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Alphabetical    [«  »]
perceives 7
perceiving 8
perceptible 1
perception 35
perceptions 2
perchance 10
percipitur 1
Frequency    [«  »]
35 jesus
35 left
35 less
35 perception
35 persons
35 superstitions
35 temples
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
The divine institutes

IntraText - Concordances

perception

   Book, Chapter
1 I, 1 | reading or hearing to the perception of the discipline of wisdom. 2 I, 3 | in this subject, both in perception and in words--for neither 3 I, 5 | though they were endowed with perception, were to be held and worshipped 4 I, 20| have no intelligence or perception of themselves; nor are they 5 II, 2 | are entirely destitute of perception. But the image of the ever-living 6 II, 2 | be living and endued with perception. But if it received this 7 II, 2 | God, which have neither perception nor motion? Therefore the 8 II, 2 | himself, since he has both perception and motion, and performs 9 II, 2 | if images could exercise perception and motion, they would of 10 II, 9 | with free and unrestrained perception. Let him know, therefore, 11 II, 11| Himself a figure endowed with perception and intelligence, that is, 12 II, 18| service, are destitute of all perception, since they are earth. But 13 III, 19| evil; for it takes away the perception of evil. But if the soul 14 III, 19| life; and if it is without perception, assuredly there is no evil." 15 III, 19| no one at all who has any perception; for it is the perception 16 III, 19| perception; for it is the perception which causes anything to 17 III, 29| it as though it had any perception, since fortune is the sudden 18 IV, 6 | but because He leads to perception and to intelligence. Since, 19 IV, 8 | has life through its own perception and wisdom, and He also 20 IV, 8 | and are lasting, and have perception; because He Himself is immortal, 21 IV, 8 | immortal, and the Giver both of perception and life. Our expressions, 22 IV, 8 | and is accompanied with perception and power, which it has 23 V, 20| themselves of all power of perception: they bid adieu to reason, 24 VI, 1 | good and evil things by the perception and pleasure of the body 25 VI, 2 | attribute to the gods a heavenly perception, but rather a human one. 26 VI, 21| penetrate to the innermost perception. For all those things which 27 VII, 2 | comprehended by our own perception and innate intelligence, 28 VII, 3 | contained all the power of perception, in the latter the material, 29 VII, 8 | reasoned, that whatever has perception by itself, and always moves, 30 VII, 9 | the soul can retain its perception without those parts of the 31 VII, 9 | body in which the office of perception is contained. What about 32 VII, 12| supposed that, because the perception of the body fails, the sensibility 33 VII, 13| thought that the power of perception existed in bodies from the 34 VII, 22| but possessed of the same perception and figure, we are met with 35 VII, 22| are pliant, and easy of perception, and because they so quickly


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