Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] igitur 5 ignoble 3 ignominy 3 ignorance 59 ignorant 143 ignores 1 ii 9 | Frequency [« »] 59 else 59 flesh 59 former 59 ignorance 58 condition 58 hands 58 learned | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances ignorance |
Book, Chapter
1 I, 1 | their perverseness,--namely, ignorance of themselves: and if any 2 I, 1 | shall have shaken off this ignorance, he will know to what object 3 I, 20| altogether de~ rived from their ignorance of the principal and chief 4 I, 21| evil practices from their ignorance of those which are good. 5 I, 23| religion men who, through ignorance of good things, wander in 6 II, 1 | error entirely arose from ignorance of the divine name. But 7 II, 5 | surpassed in shallowness the ignorance of the uneducated. For they 8 II, 9 | philosophers prated, in his ignorance of the truth he imagined 9 II, 14| left to his descendants ignorance of the divine nature. From 10 II, 17| of the ruler, through his ignorance; which is the result of 11 III, 1 | either through the error and ignorance of the common people, who 12 III, 1 | great in convicting them of ignorance, which they themselves very 13 III, 1 | opinion respecting their own ignorance.~ 14 III, 4 | the many which blame the ignorance of each other? That must 15 III, 4 | all, and the confession of ignorance made by distinguished philosophers, 16 III, 5 | foundations of his own. For ignorance of all things cannot be 17 III, 6 | united and combined with ignorance. Knowledge in us is from 18 III, 6 | its origin from heaven; ignorance from the body, which is 19 III, 6 | given to us, and a part of ignorance. Over this bridge, so to 20 III, 6 | subjects, they embraced ignorance as though they had taken 21 III, 9 | destitute of this, and in their ignorance of divine things prostrated 22 III, 14| excepting that you know your own ignorance. Therefore your own books 23 III, 14| possesses us, or deplorable ignorance of the truth." Where, then, 24 III, 14| confession of error and ignorance has been extorted almost 25 III, 16| this employment, through ignorance of the truth, they thought 26 III, 17| it appeared to him in his ignorance of the cause and subject), 27 III, 18| depths of the darkness of ignorance. And this ignorance has 28 III, 18| darkness of ignorance. And this ignorance has caused that some have 29 III, 18| held by error and wretched ignorance of the truth.~ 30 III, 19| and errors are produced by ignorance of the truth would altogether 31 III, 25| years. Nor must there be ignorance of rhetoric, that you may 32 III, 28| altogether confess their own ignorance. For nature, apart from 33 III, 28| they are reminded of their ignorance; and, as though in madness, 34 III, 28| called a system in which ignorance is both learnt and taught. 35 III, 28| one another, through their ignorance of divine things they were 36 III, 29| of intelligence and our ignorance of causes." Since, therefore, 37 III, 29| blindness, and, as Cicero says, ignorance of facts and causes, which 38 IV, 1 | suddenly arrived at such ignorance of themselves, that the 39 IV, 1 | and themselves also of ignorance, which indeed they did not 40 IV, 26| surrounded with the darkness of ignorance, worship earthly and frail 41 V, 3 | such absurd ravings of his ignorance, when he had eagerly endeavoured 42 V, 3 | grant that you did this from ignorance, not from malice: what truth, 43 V, 6 | truth, left to men error, ignorance, and blindness. The poets 44 V, 8 | now men are wicked through ignorance of what is right and good. 45 V, 18| deeds and words, through ignorance of what is right and good. 46 V, 19| But it is manifest that ignorance of the truth makes your 47 V, 20| others. Thus, involved in ignorance of all things, they neither 48 V, 20| destruction of many. But this very ignorance causes them to be so cruel 49 V, 22| and goad them in their ignorance to fury. For these, as long 50 V, 23| not assuredly with the ignorance of this world, but wisely, 51 VI, 4 | lust, avarice, discord, ignorance, falsehood, folly, and other 52 VI, 5 | and a vicious mind, which ignorance cannot excuse, will be justly 53 VI, 5 | is ignorant of God, since ignorance of Him from whom good things 54 VI, 9 | greatest impiety. For this ignorance causes him to serve other 55 VI, 9 | step to wickedness through ignorance of the truth and of the 56 VI, 12| Cicero? But through his ignorance of true justice he knowingly 57 VI, 18| and hold forth this very ignorance as the greatest knowledge; 58 VI, 24| preceded by a confession of ignorance. It is of no avail that 59 VII, 3 | correctly seen, and by his ignorance of system entirely overthrew