Book, Chapter

1  Int,   4, p.   xv|      proposes to reject "all deceitful and sophistical plausibilities"
2  Int,   4, p.   xv|      as guides for avoiding "deceitful and sophistical plausibilities"
3  III,   2, p.  104|   found them attached to the deceitful polytheism of Egypt, and
4  III,   5, p.  129|      as some might say their deceitful cozener, yet why was it
5  III,   5, p.  129|   their dear ones. How could deceitful and shifty men have thought
6  III,   5, p.  129|       Granted that they were deceitful cozeners, you must add that
7   IV,  12, p.  187|   out the destruction of the deceitful powers of the daemons by
8   VI,  20, p.   39| Egyptians with all manner of deceitful superstition, when they
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