Book, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 24, 6 | all the angels and their causes, is rendered invisible and
2 II, 2, 3 | will no longer be the causes of that formation, but the
3 II, 2, 3 | the world who prepared the causes of its formation. Although
4 II, 4, 2 | very beings who are the causes from which men derive their
5 II, 5, 4 | beginning to have cut off the causes of [the fancied] necessity,
6 II, 17, 10| of your Father to be the causes of ignorance, assimilating
7 II, 25, 3 | faculity of investigating the causes of all things, inferior
8 II, 26, 3 | and bring forth the proper causes of such a system: if, [I
9 II, 26, 3 | endeavour to think out the causes of the number which he imagines
10 II, 28, 2 | while we search into their causes, but God alone who made
11 III, 12, 12| themselves to investigate the causes of the difference of each
12 III, 16, 3 | when discoursing on the causes of His birth: "And He appointed
13 III, 24, 1 | in an excellent vessel, causes the vessel itself containing
14 IV, 29, 2 | occurred by merely natural causes (sed naturaliter sic se
15 IV, 36, 4 | to eternal life, but He causes the unfruitful fig-tree
16 V, 2, 2 | the creation to us, for He causes His sun to rise, and sends
17 V, 29, 1 | books I have set forth the causes for which God permitted
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