Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
Alphabetical [« »] senselessness 1 senses 19 sensibilities 1 sensibility 27 sensible 13 sensual 2 sensus 1 | Frequency [« »] 27 passion 27 practice 27 pursuit 27 sensibility 27 sex 27 spirits 27 tullius | Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius The divine institutes IntraText - Concordances sensibility |
Book, Chapter
1 I, 18| itself, and the power of sensibility and of life? Finally, did 2 II, 4 | for they did not receive sensibility on their consecration. Persius 3 II, 5 | objects and are void of sensibility; who, when they admired 4 II, 6 | man, who is endowed with sensibility; therefore it must also 5 II, 6 | that cannot be without sensibility, a part of which is sensible; 6 II, 6 | is a part, also possesses sensibility. The propositions themselves 7 II, 6 | the world is possessed of sensibility, and is God, did not perceive 8 II, 6 | the world is endowed with sensibility because man is sensible, 9 II, 6 | manner are possessed of sensibility, and are parts of the world. 10 II, 6 | because these also have sensibility, and are parts of the world. 11 II, 6 | living being is endowed with sensibility, its members also have sensibility; 12 II, 6 | sensibility, its members also have sensibility; nor do they become senseless 13 II, 6 | being inhabited, has no sensibility by itself, and is subject 14 II, 6 | so the world, having no sensibility of itself, is subject to 15 II, 9 | two, one is endued with sensibility, the other is insensible. 16 II, 9 | except in that which has sensibility, intelligence, reflection, 17 II, 9 | because a being endued with sensibility can never spring from one 18 II, 9 | since He is possessed of sensibility, intelligence, providence, 19 III, 19| might be endued with the sensibility of a man, so as to understand 20 VI, 15| with astonishment that all sensibility should be taken from him. 21 VII, 3 | the members are without sensibility, and mortal, since we see 22 VII, 4 | for since it is without sensibility, it neither needs the warmth 23 VII, 4 | temporal, that which has sensibility and that which is senseless, 24 VII, 5 | everlasting, endued with sensibility, and full of lustre; and 25 VII, 12| perception of the body fails, the sensibility of the soul is extinguished 26 VII, 12| departure, because it draws all sensibility with it. But since the soul 27 VII, 12| soul by its presence gives sensibility to the body, and causes