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| Alphabetical [« »] senility 1 sensation 28 sensations 3 sense 23 sense- 1 senses 58 senses- 3 | Frequency [« »] 23 certainly 23 doubt 23 lord 23 sense 23 subject 23 view 23 within | Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus A treatise on the soul IntraText - Concordances sense |
Chapter
1 2 | perversely apply in some other sense. This process is attended 2 4 | admits of being taken in the sense of being brought forth; 3 4 | thing that is made: in this sense Plato also uses the phraseology. 4 11| is spirit in any especial sense. For to blow or breathe 5 11| scriptural and distinctive sense of the spirit; and here 6 11| spirit at all in the lower sense, in consequence of the identical 7 12| taken by us in no other sense than as indicating that 8 18| clearest; who never applies the sense of sight, nor adds to his 9 18| truth? Who can show me the sense which does not understand 10 18| things are the objects of sense, and incorporeal ones objects 11 18| the domicile or abode of sense and intellect; in other 12 19| both of intellect and of sense! I am much mistaken if the 13 24| appendage to God (in the sense of equality), by this very 14 33| there will be wanting the sense and consciousness of merit 15 35| in its plain and natural sense. Thus our "adversary" (therein 16 35| What can be a more fitting sense than this? What a truer 17 35| really in a Pythagorean sense that the Jews approached 18 35| and not rather in the sense of the divine pre- diction, " 19 38| the soul which relate to sense and intelligence are inherent 20 41| antecedent, and in a certain sense natural, evil which arises 21 46| interpret them in another sense. As for all other oracles, 22 48| penetrating and explaining the sense of dreams. For my own part, 23 51| death. It is indeed in this sense that Plato, although he