Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   1|       has gone to ruin, that the human race has been visited with
 2   I,   3|        of pestilence consume the human race:-ransack the records
 3   I,   4|                  4. When was the human race destroyed by a flood?
 4   I,   7|  opponents, no damage is done to human affairs by you, whence arise
 5   I,   8|          bodies, and weakens the human race? What if-and this seems
 6   I,   8|        call the overthrow of the human race, its destruction, ruin,
 7   I,  14|    carried on, and how could the human race have existed even to
 8   I,  19|    injure others, to complain of human beings, and to ravage the
 9   I,  24|         religions. Justly is the human race afflicted by so many
10   I,  29|        in the hearing of all the human race! Are we therefore charged
11   I,  33|                 33. Is there any human being who has not entered
12   I,  34|        the common consent of the human race, the omnipotent God
13   I,  37|        that they once partook of human destiny, and of the state
14   I,  38|  profitable and salutary for the human race; who has shown us what
15   I,  42|          one who was born a mere human being. Even if that were
16   I,  51| Capitolinus of yours give to any human being power of this kind?
17   I,  53|          as you suppose, nothing human, delusive, or crafty in
18   I,  53| themselves so, terrify the whole human race, were able to know
19   I,  54|    nations, and that incredulous human race; but if the matter
20   I,  57|      written by men-set forth in human speech; and whatever you
21   I,  60|        God, why did He appear in human shape, and why was He cut
22   I,  60|        to the world and mixed in human society, otherwise than
23   I,  62|         the cross? Who dead? The human form, I reply, which He
24   I,  62|   according to the conditions of human life? The death of which
25   I,  62|        you speak was that of the human body which He had assumed,
26   I,  65|     death itself He suffered His human form to be slain, that from
27  II,   9|        on subjects placed beyond human knowledge? Does not each
28  II,  16|     wicked men, on leaving their human bodies, pass into cattle
29  II,  22|          that they come to their human bodies with all knowledge-we
30  II,  22|         or is made familiar with human speech, let him be questioned
31  II,  40|    hunger to throw themselves on human bodies; and when set free,
32  II,  40|          to be parted from their human forms by a wasting sickness?
33  II,  43|          with the garment of the human body, in order that they
34  II,  45|        the wretched and pitiable human race endures with agony
35  II,  46|           and, to exalt Him with human praise, most wise, just,
36  II,  49|       But it is fitting that the human race should be rated and
37  II,  50|        there are good men in the human race; and perhaps, if we
38  II,  51|    clearly that which transcends human knowledge, and which has
39  II,  52|     which may have fashioned the human race, and connected it with
40  II,  54|        of dangers with which the human race is every moment distressed
41  II,  55|         expressly allow that all human affairs are full of them,
42  II,  56|         trouble themselves about human things; nay others maintain
43  II,  57|         things by divine, but by human methods; and just as we
44  II,  60|          be understood, although human conjecture should extend
45  II,  63|          number or not since the human race began to be on the
46  II,  75|         they were the remains of human limbs? So, then, it may
47  II,  75|      then indeed, after that the human race, becoming feebler,
48 III,  13|         even confine them to the human figure, and with even less
49 III,  16|       asses, dogs, pigs, had any human wisdom and skill in contrivance,
50 III,  19|      that God is great by merely human excellences? or that He
51 III,  19|          and is corrupted into a human sense, and does not carry
52 III,  19|         which are suited only to human affairs. There is but one
53 III,  19|       nothing can be revealed in human language concerning God.
54 III,  23|         do, or all we attempt in human affairs, sped as we wished
55 III,  28|        gods with natures such as human kindness has often charmed
56 III,  42|         affairs and occasions of human life; especially as you
57  IV,   2|      accidentally, and depend on human acts and chance moods, so
58  IV,  19|    falsehood. By the laws of the human race, and the associations
59  IV,  23|         was there, I ask you, in human bodies, which could move,
60  IV,  24|        by which, as you say, the human race has long been afflicted,
61  IV,  28|        not apply, for they are a human and earthly race to whom
62  IV,  33|        been wholly put away from human society, and are solicitous
63  IV,  36|         ills come with which the human race is deluged and overwhelmed
64   V,   1|       averted with sacrifices of human heads, not with hair and
65   V,   4|      there was a greedy lust for human blood. And both parts are
66   V,   8|       not be false, that she was human, not divine. For if it is
67   V,  10|         you will perhaps say the human race shuns and execrates
68   V,  10|         so wonderful. For as the human race is said by you to have
69   V,  26|       abroad in his songs to the human race throughout all ages:- "
70  VI,   2|       only our heaping upon them human honours is not a crime,-
71  VI,   2|     belongs to a mortal race and human weakness to act otherwise;
72  VI,   3|        these temples? If you ask human weakness -something vast
73  VI,  11|         little images of men and human forms-nay, you even suppose
74  VI,  23|       they knew was suggested to human desires by themselves. But
75  VI,  26|          on account of which the human race was to be benumbed
76 VII,  14|        the god who is exalted by human honours is the inferior,
77 VII,  17|         placed bones, and burned human excrements at your shrines;
78 VII,  34|          nature is embodied in a human frame; and because they
79 VII,  42|      befitting Jupiter to pardon human failings, and grant forgiveness
80 VII,  51|       born to be the bane of the human race, subjugated the guiltless
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