Book, Chapter

 1    I,   6, p.   39|        and become like different beings, should crowd the public
 2    I,   8, p.   48|      heaven. Like some celestial beings they gaze upon human life,
 3   II,   3, p.   90|        intelligent and spiritual beings, either evil daemons, or
 4  III,   3, p.  122|          needs nothing even from beings that are greater than we
 5  III,   3, p.  122|       things from the noblest of beings by what is noblest in ourselves,
 6  III,   5, p.  142|      nothing of the lot of human beings or mortals, but that after
 7   IV,   5, p.  172|          and the Cosmos, and the beings who have mind and reason,
 8   IV,   9, p.  180|          daemons, but only those beings, which are said in Holy
 9    V, Int, p.  224|        Scythians to devour human beings, or laid down laws to others
10    V, Int, p.  225|         it was not unlikely that beings who passed their time in
11    V, Int, p.  229|     beasts, nor even in rational beings, except ... in such virtuous
12    V,   1, p.  232| according to this two Unbegotten Beings, He that cast forth and
13    V,   1, p.  233|  similarly to the other begotten beings; for the generation of the
14    V,   3, p.  239|      allot to any among begotten beings the sitting at the right
15    V,   3, p.  239|        be supposedleaving human beings out of account — even of
16    V,   6, p.  250|      says that He is first among beings begotten in all reverence,
17    V,   6, p.  250|         to which of the begotten beings He gave the command to create,
18    V,  11, p.  257|         to be God and Lord among beings, after the Almighty God
19  VII,   1, p.   68|        it refers to the (d) same beings, when it says: "He will
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