Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   6|        would not be difficult to prove, that after the name of
 2   I,   7|          from our door. And if I prove this, if by examples and
 3   I,  32|          dangerous to attempt to prove by arguments that God is
 4  II,   4| disproved? But He, too, does not prove what He promises. It is
 5  II,   4|        said to be at hand should prove vain and groundless; in
 6  II,  24|         of number, and strive to prove by his answers that what
 7 III,   3|          religion, we ask you to prove this, that there are other
 8 III,   6|     natures assigned to them, to prove that they did not exist
 9  IV,  11|         their predictions either prove untrue or baffled expectation
10  IV,  30|        serve the gods, we should prove and make manifest that by
11   V,  24|         what causes, that we may prove that Athens itself also,
12   V,  39|          39. Whence, then, do we prove that all these narratives
13  VI,  10|         of a god whom you cannot prove to exist at all?
14 VII,  26|         the rites of the chapels prove; nor was it used by any
15 VII,  44|        your assertions, we might prove by your own authority that
16 VII,  45|        do not think that you can prove and show that that serpent
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