Book, Paragraph
1 1, 2 | temples, gymnasia—things inanimate—with the admiration due
2 1, 39| once devoted: not, with inanimate colours variously set forth
3 1, 42| erred in the setting up of inanimate images under the phantasms
4 1, 44| their nature from those inanimate elements which are in its
5 1, 61| into animals; even this inanimate matter will he change into
6 1, 62| their own accord, and the inanimate images of the birds, placed
7 2, 18| and wicked spirits, to the inanimate elements, and to the sensible
8 2, 19| that are irrational and inanimate, which are indivisible and
9 2, 19| these very things, which are inanimate, irrational, as being without
10 2, 22| the origin of all upon the inanimate Elements, and recognized
11 2, 46| were constituted out of the inanimate elements, fire, water, air,
12 2, 49| their) vows, as Gods, the inanimate Idols, (formed) ./. in
13 2, 70| to induce them to honour inanimate images as Gods, and vainly,
14 3, 11| stone, and matter that is inanimate ?~
15 3, 39| seeking God by means of inanimate Images, and carved Idols;
16 3, 39| For that which was of inanimate ./. matter, and in the
17 3, 39| it is believed, that an inanimate lyre soothed both the animals
18 3, 65| fleeting and corruptible, inanimate (in itself,) and irrational; --
19 3, 69| former times, will he revere inanimate Idols. Nor will he honour
20 4, 6 | earthly) material, and are inanimate; but, not as these things,
21 4, 21| the famine, as to things inanimate? I come then to the making
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