, he was troubled
4 1, 3, 6 | accomplish in the theory of knowledge what Copernicus did in astronomy.
5 1, 3, 8 | perception, not through your knowledge, not through your logic,
6 1, 4, 16 | possessor, not a relative knowledge of things as his intellect
7 1, 4, 17 | as He is beyond relative knowledge; some, Self, as He is the
8 1, 5, 20 | never dreamed of. Of our knowledge they had almost none. That
9 1, 6, 2 | admit, so far as our present knowledge is concerned, that mind,
10 1, 6, 4 | my individual desire for knowledge; or that I make a fortune,
11 1, 6, 5 | of her own formation, his knowledge is of her own laws, and
12 1, 6 (2)| That knowledge by which one becomes enlightened.~
13 1, 6, 16 | relativities, owing to our relative knowledge; but these relativities
14 1, 7, 7 | and shame go hand in hand. Knowledge and virtue live in poverty,
15 Appen, 1 | indirect causes (to gain its knowledge), and to acquire them through
16 Appen, 2 (2)| the heaven of unlimited knowledge,' the third 'the heaven
17 Appen, 2, 2 | consciousness,2 conception,3 and knowledge.4~If all (these elements)
18 Appen, 4 (5)| consciousness, (3) conception, (4) knowledge.~
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