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1 I, 3 | do not wish to know for certain that which for certain you
2 I, 3 | for certain that which for certain you are sure you know nothing
3 I, 3 | Chrestians" (for you are not certain about even the sound of
4 I, 7 | of a rumour, but only of certain knowledge; and none but
5 I, 8 | is said to have removed certain new-born infants from all
6 I, 10| more honourable, having a certain glory in its arrogance;
7 I, 10| your philosophers, whom a certain inspiration of truth itself
8 II, 1 | WHICH OUGHT TO BE FIXED AND CERTAIN.~OUR defence requires that
9 II, 1 | regarded, as it really is, as certain, entire, universal, because
10 II, 3 | touched by them, and we see certain bodies fall down from them.
11 II, 5 | governance; the stars also, certain indications as they are
12 II, 5 | And rightly too; for it is certain that everything which happens
13 II, 5 | fulfil their courses in certain orbits, in regular seasons,
14 II, 9 | classification into the certain, the uncertain, and the
15 II, 9 | gods, when they possessed certain ones? Unless, forsooth,
16 II, 9 | Then, again, as they had certain gods, they ought to have
17 II, 12| after parentage began, it is certain that they had no child previous
18 II, 12| it becomes sufficiently certain that Saturn and his family
19 II, 13| denying that there is a certain wholesale distributor of
20 II, 13| requires the aid and support of certain, even dead persons, is a
21 II, 16| BECOME OBSOLETE.~Well, but certain men have discovered fruits
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